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UN To Stop Sending Aid Workers To Somaliland
ISSUE 92
Front Page
Index

Headlines

- Somaliland says international assistance needed to enable it combat terrorism

- Somaliland Delegation Meets With Los Angeles Board Of Supervisors Official And The World Affairs Council
- UNHCR To Close Hartisheik Refugee Camp
- Somaliland Under Attack
- Drug: The Double Edged Knife (Part 27)

- UN To Stop Sending Aid Workers To Somaliland

People

- Somalilanders' Reactions To The Eyeingtons’ Killing

- Foreign Press Commentary On The Tragic Loss Of Dick And Enid Eyeington
- Death of a Nobody: Annalena Tonelli, 2 April 1943–5 October 2003

- Iman Faces Debeers' Criticism Cool on Ice? Activists have issues with Iman's work for De Beers.

International News

-Voyages Of Death For Somali Immigrants,International moves to end flow of small boats trying to get to Europe.

- Presidents Bashir, Kibaki Jet In For IGAD Summit

- Security Council Mission To Visit Region Next Month
- Dutch-Somali Asylum Seekers Join UK Schools

- Terrorism In Spotlight At African Summit
- Al-Qaeda 'In US Embassy Plot'

Peace Talks

- Djibouti Quits Peace Talks

Editorial & Opinions

- Terrorism Is Here

- Against The Saudization Of Somaliland

- 4 Steps That Can Help To Improve Security In Somaliland

- Heinous Crime Would Haunt Somaliland

-Reforming The Somaliland’s Police Force


UN To Stop Sending Aid Workers To Somaliland

UN News Centre, 21 October – A senior United Nations humanitarian official today expressed "profound sorrow" at the killing of two British aid workers in northern Somalia and said no new UN workers would be sent to the area until it stabilizes.

The murders of two workers for the non-governmental organization SOS Children's Villages, by so far unidentified gunmen, follows by two weeks the murder of an Italian hospital director in the same area, known as Somaliland.

Jan Egeland, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, called on the local authorities to take immediate action to find and prosecute those responsible for the killings and to ensure the safety and security of all aid workers in the area.

A total of four international aid workers have been killed in Somalia since mid-September.

As a result of these incidents, no additional workers will be allowed to travel to the region until the situation has stabilized, Mr. Egeland said.

An official in the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said existing UN activities in the area would not be stopped but the 50 international staff would restrict their activities to the largest city in the area, Hargeysa.

 

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