NAIROB, July 23 (Xinhua) -- The International Organization for Migration
(IOM) said Wednesday it has completed the relocation of some 2,000 mainly Somali
refugees from Dadaab refugee camp in northeastern Kenya to Kakuma camp in the
northwest to reduce overcrowding.
The relocation, which ended over the weekend, was carried out by IOM with
funding from UNHCR. It included the movement of 500 refugees by air and the
movement of the remaining 1,500 by road.
"We gave priority to vulnerable people in need of protection, including
children and families headed by women," IOM's Operations Officer Bill Lorenz
said in a statement.
IOM convoys, each comprising 10 buses, made three trips each carrying 500
refugees, completing the 1,200 km journey between the camps in three days.
Dadaab, which has seen a massive influx of refugees, mainly from Somalia,
now shelters almost 200,000 refugees, doubling its original capacity. Kakuma now
houses some 51,000 refugees, mainly from Sudan.
"The ongoing repatriation of 8,000 or so Sudanese refugees from Kakuma to
Sudan this year means that Kakuma is now less crowded and able to take in some
of the refugees from Dadaab," said Lorenz.
The east African nation hosts more than 230,000 refugees from neighboring
countries of Sudan, Somalia, Burundi and other neighboring
nations.