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Dzaleka Refugee Camp

Coordinates: 13°39′46″S 33°46′48″E / 13.662814°S 33.78°E / -13.662814; 33.78
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Dzaleka Refugee Camp
Dzaleka Refugee Camp in 2024
Dzaleka Refugee Camp in 2024
Dzaleka Refugee Camp is located in Malawi
Dzaleka Refugee Camp
Dzaleka Refugee Camp
Location in Malawi
Coordinates: 13°39′46″S 33°46′48″E / 13.662814°S 33.78°E / -13.662814; 33.78
Country Malawi
RegionDowa District
Time zoneGMT
 • Summer (DST)GMT
WebsiteDzaleka.com

Dzaleka Refugee Camp is in Malawi's Dowa District, 41 kilometres from Lilongwe. 93% of the approximately 52,000 people (in 2024) who live there are women or children. Nearly all of Malawi's refugees live here. The new refugees originate from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Burundi and Rwanda, but they have arrived from elsewhere. The UNHCR and the Malawian government made the camp a home for refugees in 1994.

History

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The camp is in the highlands of Malawi's Dowa District, about forty kilometres from Lilongwe[1] It had been a prison for political prisoners.[2] There were less than a hundred prisoners there in 1960 farming sisal and creating string, rope and mats.[3] By the 1970s, the farm now had about 400 prisoners and the conditions were described as appalling with regular beatings and torture. Reading material was minimal - it included the Bible and the Koran. Three of the prisoners, John Liwomba, Bernard Njakare and George Ndomondo would later enter the church as ministers.[3]

During the 1990s there was political unrest and strife in Somalia (1991), Burundi (1993), Rwanda (1994) and the DRC (1993). Hundreds of thousands of refugees sought shelter from genocide, rape and war in nearby countries. Malawi was not an obvious destination geographically but it was relatively peaceful. Some refugees sheltered in Tanzania and the DRC and then continued on to Malawi.[4]

Dzaleka became a refugee camp in 1994,[5] after an agreement was made with the UNHCR and refugees were moved from Lilongwe market to here. There were initially about a thousand, but by 2003 there were 6,000. In 2008 it was 10,000 and in 2010 it was 16,000.[3] The camp was designed to take 12,000 residents.[1] The refugees are not given access to Malawian citizenship and with the exception of a few patients in Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital they are denied access to the facilities open to citizens.[3] It was reported in 2012 that shops set up outside the camp by refugees were attacked and looted as locals objected to the competition.[6]

Most of the residents are from the Democratic Republic of the Congo with less from Burundi, Ethiopia, Rwanda and Somali. The camp has been supported by UNHCR since it began.[7] The camp did not appear on the official map of Malawi in 2011.[3]

In 2014, Trésor Nzengu Mpauni (aka Menes La Plume), who was a refugee from Lubumbashi, started what became an annual arts and culture event called the Tumaini Festival.[5] The festival became the largest source of external funding as it attracted 50,000 people who came to see over 100 artists in 2023.[8]

At the end of 2020 two Malawians, Ndapile Mkuwu and Zola Manyungwa, decided to use OpenStreetMap to create a map of the refugee camp. They created a project named MapMalawi. They were undergraduates at the University of Malawi. They obtained a grant and permission to fly drones over the camp. The pictures from the drones allowed local volunteers and the African Drone and Data Academy to create a map. The map showed water points, dumping sites, schools and hospitals.[9]

2024 and on

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Rwandan cultural dance on World Refugee Day 2022 in Dzaleka
OpenStreetmap of Dzaleka market, hospital and school in 2025[10]

93% of the approximately 52,000 people (in 2024) who live there are women or children. Nearly all of Malawi's refugees live here as the total is estimated to be below 57,000 in 2024. At that time there were 300 new refugees in the camp every day.[1] The camp feeds itself by subsistence farming.[2]

New refugees in 2024 originate from the DRC, Burundi, and Rwanda.[1] In 2024 Malawi's government was planning a new refugee camp to ease overcrowding.[1]

In 2024 4,000 households shared an insurance payout that was innovative. Humanitarian groups had taken out insurance against bad weather. The El Nino phenomena had led to crop failures. The amount of money received ($33 per household per month) would not cover the cost of lost crops but it would help to mitigate some of the effects.[11]

A major income in the camp comes from people smuggling. Ethiopians pay criminal gangs to smuggle them into South Africa where they can work for friends and relatives. The Ethiopians are billeted with people living in the camp and they can earn substantial sums. If people assist with taking them to the border they can be paid a good sum for a single activity. The police try and crack down but they are bribed. Despite the income the people of Dzaleka want the smuggling to stop because they see how the Ethiopians are treated badly.[12]

The UNHCR announced in 2025 that they had only 12% of the funds required to support the refugees who live there. This is at a time when the World Food Programme is also reducing its support. Payments of $10.3 dollars to family members was reduced to less than $9 in February, and there were no more payments planned.[7]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Malawi". UNHCR US. 12 June 2025. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
  2. ^ a b "IAFR • Int. Association For Refugees". iafr.org. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
  3. ^ a b c d e Baker, Colin (2011). "Come Walk with Me: Three Visits to Dzaleka". The Society of Malawi Journal. 64 (1): 34–41. ISSN 0037-993X. JSTOR 41289170.
  4. ^ Schafer, Loveness H. (2002). "True Survivors: East African Refugee Women". Africa Today. 49 (2): 29–48. ISSN 0001-9887.
  5. ^ a b "Dzaleka Refugee Camp". Dzaleka.com – Exploring Refugee Culture Through Stories, People, and Community. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
  6. ^ Ki-moon, Ban (21 August 2012). Report of the Secretary-General to the General Assembly: Assistance to Refugees, Returnees and Displaced Persons in Africa (Report).
  7. ^ a b "Refugees in Dzaleka refugee camp struggle to make ends meet amid funding cuts". UNHCR Africa. Retrieved 7 July 2025.
  8. ^ "BBC World Service - The Documentary, Tumaini". BBC. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
  9. ^ "MapMalawi's Dzaleka Mapping Project- OSM Mapping for People Living in Protracted Crisis". Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team. 18 June 2022. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
  10. ^ "Node: Dzaleka Market (11029586456)". OpenStreetMap. 6 July 2023. Retrieved 7 July 2025.
  11. ^ "Malawi refugees receive first-ever insurance payout". Voice of America. 21 November 2024. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
  12. ^ "Malawi refugee camp raid unlikely to smash people smuggling networks". www.thenewhumanitarian.org. 1 August 2024. Retrieved 6 July 2025.