[men speakaking nativeve langua] man: there is a lot of r risk in the e city for the youth v vis-s radicacalization and recititmen, actually. there is a lot of risk in the city, andnd it's sosometg that we know that is ongoing. ah, youth h are radicalized through preaching, uh, they are given narratives that connect to--to the suffering, [indistinct] youth h employment, popoverty, anand all ththis. and many, many are believing the story. my--my job, actually, is information gathering. i'm the conduit between the government and the people. >> [speaking native language] [man speaking native language] yeah, evevery morning, ah, i do my rounds to see if there--there are any problems. people being harassed because they are refugees. an indigenous kenyan maybe has insulted or abused a refugee because they are not, ah, because they are strangers and they don't belong to this country. so, we get a lot of those cases around here. i can imagine the refugee community complaining about lacking identity. they don't feel like they belong, because they have not been made to feel they belong. and much of the work