
Fusion Between Culture and Modernity as Children Dance in Kenyan Refugee Camp
These are refugee children, some who were born in one of Africa's largest camps — Kakuma, located in northern Kenya, where more than 300,000 refugees' livelihoods have been affected by funding cuts that have halved monthly food rations, The Associated Press said.
The children use the Acholi traditional dance as a distraction from hunger and have perfected a survival skill to skip lunches as they stretch their monthly food rations that are currently at 30% of the UN nutritional recommendation per person.
The Acholi people, mostly from Uganda and South Sudan, are among refugees who live in Kakuma camp, which was established in 1992 as a safe haven for people fleeing conflict from dozens of east African countries.
For a moment, the melodious sound of one of the refugee mothers stops the playground buzz of activity as dozens of children sit down to enjoy the traditional dance performance.
The colorful swings doting the community center at Kakuma's Kalobeyei Refugee Settlement were donated by a Swiss organization, Terre des hommes, which still manages the playground aptly named 'Furaha' — Swahili for Happiness.
But the happiness of these children isn't guaranteed now as funding cuts have affected operations here. Fewer resources and staff are available to engage the children and ensure their safety.
One of the dancers, Gladis Amwony, has lived in Kakuma for 8 years now. In recent years, she has started taking part in the Acholi traditional dances to keep her Ugandan roots alive.
The now 20-year-old doesn't imagine ever going back to Uganda and has no recollection of life in her home village.
'I'm happiest when I dance, I feel connected to my ancestors,' the soft-spoken Amwony says after her dance session.
While Amwony and her friends are looking for a cultural connection, just about 5 kilometers (3 miles) from their village in neighboring Kalobeyei Village 3, some boys are in touch with modernity.
The five boys have been practicing a one-of-a-kind dance where they mimic robots, complete with face masks that hide their human faces.
They make their sharp synchronized moves that they have been perfecting for months.
The boys will be part of performances that will be showcased during this year's World Refugee Day, as an example of the talent and resilience that exists among the refugee community.
This younger generation of dancers make precision moves in a small hall with play and learning items stored in a cabinet that is branded with an American flag, an indication that it was donated by the U.S government.
Such donations are now scarce, with the United States having cut down on funding in March.
These cuts have affected operations here, with the future stardom hopes for these children dimming by the day.
The center, which previously featured daily programs such as taekwondo and ballet, may not be operational in a few months if the funding landscape remains as is.
'We are now reducing some of the activities because we are few. The staff are few and even per day we only have one staff remaining in the center and it is really hard for him/her to conduct 500 children,' said John Papa, a community officer for Terre des hommes in Kalobeyei Village 3.
These programs do more than entertain the children — they keep them away from issues such as child labor, abuse and crime which as a major concern for humanitarian organizations in Kakuma.
And as the children dance and play beneath the sweltering sun, the only hope is that these child friendly spaces remain operational for years.
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Arab News
2 days ago
- Arab News
Why not enough food is reaching people in Gaza even after Israel eased its blockade
International outcry over images of emaciated children and increasing reports of hunger-related deaths have pressured Israel to let more aid into the Gaza Strip. This week, Israel paused fighting in parts of Gaza and airdropped food. But aid groups and Palestinians say the changes have only been incremental and are not enough to reverse what food experts say is a ' worst-case scenario of famine' unfolding in the war-ravaged territory. The new measures have brought an uptick in the number of aid trucks entering Gaza. But almost none of it reaches UN warehouses for distribution. Instead, nearly all the trucks are stripped of their cargo by crowds that overwhelm them on the roads as they drive from the borders. The crowds are a mix of Palestinians desperate for food and gangs armed with knives, axes or pistols who loot the goods to then hoard or sell. Many have also been killed trying to grab the aid. Witnesses say Israeli troops often open fire on crowds around the aid trucks, and hospitals have reported hundreds killed or wounded. The Israeli military says it has only fired warning shots to control crowds or at people who approach its forces. The alternative food distribution system run by the Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has also been marred by violence. International airdrops of aid have resumed. But aid groups say airdrops deliver only a fraction of what trucks can supply. Also, many parcels have landed in now-inaccessible areas that Palestinians have been told to evacuate, while others have plunged into the Mediterranean Sea, forcing people to swim out to retrieve drenched bags of flour. Here's a look at why the aid isn't being distributed: A lack of trust The UN says that longstanding restrictions on the entry of aid have created an unpredictable environment, and that while a pause in fighting might allow more aid in, Palestinians are not confident aid will reach them. 'This has resulted in many of our convoys offloaded directly by starving, desperate people as they continue to face deep levels of hunger and are struggling to feed their families,' said Olga Cherevko, a spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA. 'The only way to reach a level of confidence is by having a sustained flow of aid over a period of time,' she said. Israel blocked food entirely from entering Gaza for 2 ½ months starting in March. Since it eased the blockade in late May, it allowed in a trickle of aid trucks for the UN, about 70 a day on average, according to official Israeli figures. That is far below the 500-600 trucks a day that UN agencies say are needed — the amount that entered during a six-week ceasefire earlier this year. Much of the aid is stacked up just inside the border in Gaza because UN trucks could not pick it up. The UN says that was because of Israeli military restrictions on its movements and because of the lawlessness in Gaza. Israel has argued that it is allowing sufficient quantities of goods into Gaza and tried to shift the blame to the UN 'More consistent collection and distribution by UN agencies and international organizations = more aid reaching those who need it most in Gaza,' the Israeli military agency in charge of aid coordination, COGAT, said in a statement this week. With the new measures this week, COGAT, says 220-270 truckloads a day were allowed into Gaza on Tuesday and Wednesday, and that the UN was able to pick up more trucks, reducing some of the backlog at the border. Aid missions still face 'constraints' Cherevko said there have been 'minor improvements' in approvals by the Israeli military for its movements and some 'reduced waiting times' for trucks along the road. But she said the aid missions are 'still facing constraints.' Delays of military approval still mean trucks remain idle for long periods, and the military still restricts the routes that the trucks can take onto a single road, which makes it easy for people to know where the trucks are going, UN officials say. Antoine Renard, who directs the World Food Program's operations in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, said Wednesday that it took nearly 12 hours to bring in 52 trucks on a 10-kilometer (6 mile) route. 'While we're doing everything that we can to actually respond to the current wave of starvation in Gaza, the conditions that we have are not sufficient to actually make sure that we can break that wave,' he said. Aid workers say the changes Israel has made in recent days are largely cosmetic. 'These are theatrics, token gestures dressed up as progress,' said Bushra Khalidi, Oxfam's policy lead for Israel and the Palestinian territories. 'Of course, a handful of trucks, a few hours of tactical pauses and raining energy bars from the sky is not going to fix irreversible harm done to an entire generation of children that have been starved and malnourished for months now,' she said. Breakdown of law and order As desperation mounts, Palestinians are risking their lives to get food, and violence is increasing, say aid workers. Muhammad Shehada, a political analyst from Gaza who is a visiting fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, said aid retrieval has turned into the survival of the fittest. 'It's a Darwin dystopia, the strongest survive,' he said. A truck driver said Wednesday that he has driven food supplies four times from the Zikim crossing on Gaza's northern border. Every time, he said, crowds a kilometer long (0.6 miles) surrounded his truck and took everything on it after he passed the checkpoint at the edge of the Israeli military-controlled border zones. He said some were desperate people, while others were armed. He said that on Tuesday, for the first time, some in the crowd threatened him with knives or small arms. He spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing for his safety. Ali Al-Derbashi, another truck driver, said that during one trip in July armed men shot the tires, stole everything, including the diesel and batteries and beat him. 'If people weren't starving, they wouldn't resort to this,' he said. Israel has said it has offered the UN armed escorts. The UN has refused, saying it can't be seen to be working with a party to the conflict – and pointing to the reported shootings when Israeli troops are present. Uncertainty and humiliation Israel hasn't given a timeline for how long the measures it implemented this week will continue, heightening uncertainty and urgency among Palestinians to seize the aid before it ends. Palestinians say the way it's being distributed, including being dropped from the sky, is inhumane. 'This approach is inappropriate for Palestinians, we are humiliated,' said Rida, a displaced woman. Momen Abu Etayya said he almost drowned because his son begged him to get aid that fell into the sea during an aid drop. 'I threw myself in the ocean to death just to bring him something,' he said. 'I was only able to bring him three biscuit packets'.


Arab News
3 days ago
- Arab News
UN says Gaza aid delivery conditions ‘far from sufficient'
GENEVA: The United Nations' humanitarian agency said Wednesday that the conditions for delivering aid into Gaza were 'far from sufficient' to meet the immense needs of its 'desperate, hungry people.' OCHA also said fuel deliveries were nowhere near what is needed to keep health, emergency, water and telecommunications services running in the besieged Palestinian territory. This week, Israel launched daily pauses in its military operations in some parts of the Gaza Strip and opened secure routes to enable UN agencies and other aid groups to distribute food in the densely populated territory of more than two million. However, these pauses alone 'do not allow for the continuous flow of supplies required to meet immense needs levels in Gaza,' OCHA said in an update. 'While the UN and its partners are taking advantage of any opportunity to support people in need during the unilateral tactical pauses, the conditions for the delivery of aid and supplies are far from sufficient,' the agency said. 'For example, for UN drivers to access the Kerem Shalom crossing — a fenced-off area — Israeli authorities must approve the mission, provide a safe route through which to travel, provide multiple 'green lights' on movement, as well as a pause in bombing, and, ultimately, open the iron gates to allow them to enter.' OCHA warned that four days into Israel's 'tactical pauses,' deaths due to hunger and malnutrition were still occurring, as were casualties among those seeking aid. 'Desperate, hungry people' continue to offload the small amounts of aid from the trucks that are able to exit the crossings, it said. 'Current fuel entries are insufficient to meet life-saving critical needs and represent a drop in the ocean,' it added. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification Initiative — a group of monitors who advise the UN on impending crises — said Tuesday the worst-case scenario of famine was now unfolding in Gaza. OCHA called for all crossings into Gaza to open, and a broad range of humanitarian and commercial supplies to be allowed in.


Arab News
26-07-2025
- Arab News
A data-driven blueprint for a flourishing Africa
International dialogues on African development remain fixated on redefining success rather than materially enabling its realization. Groundbreaking research across 40 African nations reveals populations consistently excel in nonmaterial dimensions of human thriving, even amid severe economic constraints. Consider Nigeria, ranked fifth globally in nonfinancial flourishing indicators despite its middle-income status. There, a majority of citizens report robust social relationships and exceptional levels of forgiveness, outperforming wealthier nations. Kenya and Egypt follow closely at seventh and 10th, respectively. In Senegal and Ghana, over three-quarters of the population experiences daily enjoyment and laughter — testament to emotional resilience untethered from gross domestic product per capita. Rwanda and Ethiopia demonstrate similar strengths, with populations reporting high social well-being metrics such as feeling respected and engaging in daily learning, despite ranking among the world's least-affluent nations. This divergence is jarring: Sierra Leone, facing heightened food insecurity, ranks 135th in life evaluations globally, yet West African neighbors such as Senegal report surprising levels of optimism about living standards improving. The contradiction exposes a fatal flaw in current development frameworks. While African societies organically cultivate profound human strengths — communal bonds in Nigeria's wazobia tradition, Ubuntu-inspired resilience in Southern Africa, or Ethiopia's dedication to collective learning — the global response offers mere measurement instead of meaningful support. Mauritius' relatively high global life evaluation ranking coexists with its paradoxical stress levels, proving economic stability alone does not guarantee flourishing. This evidence demands a rethink: If 87 percent of Nigerians thrive socially without material abundance, why do development policies prioritize economic metrics over social infrastructure? When Kenya outranks industrialized nations in daily enjoyment, yet places 115th in life satisfaction, it reveals the inadequacy of single-dimension assessments. Africa's organic flourishing, rooted in community, character, and meaning, is not a footnote to development. It is the blueprint. Yet the machinery of international aid remains calibrated to inputs Africa has not requested, ignoring the outputs it demonstrably achieves. The persistent refinement of well-being metrics, while academically rigorous, risks becoming a sophisticated form of inaction. Consider Tanzania, ranked 11th globally in multidimensional flourishing, yet grappling with systemic gaps in housing and education access. Or Nigeria, where nearly half report financial instability despite the nation's fifth-place global ranking in nonmaterial flourishing, 87 percent exhibit exceptional character virtues like forgiveness, and three in four maintain robust social bonds. These divergences expose a troubling reality: Cataloging strengths without addressing corresponding deficits is an analytical dead end. The evidence is unambiguous: Thriving social ecosystems coexist with material deprivation. Kenya, ninth globally in daily learning opportunities, reports only 115th in life satisfaction — a paradox where intellectual curiosity flourishes amid broader systemic challenges. Ethiopia, ranking 121st in educational access, trails Kenya's emotional resilience. These societies do not require more sophisticated scorecards; they need targeted investment aligned with documented needs. Yet the development sector remains seduced by quantification. Mauritius' positive life evaluation masks heightened stress levels, while oil-rich Gabon trails in emotional well-being. At the same time, Algeria's food insecurity rate of just under 20 percent still represents millions denied basic sustenance. In a nutshell, when indices celebrate non-financial flourishing while material suffering persists, they inadvertently sanitize inequality. Documenting African resilience, while valuable, remains an insufficient academic exercise if divorced from concrete action. Hafed Al-Ghwell Africa's organic wisdom, collective dignity, intergenerational support, and joy amid adversity, demands more than documentation. It requires deploying resources toward the specific fissures revealed by the data: financial inclusion for Nigeria's struggling bottom half, educational infrastructure in Tanzania, and healthcare equity from Algeria to Chad. Until then, well-being metrics serve as epitaphs for potential, not blueprints for progress. Documenting African resilience, while valuable, remains an insufficient academic exercise if divorced from concrete action. True partnership requires channeling resources decisively toward priorities defined by African communities themselves. The evidence is unequivocal: Populations are actively constructing well-being frameworks rooted in indigenous philosophies emphasizing communal bonds over individualistic metrics. Yet the transformative power of these organic structures is systematically throttled by deficits in foundational capabilities. Consider food insecure countries, where more than two-thirds consistently report lacking money for food. This crippling economic reality directly impedes the potential of community-driven support networks, however strong their cultural foundation. Endless refinement of well-being indicators, while intellectually engaging, becomes a distraction when basic needs remain unmet for vast segments of the population. The imperative is a fundamental redirection: shifting energy and capital toward enabling African-conceived and African-led solutions. This redirection demands targeted investment in areas proven to underpin dignity and agency, directly addressing the deficiencies quantified in the very surveys critiquing narrow approaches. Chronic underfunding of education, particularly in the humanities essential for ethical reasoning and civic character, must be reversed. The data reveals a continent-wide chasm: Kenya ranks ninth globally for daily learning experiences, reflecting vibrant intellectual engagement, while Algeria languishes at 125th, suggesting systemic barriers to personal development. Financing educational models that intentionally marry skills training with moral and civic development is not a luxury; it is foundational for sustainable, self-directed flourishing. Similarly, investing in physical infrastructure that enhances daily dignity, for example safe housing, reliable sanitation and accessible clean water is non-negotiable. These are not abstract ideals, but tangible requirements highlighted by low rankings in perceived living standards improvement. Such investments directly tackle the environmental 'livability' factors demonstrably linked to well-being. Crucially, this shift necessitates accepting African definitions of success as legitimate policy blueprints, not anthropological curiosities. Mauritius' position as Africa's leader in life evaluations and the consistently high rankings for positive affect across West Africa, measured by, for instance, levels of enjoyment and optimism about the future, are not statistical outliers to be explained away. They are valid, contextually grounded expressions of prosperity emerging from distinct social, cultural, and economic realities. Policies anchored in externally imposed definitions of progress will inevitably falter. Recognizing the strength inherent in communal orientations, as seen in Nigeria's high ranking for experiencing harmony with others, or the resilience reflected in Kenya's unexpectedly high enjoyment ranking despite lower life satisfaction, provides an essential starting point. Prosperity in Africa manifests diversely; policy must reflect this complexity rather than force conformity to foreign — and too often out-of-touch — paradigms. Enabling self-determined priorities means respecting the evidence of what already works within African contexts and scaling it through aligned, substantial resource commitment. The data provides the map; the will to follow it, investing in capabilities and dignity defined from within, is the test of genuine partnership. When Nigeria consistently outperforms advanced economies on core human dimensions, the message is clear: Africa does not need the world to redefine success; it needs the world to respect and resource its pathways to sustainably achieving it.