The largest refugee camp in Malawi is Dzaleka located in Dowa District, around 50 km from Lilongwe, the capital city of Malawi, Dzaleka was established by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in 1994 in response to a surge of forcibly displaced people fleeing genocide, violence and wars in Burundi, Rwanda and the D.R. Congo. Dzaleka Refugee Camp hosts around 5,000 refugees. Prior to becoming a refugee camp, the Dzaleka facility had served as a political prison to around 6, 000 inmates.
More than half of Malawians live on less than one US Dollar per day. The vast majority rely on subsistence farming. Industry is limited and major exports include: tea, coffee, sugar, and tobacco. Despite being a poor nation, Malawi currently hosts close to 45,000 refugees. Most refugees come from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, Ethiopia, and Somalia.
Malawi’s policies regulating the movement and the right to employment of refugees make opportunities to earn a living outside the camp very limited. Therefore, the majority of refugees are completely reliant on food aid and other external assistance for survival.
It is in this difficult environment that Amahoro Ministries for Communities works with the refugees and their host community in peace building and conflicts resolution workshops, counseling, access to a small business development, education and empowering christian. Amahoro Ministries for Communities (A.M.C) was created in 2008 by Pastor Charles Baraka , were left as a refugee for many years across Dzaleka refugee camps Malawi. With his experience, Charles and Gilbertine were make different by brings peace, counseling,forgiveness and unity in different communities living in refugee camp.