Today's Headlines
- Two Exhibitions Are On At Ramoma, Nairobi
- Country to Review Tourism Law
- Econet Wireless Finally Rolls Out
- Odinga Warns of Civil Unrest
- Mulee Rules Out Harambee Stars U-Turn
- Taking Up a Women's Agenda
- More Than 6,000 Christian Youth Converge for Prayers
- Catholic Church Outraged By MPs' Refusal to Pay Tax
- Pope Benedict Praying for Release of Abducted Nuns
- Thousands Flee Amid Fears of Border Clashes
- Malaria Rates Plummet Among Children
- Winning Against HIV Stigma Behind Bars
- First Congress of Federation of African Journalists a Historic Milestone, Says IFJ
- Archbishop Lele Urges State to Act as Food Crisis Bites
- Regional Workshop Focus Border Management, Irregular Migration
- Silverbird Acquires Kenya's Nu Metro, Starts Operations in Ghana
- Raila is Evil, Says Minister
- Man Charged With Abduction of Two Catholic Sisters
- UN Censures State On Torture
- Agencies Seek $390 Million to Offset Climate And Food Risks
- UN-Backed Scheme Gives 3,000 Prisoners Clean Water and Sanitation
- Samosa Festival is On in Nairobi
- Heartstrings in Another Comedy
- Govts, Investors Engage RVR in Rail Bid
- Mwangi Replaces Mwebesa At NSE
- Riepa Hosts Business Association
- ICTR Petitions UN for Arrest of Kabuga
- UBA to Invest SH360 Billion in Kenya
- Free Movement of People Too, Not Just Goods and Capital
- Judges Running Out of Money?
The Nation (Nairobi)
April 21, 2008
News Article By Ouma Wanzala
Plans to move more than 1,900 Kenyan refuges who have been camping at a transit camp in Uganda have been put on hold.
The UNHCR Uganda office said the refugees at Mulanda camp will not be moved because their new camp in the west of the country was not ready.
"We are yet to start the relocation of the refugees to Kiryandongo refugee settlement in Masindi district in Western Uganda but we sent some people to go ahead to assess what the situation is like," Ms Roberta Russo, the external relations officer at UNHCR Uganda said.
She told the Nation that after discussion with refugees in Mulanda about their findings, people who wished to stay in Uganda would be moved to the new camp.
She said the refugees would not be forced back to Kenya until they feel secure to return home themselves.
The Kenyans fled in January following the eruption of violence after the December disputed polls that left 1,200 dead and more than 350,000 people homeless.
President Kibaki and ODM leader Raila Odinga have since signed a peace deal brokered by former UN secretary general Kofi Annan to end the stalemate.
Meanwhile, some families that have been camping at Busia police station since January have started going back to their homes but they still want the Government to compensate them.
The displaced persons said they were going back to their homes in the hope that the peace deal would hold so that they can resume their normal life.
"Life in camps has been hectic," said Ms Mary Wanjiku.


