Thought non-refoulement's one of those sacred, inviolable rules/principles of the world community; some say part of jus cogens. I remember once Tuju pulled the same nonsense, turned back fleeing women and children at the border. Am I missing something? Non of those Westgate, Mpeketoni, Garissa thugs needed Dadaab. Good number of them are citizens. And one can camp at the camps and root out terrorists without victimizing asylum seekers collectively. Returning refuges back to a land where they still fear war or persecution is repulsive. Uhuru needs to have a dialogue, we help him come up with a plan, scapegoating fleeing women and children wont make Kenya safer.
Bella:
What would you be missing? Ruto, on the other hand, seems to be missing plenty of good common sense and basic legal understanding.
* To start with, those refugees actually do have some sort of rights in the matter. The
Universal Declaration on Human Rights:
Article 14: (1) Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution.* When applied to a group of people, the notion that refoulment is permissible in the interests of national security did not died ages ago. If national security issues are involved, what seems to be the accepted standard is that there must be
individualized findings to that effect, and only the individuals involved should be dealt with. So Ruto immediately has two problems:
- He needs to show that particular individuals in those camps threaten Kenya's national security. (Going by standards in some legal cases in a few Western countries, the "internationally accepted bar" seems quite high: it would not be enough to merely show that those particular refugees are very bad guys.)
- He would then need to show how the particulars of those individuals extrapolate directly to the rest of the refugee population. (That seems impossible, and it is where he loses before he even starts.)
* To the extent that Somali refugees "must" return to Somalia, there is an agreement---by the governments of Kenya (
UhuRuto) and Somalia and the UNHCR---to help facilitate a voluntary return. See here:
http://www.refworld.org/pdfid/5285e0294.pdfI don't know how much thinking-through has gone into this matter within GoK. Probably not much.
* There are legal aspects that are worthy of the International Court of Justice and which could end up there.
* Even the most callous folks in the world have something of a sympathetic attitude to those who, through no fault of their own, must seek refuge elsewhere. I doubt that anyone has reflected on how damaging this could be to Kenya's reputation and interests.
* Many of Kenya's less-fortunate, and who are not refugees, get a lot of help from other places. That will be noted by those who provide such help.
After the tough talk is done, I can't imagine how Ruto intends that this "they must leave right now!" will be done, although I won't say it is impossible. But if I were to place a wager, it would be that ambassadors from certain countries will make certain things clear to Uhuru, and that will be the end of the idea. Some saving of face will be required, and for that, some half-hearted thing will be rushed through that is covered my the current agreement.