![]() |
| Photo: Jane Bauni |
| IMC staff administers drugs to patients in Kesegoni, one of the IDP camps serviced by International Medical Corps’ new mobile medical outreach in Kitale. |
In coordination with the Kenyan Red Cross, the Ministry of Health (MoH), and Catholic Relief Services (CRS), International Medical Corps looks to penetrate IDP camps in and around Kitale, a town in the North Rift Valley where the U.N. estimates 40,000 people have migrated to three large and 12 small resettlement areas. With the demand for care high and the supply of resources limited, IMC will supplement others’ aid efforts in the area, fanning out to some of Kitale’s medically underserved satellite communities, including Kesogono, Kesogni, Sekhendu, Makutano, and Wamuini.
The team also offers psychosocial support to help residents cope with the trauma, stress, and anxiety that resulted from the post-election violence and from their subsequent displacement. One 31-year-old displaced woman named Mary is receiving counseling from International Medical Corps to alleviate chronic insomnia. Through tears, the widow and mother of three recounted the events of the past month. She had been at a nearby market on the day of the presidential election, December 27, when she heard gunshots and saw people running to the local police station. She immediately grabbed her children and ran with the crowd.
“This is when I was told that certain tribes were being killed and their houses burnt,” Mary recalls. “I was told that even mine was on fire – I cried, shouted, and became hysterical, as I carried nothing, but I thanked God that I was with my children.”
![]() |
| Photo: Jane Bauni |
|
IMC Kitale coordinator, Florence, gives a health talk as IDPs wait to be seen by IMC medical staff.
|
Killing nearly 1,000 and displacing approximately 300,000, Kenya’s political unrest has left thousands homeless, without income or access to health services. Brutal clashes among political opponents and marauding gangs have left homes looted and communities devastated. Widespread violence erupted again at the end of January, as two members of Parliament were murdered and turbulent riots broke out again in Kibera and the Rift Valley.
Since its inception nearly 25 years ago, International Medical Corps’ mission has been consistent: relieve the suffering of those impacted by war, natural disaster and disease, by delivering vital health care services that focus on training. This approach of helping people help themselves is critical to returning devastated populations to self-reliance. For more information visit our website at www.imcworldwide.org.
Email this page
Print Friendly











