Reference :
V-P-TZ-E-00058
Date :
17/05/2015
Caption :
Kigoma. Whenever situations of violence occur, women and children bare the biggest brunt. There are many unaccompanied children in Kagunga, probably separated from their families as they fled. The ICRC in collaboration with the Tanzania Red Cross is helping to reunite families who become separated, as well as enabling them to get in touch with their relatives anywhere in the world through the phone call service at Nyarugusu refugee camp. Pre-election tension in Burundi forced many Burundian nationals to flee the country.
Confidentiality level :
public
Publication restrictions :
publication without restrictions
Description :
ICRC website, Photo gallery, 21 may 2015.
"Tanzania: Burundi refugees flood into Kagunga and Kigoma"
Following the pre-election tension in Burundi, Burundian nationals began fleeing to Tanzania, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. To date, the UNHCR has put the number of refugees who have sought asylum in neighbouring countries at over 112,000, of which those fleeing to Tanzania number over 70,000.
In Tanzania the humanitarian situation in Kagunga and Kigoma is dire, with some 50,000 refugees awaiting transportation to Nyarugusu refugee camp. The ICRC is working closely with the Tanzania Red Cross Society (TRCS) on the humanitarian situation in Kagunga and at Nyarugusu refugee camp. Services such as restoring contact with separated family members (restoring family links) are already being provided at Nyarugusu for the new arrivals, while the TRCS is providing first aid in Kagunga and at the transit point at Lake Tanganyika stadium. Red Cross volunteers are also focusing on hygiene with the aim of containing the cholera outbreak.
Original material :
digital
Resolution :
4000x2664
Orientation :
landscape
Colour/B&W :
colour