Humanitarian aid and development cooperation in the Horn of Africa
The example of Dadaab shows that emergency aid for refugees and displaced persons alone is not a long-term solution. In addition to humanitarian aid, development activities are needed to reduce the root causes of migration and to integrate refugees and displaced persons in first countries of asylum. The SDC assumes an innovative leadership role in the Horn of Africa. Since summer 2016 it has been jointly leading the ‘Informal Humanitarian Donor Group Somalia’ with Denmark and advocating a sustainable solution for long-term displaced persons. Two Swiss experts at the office of the UN Resident Coordinator for Somalia are actively working on the integrated approach.
Horn of Africa (Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Eritrea, Djibouti)
Where other international actors look away, the SDC takes action. For example, it is supporting the development of national primary healthcare provision in Somalia. At the same time, it brings the traditional humanitarian actors and development organisations to the table and, with the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, explores new ways of integrating Somalia’s national healthcare system, which has been funded by humanitarian aid for 25 years, into the country’s national healthcare plans.
Horn of Africa: two SDC humanitarian workers tell us about their work, article
To foster the local integration of refugees and displaced people, the SDC also invests in basic education and vocational education and training. Housing 180,000 people, Kakuma in Northern Kenya is also one of the world’s largest refugee camps. Around half of the refugees living there are from South Sudan. “We don’t like it here, but there is nowhere else for us in this world”. These are the words of a Kakuma resident, who sees little hope for the future for herself and her family. In order to counteract this trend and to offer young men and women prospects for a brighter future, the SDC launched the ‘Skills for Life’ project in 2013.
Kakuma: Developing vocational skills in a refugee camp, SDC project