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Refugee Consortium of Kenya

1998 establishments in KenyaHuman rights organisations based in KenyaNon-governmental organizationsOrganizations established in 1998Refugee aid organizations

The Refugee Consortium of Kenya (Refugee Consortium of Kenya) also called Haki House (Right House), is a non-governmental organization (NGO) founded in 1998 by Ms. Abi Gitari to address the increasingly complex and deteriorating refugee situation in Kenya, the Great Lakes, and the Horn of Africa Region. RCK was founded by Ms. Abi Gitari and Justice Mbogholi Msagha as a co-founder. Eunice Ndonga-Githinji is its current Executive Director.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Refugee Consortium of Kenya (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Refugee Consortium of Kenya
Ole Odume Road, Nairobi Kilimani division (Westlands)

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -1.2952777777778 ° E 36.775277777778 °
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Address

The Hamptons Serviced Apartments

Ole Odume Road
54102 Nairobi, Kilimani division (Westlands)
Nairobi County, Kenya
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RFUEA Ground
RFUEA Ground

The RFUEA Ground is a rugby union stadium located on the Ngong Road in Nairobi, Kenya. It was purpose built to be the home of the national team and to serve as the headquarters of the Rugby Football Union of Kenya (RFUK). Coincidentally, the RFUEA ground has another parallel with Twickenham Stadium in the United Kingdom in that it also serves as the home ground for the Kenya Harlequin Football Club, just as their sister club the London Harlequins once played at Twickenham.Many internationally renowned teams have played here including the British Lions (1955 & 1962), the Barbarians (1958), the Springboks(1961) and Wales (1964). The 2009 IRB Junior World Rugby Trophy took place on this site (with some games also being played on the neighbouring Impala RFC ground). As the site for one of the largest and most prestigious annual sevens tournaments in Africa, the Safari Sevens, the RFUEA ground has hosted matches between such diverse teams as Samoa, Emerging Springboks, Zimbabwe, British Army, Public School Wanderers, Bristol University and Université de Grenoble. At an altitude of 1,650 metres (5,410 ft) above sea-level, it is higher than three of the four vaunted stadia of South Africa's highveld; Loftus Versfeld Stadium Pretoria at 1,214 metres (3,983 ft), the Free State Stadium Bloemfontein 1,400 metres (4,600 ft) and Royal Bafokeng Stadium Rustenburg 1,500 metres (4,900 ft). Only Ellis Park in Johannesburg at 1,750 metres (5,740 ft) is higher.