The Kenyan government is benefiting from the camp in many ways. One of them is that most of the people working for the United Nations and the other implementing agencies are Kenyan nationals. In that case, they are employed and are paying taxes to their government. In that way the Kenyan government is benefiting a lot. As I said, a Kenyan person who works for the UN in the camp is earning seven times more than a Kenyan who is working for their own government. In that way the Kenyan government is benefiting from the camp.
In another way, most of the funding.... As Mr. Beuze has just said, the World Bank has given $100 million U.S. to the Kenyan government to develop the surrounding area. The funny thing is that no systems are put in place to ensure whether these funds are being used for the right purposes or not.
One other thing I want to add is that I don't think the Kenyan government is closing the camp for security reasons. I remember once when we were told that al Shabaab was in control of a town that was 10 kilometres from the border base of the Kenyan military. All that time, nothing was happening. I don't understand the reason the Kenyan government all of a sudden said there were al Shabaab hiding in the camp. No, there are no al Shabaab hiding in the camp. Al Shabaab are screened in the same way the Kenyan government and the refugee camps do of refugees. They don't even think the refugees are Muslims any more, or something like that.
I don't think, then, that there are security reasons, and as I said, those are some of the many reasons that the Kenyan government is getting a lot more than the refugees are getting from relief and aid.