U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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Starvation Closing In: Urgent Help Needed in Kenya’s Refugee Camps

June 25, 2025

The U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) voices grave concern over the most recent in a series of devastating cuts to food rations, which have affected over 700,000 refugees in Kenya’s Kakuma and Dadaab refugee camps and Kalobeyei Settlement. These cuts are a direct consequence of the withdrawal of life-saving humanitarian assistance by the United States and other donor governments, creating critical funding shortages that impact the United Nations (UN) World Food Programme (WFP) and partner agencies.

As of June, refugees are receiving just 28 percent of their full in-kind food ration, amounting to only 3 kilograms (kg) of rice, 1 kg of lentils, and 500 milliliters (mL) of cooking oil per person per month—far below the nutritional benchmark recommended by the UN. Simultaneously, all cash-transfer assistance has been halted, eliminating refugees’ ability to purchase essential proteins, vegetables, and supplementary items. The situation has become so dire that some refugee mothers have chosen to end their lives instead of witnessing the starvation of their children.

Levels of food insecurity in Kenya’s refugee camps were already devastatingly high. The Global Acute Malnutrition (GAM) rate among refugee children under five and pregnant or breastfeeding women in Kenya is above 13 percent. Starving children now fill hospital beds, severely malnourished, with time running out. Should this continue, refugees in Kenya will face the specter of a widespread, man-made famine.

“Behind every statistic is a child going hungry, a mother skipping meals so her baby can eat, a teenager forced to abandon school to search for food or work,” said USCRI President and CEO Eskinder Negash. “These are not abstract numbers—they are families who have already fled war, persecution, and unimaginable trauma, only to now face starvation in places they hoped would offer safety. They are now left to languish in open-air prisons.”

WFP warns that August brings an additional wave of uncertainty if the agency does not receive immediate funding. The agency states that it urgently requires 44 million USD to provide full rations and cash assistance for all refugees in Kenya through August. Without it, even more refugees will starve.

Failing to act swiftly will severely undermine refugee health, safety, and dignity, while eroding progress towards integration and self-reliance under Kenya’s Refugee Act and the Shirika Plan. USCRI appeals to the international community—governments, the private sector, and international financial institutions—to immediately mobilize emergency funding to restore full food rations, reinstate cash-based assistance, reopen nutrition support services, and reinforce protection measures in Kenya’s refugee camps.

 

USCRI, founded in 1911, is a non-governmental, not-for-profit international organization committed to working on behalf of refugees and immigrants and their transition to a dignified life.

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