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African HRC Advisory to Kakuma LGBTI Refugees at Gate & General Warnings Including Activists

Re: P.O.C. Kakuma Camp Jan 09, 2020

From: African Human Rights Coalition:

A. To: POC/ Refugees at Kakuma Reception Center Gate 1. African HRC is reaching out to LGBTI Refugees/ P.O.C at Kakuma Reception Center and Gate and asking you to fully and peacefully cooperate with UNHCR for interviews and placement:

2. We have been assured by UNHCR that each individual will be privately interviewed and specially assessed by UNHCR, one by one and then you will receive a tailored solution to your needs. You will be assigned the best available placement/shelter/ services depending on your situation. YOU MUST take full advantage of this opportunity for yourself.

3. African HRC urges POC/ Refugees at Kakuma Gate to accept this with patience and to cooperate fully and in good faith with UNHCR.

4. That after UNHCR makes the determination, the individual should accept the tokens/ vouchers and placement decision. Once they do so, UNHCR will provide whatever they can to assist in the comfort and safety for that individual.

5. EACH of you are advised to agree leave reception and gate once assigned a shelter. Because reception is not a long term option. We have asked for other options with UNHCR, but there are none at this time, except an invitation to explore innovative solutions which we shall engage in for the long term. 6. UNHCR in good faith will provide safest available placements. You can tell UNHCR about your concerns for security and they will work with you to provide safety measures. Any problems should be reported immediately to the HELPLINE and Protection Officer.

7. UNHCR has reassured us: that with support of the local authorities in Kakuma they are continuously engaged in efforts aimed at strengthening the security in and around the camp. UNHCR also advises they are engaged in employee sensitivity trainings and they take complaints about staff treatment of refugees very seriously and each instance that is filed in complaint boxes or through other official channels are taken seriously and investigated. If you are experiencing security related incidents PLEASE IMMIEDIATELY AND FIRST report to the police and the UNHCR office in Kakuma. You can also report to African HRC and we will monitor if your report has been received at Helpline.

Please Note: If there is a need to fortify your shelter, as we have noticed other refugees in the camp are doing to protect from theft and vandalism, let us know at African HRC and we will see what we can do to further support your needs. African HRC will help advocate for better facilities. But we cannot do if we are constantly chasing emergencies and crisis.

B. To All LGBTI People of Concern, Activists, and Leadership re Kenya we advise the following for your safety and protection: PLEASE INVEST in SELF-SECURITY as much as possible, as follows:

8. Important: Do not go unpermitted into any area. You can be arrested. Do not travel to Nairobi without permits. You will be arrested and that could hurt your possible chance of resettlement.

9. In general relocation to Nairobi is not an option because of Kenya's encampment policy. We encourage you to avoid arrest. Kenyan Refugee Act says that Kenya can withdrawn refugee status if someone commits a serious crime. Arrest can lose you your resettlement.

10. Transfer to Nairobi: This is against encampment policy. If a particular individual requests a transfer/ permission papers for Nairobi, they will be fully and respectfully heard in the interview by UNHCR staff and if UNHCR sees a viable exception then they will be processed accordingly. We advise all POC that this is generally NOT available. The encampment policy is KENYAN LAW.

11. African HRC is working , as are others on improved long term solutions. 12. Remember we will advocate for you. We will help with your cases, but we cannot take cases of people who do not follow instructions. We denounce violence on all accounts. We will not work with any P.O.C. or refugees who is engaged in violence, incites or threatens violence, even if couched in defensive terms. We promote peaceful conduct. We understand the need for targeted protests and support peaceful protest that is in good faith, while urging the balance to maintain self-security. Note: we are aware that sometimes protests results in arrests and gives Kenyan police an excuse to arrest, even if the protest is peaceful. Arrests in a country that criminalizes LGBTQI people could result in extortion and brutal treatment, similar to the country POC escaped.

13. We have asked UNHCR to be aware we require rapid responses to complaints and situations. If you overwhelm them with numerous activists writing on your behalf, it does not help and many emails could be missed. It takes away their time to actually get the work done. 14. All are advised to invest seriously in self-protection. This is because you are surrounded by 200,000 refugees who have adopted the untruthful narrative of the Colonialists, and religious zealots, who taught that LGBTQI are abominations and should be ostracized from society. Your neighbors may not understand homosexuality. You will be safer if you remain private about your sexuality. That does not mean you should be in the closet. It is important to declare to UNHCR officers and authority your status as LGBTQI as your claim is based on that status. However it is unwise to flaunt LGBTI status in front of others in camp. You can live as LGBTQI in the safety of your enclosures. Flying rainbow flags in Kakuma is not safe. While it should be your right, it is dangerous in the context of kakuma. What you would not do in central Kampala, do not do in Kakuma! Focus on sustaining individual development with the hope of resettlement or economic integration.

15. At Kakuma: Anti-Gay people believe that gays recruit their children. Pride parades and such are misinterpreted. To engage in open displays of being LGBTQI should be accompanied by community pre sensitivity discussions and POC should be aware they would be exposing themselves to danger through such outings. While we understand and respect your rights to do this, African HRC is urging self-protection in partnership with those who are there for your protection.


16. POC are reminded that any violence or criminal activity can result in arrests and having refugee status revoked. This can impact resettlement. It is therefore best that POC focus on individual interests.

C. GENERAL WARNINGS TO ALL:

17. WARNING: Hundreds of armchair activist on social media writing to UNHCR each and every time per case of POC does not help the situation - it makes it slower and worse. This often causes confusion and takes away from the time UNHCR could be using to work on cases and help with resources. Also some of those (Western) activists are rude and alienating and that does not help refugees or help in advocacy. African culture tends to be polite. Westerners stepping on the toes of that politeness can result in backlash to the refugee.

Leadership should not see assaults and security breach incidents as money making opportunity for all, which seems to be the case in some circles. THIS WILL END UP HURTING ALL LEGITIMATE SITUATIONS. There is much opportunism and exploitation helming fundraising and people should be aware that corruption of this nature is ultimately a downfall for all.

18. WARNING: ACTIVISTS and LGBTI POC LEADERSHIP - are asked to STOP providing personal information – Names, numbers and medical info and status of refugee – online, on social media, in groups or in emails - to a wide net of ACTIVISTS, ORGS, PRESS and UNKNOWN people. This is a danger to the refugee and gets spread around unsolicited. THIS IS NOT OK!!! These names, private information and medical pictures such as XRAYS and medical documents being out in the public domain are a breach of the individuals privacy, even if you think you have permission. from the refugee. SO REFRAIN whether you have permission or not. It does nothing at all to help and does not make a situation any better. IN FACT these emails and social media posts have been used as HIT LISTS – and you are contributing to that. 19. WARNING: STOP using words like genocide and death squads in your outreach, when describing the Kenyan authorities, local hosts or Kenya. That is a lie. Exaggeration and dishonesty loses credibility for us all!!! That is NOT what is happening. Kenya does not have death squads. That is like slapping your hosts in the face to say that untruth. While police are can be cruel and unfair and often commit serious human rights infractions – this is NOT death squads. Kenya does not have to agree to host refugees on basis of SOGI – yet they have done so. And so we have to work with them because there is no other alternatives at this time. There are few to no African countries hosting in this robust fashion based on SOGI. We must be aware of this.

20. Yes there is homophobia – and yes there have been targeted attacks by individual groups. BUT to call it death squads? – THERE ARE NONE. While Kenya is a hostile host merely by virtue of its criminalization of homosexualit,, it is still processing LGBTQI refugees and if you continue with this untrue depiction they will end up cutting you off from any opportunity to be a refugee in their country and they will close down the program and there will be no other country to step up to process LGBTQI refugees. Why should they tolerate untrue allegations that make them look bad and continue to host LGBTQI? That does not mean you cannot complain about human rights breaches, beatings, corruption etc. It just means tell the truth and stop inciting a worse situation. NOW many of us do not believe Kenya is working out to be a good solution at this time. HOWEVER we also know that at this time they are the ONLY solution - one of very few possibilities for resettlement on the continent for LGBTQI. So please do not alienate them any further.

21. WARNING: STOP helping straight people pretend they are GAY! Gay people are not being resettled any quicker. It is hurting all the legitimate cases and bringing mistrust to all. 22. WARNING: We are asking people to lay low while we try and come up with better long term solutions for LGBTQI individuals.

23. NOTICE: To Transgender refugees- PLEASE know when it is safe to wear your authentic clothing and when not. This is a very sad situation where we have to warn people about what they should wear. I wish we did not have to say this. We fully understand you are entitled to dress as your true self all the time. We suggest that if you go out to get food, market, walk in streets, your chances of being attacked increase if you wear clothes that others do not understand or see as provocative. We would NEVER tell this to someone who is not in a makeshift temporary refugee camp or a criminalizing country. We also urge caution where you display rainbow flags. We are asking people to lay low while we try and come up with better long term solutions for safety.

WE NEED TIME FOR NEW PLANS. PLEASE COOPERATE IN MEANTIME..

Aluta Continua,

Your African HRC Family

African HRC Jan 2020 ©

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