Thank you very much.
The Dadaab refugee camp has become the global face of the Somalia refugee crisis. The camp has been in existence for the last 27 years, and it continues to exist. A good number of the Somali refugees in the camp have chosen to go back to Somalia. They have voluntarily gone back. The majority of them who continue to require protection are still in the camp.
One of the reasons that informed the Nairobi declaration that I referred to is exactly because the Kenyan government hosted the first-ever regional summit to find a solution for the Somali refugees in the Horn of Africa. All the countries in the Horn of Africa that continue to host the Somali refugees participated in this summit.
We have a declaration; we have an action and commitments from this government. The Dadaab refugee camp continues to require the support of all of us.
With the youth in the camp, as I said, half the population are school-age youth who require unique attention. This situation has not confronted us in the past.
The camp is open. Some Somalis have made the choice to go back voluntarily, but those who remain there continue to require our protection and support.