Environmental Refugees
Part of Child survival in a changing climate

Borneo, Indonesia - 2014
Artisanal gold mining

Gobi desert, Mongolia - 2012
Besieged by the Gobi

Dadaab, Kenya - 2012
The hidden focus

Dhule, India - 2011
Blown away

Tsho Rolpa Glacial Lake, Nepal - 2011
Glacial lake outburst flood

Chirindu-Zambia - 2014
Thriving mosquitoes

Bengal Bay, Bangladesh - 2010
Coastal flooding in Bengal Bay

Shael-Burkina Faso - 2012
The shifting sands of the Sahel
There is no clear definition for those people called “Environmental refugees” and this category isn’t covered by the 1951 Refugee Convention; such Convention extends only to people who have a well-founded fear of being persecuted because of their race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, and are unable or unwilling to seek protection from their home Countries. Environmental migration is like an unexploded device: in a not-too-distant future, the whole planet shall face the economic and social burden of its consequences. By 2050, one in 45 people will be an environmental migrant—200/250 million people in total – today there are already tens of millions (source, IOM and UN). Ninety percent of these 200/250 million migrants live in developing countries. Composed of 5 camps and with a population of more than 420.000 refugees, Dadaab – located in the North of Kenya and a few kilometers from the border of Somalia – is the largest refugee camp in the world. Three quarters of its population are children under the age of 12, women and elderly people. However, arriving to Dadaab is no survival guarantee, especially for children who are malnourished, unhealthy and vulnerable. The camp was originally opened as a temporary site in 1992 and is still home to people fleeing famine and drought. Thousands of Somalis are heading to the Dadaab refugee camp. Hope is buried there, in the unraveling of shanties kept together by the desperation of those who try to escape the famine that hit millions of people in the Horn of Africa. (text by Luca Catalano Gonzaga).


































