Batula is an ambulance driver for the 探花精选 in Dadaab, Kenya鈥攁nd the only female driver in the region. She is also the only driver that ventures unaccompanied through treacherous terrain. You鈥檒l usually find her taking mothers in labor to hospitals so they can deliver their babies safely鈥攕ometimes up to 15 patients in one day.

Being a driver in her region has come with many hardships as a woman, but Batula has always been determined and fearless: 鈥淢any men are doing this job,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey really don鈥檛 want a female driver, but I don鈥檛 mind them. I work hard and it is part of my job. They can say anything, but I will continue doing my job."

 

Batula鈥檚 story

Batula is originally from Garissa, a town in northeastern Kenya, and now works in Hagadera camp in the Dadaab region, home to the largest refugee complex in the country (and third largest in the world). 

She has been working for the 探花精选 for four years, but has spent an impressive 22 years driving as her career.

鈥淚 loved it when I was in school, I used to cry saying 鈥業 want to learn how to drive,鈥 so I finished school and learned,鈥 Batula recalls. 鈥淚 got married and then I learned how to drive and started this career.鈥

With the support of the (EU), the 探花精选 ambulance service runs all day, seven days a week. Batula usually spends her days transporting mothers in labour to hospitals so they can deliver their babies safely, sometimes driving up to 15 patients in one day. 

At times she has to cross difficult terrain, her vehicle being the only one to pass through flooded areas without any escort.

鈥淚 am carrying all of the patients because coming here is a problem. You see that water...crossing it is a problem especially when the water is deep.鈥

Amina Abukar Abdi and her new born baby meet with doctors in order to be discharged from Hagadera Refugee Camp Hospital Maternity Ward, run by the 探花精选.
Amina Abukar Abdi and her new born baby meet with doctors in order to be discharged from Hagadera Refugee Camp Hospital Maternity Ward, run by the 探花精选.
Photo: Fahmo Mohammed for the 探花精选

But Batula has had to fight for her place as a driver in the region. 鈥淲hen I was at my previous job, I went through a lot... being insulted, people throwing stones at me, but that did not deter me from doing my job. I was still doing my job because I just wanted to excel in my career,鈥 she says.

鈥淢any men are doing this job. They really don鈥檛 want a female driver, but I don鈥檛 mind them. I work hard and it is part of my job. They can say anything, but I continue doing my job.鈥

Despite the hardships she鈥檚 faced from being a woman in this role, she is very proud of her work. And so are her children.

鈥淭hey are immensely proud of me. My firstborn is a driver and the two boys are drivers with their own cars,鈥 says Batula. 

鈥淚鈥檓 very happy and proud of my work; to carry women who are in labour.鈥

How is the 探花精选 helping in Dadaab, Kenya?

Outside the female ward at the 探花精选鈥檚 Hagadera Refugee Camp Hospital, Kenya (part of the Dadaab complex). Families of patients walk out during visiting hours.
Outside the female ward at the 探花精选鈥檚 Hagadera Refugee Camp Hospital, Kenya (part of the Dadaab complex). Families of patients walk out during visiting hours.
Photo: Fahmo Mohammed for the 探花精选

Relief groups in Kenya鈥檚 Dadaab refugee camp have become increasingly strained as over 100,000 refugees from Somalia fleeing drought and conflict have arrived in recent years. 

Funding from the EU supports 探花精选 teams in delivering lifesaving emergency aid including healthcare, women鈥檚 protection services, and legal rights education to refugee populations and their host communities. Our health, nutrition, and conflict resolution programmes in Kenya have delivered critical care to over 300,000 people a year, including nutrition support for malnourished children and supporting refugees and vulnerable Kenyans to start businesses and rebuild their lives.

About our work with the European Union

to provide life-saving support to people caught in conflict and disasters around the world. Our work funded by the EU enables people to survive, recover and rebuild their lives.