U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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Press Release: Delegation Warns of Man-Made Starvation in Kakuma as USCRI Launches Pilot Program for Unaccompanied Girls

November 18, 2025

ARLINGTON, VALast week, a U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) delegation, led by USCRI President and CEO Eskinder Negash, visited Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya to gather firsthand insights, deliver critical support, and announce the launch of a pilot program that targets unaccompanied refugee girls. With over 300,000 refugees, the majority children, Kakuma is stretched beyond capacity. During this most recent visit, the delegation witnessed what amounted to man-made starvation due in part to significant cuts to humanitarian assistance from international donors including the United States.

“I have visited many refugee camps, but this was the worst I have seen,” said Negash. “It was devastating and cannot continue. This experience only strengthens my resolve to continue advancing refugee protection in Kakuma and beyond.”

The delegation notes that conditions in Kakuma, originally established in 1992, sharply deteriorated in 2025, with food insecurity reaching record levels. The food ration cuts have left thousands of children at particular risk and without an alternative. USCRI views this as the consequence of more than thirty years of refugee warehousing, something we have long worked to end. With an average of 500 new arrivals per week, according to UNHCR, this will only exacerbate next year.

Against this backdrop, USCRI delivered nearly 900,000 sanitary pads to help address the camp’s growing menstrual hygiene gap. The delivery was the second USCRI has conducted through Keep Girls Dreaming, a menstrual justice initiative that has provided more than 1.4 million sanitary pads to over 12,000 refugee women and girls in Kakuma and Dadaab since 2024.

“While basic services in Kakuma are severely limited, USCRI continues the Keep Girls Dreaming initiative through its pilot program and strives to meet the needs of these girls more holistically,” said Firdaus Bashee, USCRI Kenya Country Director. “Funding cuts from the U.S. government have paralyzed aid agencies like UNHCR and the World Food Program, creating a humanitarian disaster, but USCRI cannot sit by when child vulnerability, food insecurity, and a lack of menstrual hygiene products remain salient issues. We must act now.”

USCRI remains committed to supporting unaccompanied girls in Kakuma and Dadaab by providing menstrual hygiene access and education, food assistance, and protection services to these girls and their households through its new office in Kakuma and full-time staff in the camp.

 

 

ABOUT U.S. COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS 

The U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI), established in 1911, is a nongovernmental, not-for-profit international organization dedicated to addressing the needs and rights of refugees and immigrants. USCRI, working with nearly 200 affiliates, provides legal, social, and health services to refugees, unaccompanied migrating children, trafficking survivors, and other immigrants in all 50 states, El Salvador, Honduras, Kenya, and Mexico. USCRI advocates for the rights of refugees and immigrants both nationally and globally, helping to drive humanitarian policies, practices, and law. 

 

For press inquiries, please contact: [email protected]. 


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