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Somalia: Country Now World's Most Dangerous Place for Aid Workers, Says UN Official

ISSUE 275
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Petroleum Seminar Held in Hargeysa

A Semi-Footpath Bridge Poses Danger To Residents

Preliminary Report On Confirmed Presence Of Lethal Radio Active Radiation And Other Toxic Materials In Berbera

An African Country Colonized By Its Neighbor

Murderer Facing Firing Squad

74 Dead In Attack On Oil Field In Ethiopia

“This is not the time to bring Somaliland into the discussion”

REPORT OF THE GOODWILL MISSION TO SOMALILAND

The Somali Untouchables

Regional Affairs

India Gives $20 Mn Funding For Djibouti Cement Plant

Ethiopia says Eritrea behind Chinese oil facility bloodbath

Editorial
Special Report

International News

British Think-Tank Blasts Ethiopia, US Over Somalia

Foreign Office Statement On The Sentencing In Somaliland Of The Eyeington Family's Murderers

Blair warns West will suffer if it fails Africa

Somalia: Country Now World's Most Dangerous Place for Aid Workers, Says UN Official

Iraq's Security Wall: “Selected Neighborhoods”

Capital punishment
Here is thy sting

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Freedom For Ogaden, The West’s Last Choice In Africa

The Global Citizen Project

Return of the warlords

Islam in Australia: a diverse society finds a new voice

The Twin Twigs: Coffee and Qat in Yemen

The Leading Factions Behind the Somali Insurgency

Food for thought

Opinions

Why Not Have A Party Of My Own

OPEN LETTER TO WORLD LEADERS ON THE GENOCIDE IN MOGADISHU, SOMALIA

Why Blame Thyself When You Can Blame The President

An Open Letter To Sillanyo

Adan Waqaf Should Remain The Heroic Minister Of Defense

Open Letter

Ich Bin Ein Hawiye (I Am A Hawiye Citizen)


New York, April 24, 2007 - Somalia has become the most dangerous place in the world for relief workers to operate, the United Nations humanitarian chief warned today, with none of the sides in the deadly fighting that has raged across the capital Mogadishu in recent weeks respecting the rules of war or making any allowance for aid operations.

John Holmes, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, told the Security Council that the fighting in Somalia is probably the worst in 16 years, since the impoverished country stopped having a functioning national government.

More than 320,000 people have fled Mogadishu since the start of February, and hundreds of others are reported to have been killed in the past week alone as the violence escalate, Mr. Holmes told a closed-door briefing, according to the text of his speech.

Most of the people fleeing the city have virtually no possessions, and some are being forced to "rent" the use of space under trees for shelter, Mr. Holmes added. They lack many basics such as food and water.

Violence in Mogadishu has dramatically increased since the Transitional Federal Government (TFG), backed by Ethiopian forces, dislodged the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) from the capital and much of the country at the end of last year. Clan-based militias have also been involved in the clashes.

Mr. Holmes said civilians are being caught in the crossfire, with all sides "equally responsible" for failing to stay within international law. Heavily populated residential areas face constant shelling, and a hospital also appeared to be deliberately targeted by shelling and artillery fire.

"Civilians in Mogadishu are paying an intolerable price for the absence of political progress and dialogue and the failure of all parties to abide by the rules of warfare," said Mr. Holmes, who is also Emergency Relief Coordinator for the world body.

The humanitarian situation in the southern and central parts of Somalia has been exacerbated by outbreaks of cholera and acute watery diarrhea, with the latter estimated to be responsible for more than 600 deaths in recent months.

Mr. Holmes told reporters that the violence has been so intense that UN agencies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are extremely limited in their access to suffering civilians, with as many as four out of five Somalis in need out of reach.

He criticized the TFG and local authorities for making it even harder for aid workers to carry out their daily work by restricting access to area hospitals and imposing unnecessary delays and problems at checkpoints.

But Mr. Holmes said that Government officials pledged at a meeting yesterday with the UN that they fully supported all humanitarian relief work and would not impede the efforts of UN agencies or NGOs.

He stressed the need for a ceasefire as soon as possible or, failing that, a commitment by all sides in the conflict to respect international humanitarian law so that civilians are not targeted or left as victims through indiscriminate attacks.

The UN has appealed for $262 million for relief efforts in Somalia, but Mr. Holmes said only about a third of that target has been received so far and he urged donors to contribute more.

Source: UN News Service


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