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Despite Continued Insecurity, More UN Relief Flows

Issue 279
Front Page
Index
Headlines

President Rayale Blocks Release Of 70-Year Old Woman From Prison

Somaliland National Security Committee Violate The Freedom And Human Rights Of Individual Citizens

Economic Success In Somaliland

Somali Dissidents Oppose Talks

1,325 Delegates To Attend Somalia Conference Of Clans

Egyptian Envoy Freed From Somalia

European Union Role On Kosovo Vs African Union Role On Somaliland

Amnesty International Annual Report 2007‎

Democracy challenged in Somaliland

Regional Affairs

Indian Dhow Hijacked In Somalia

Ethiopia FM Meets Somali Government In Mogadishu

Editorial
Special Report

International News

U.S. Ambassador Sees Real Hope For Somalia’s Future

Somali Pop Stars Take On Tradition

Dozens Of Muslim Meatpackers Return To Production Lines After Prayer Walk-Out

Smokin' On Somalia

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Dynamics Of Post-Intervention Political Failure''

Reflections on Africa

Ethiopia Reaps U.S. Aid By Enlisting In War On Terror And Hiring Influential Lobbyists

East Africa Attracts Hunters For Oil And Gas

Food for thought

Opinions

Is May 18 The Somaliland Day Or The Cleaning Day?

The 16th Anniversary Of Somaliland Independence In Toronto

Our National Day: Much Ado About Nothing

An Open Letter to Ruth Kelly

The evolution, theory and practice of hegemony

Somaliland’s pursuit of recognition, maybe it is time to look East!

Somaliland Constitution: A Tool Being Used To Achieve Personal Interests


New York, 25 May 2007 - A second round of food distribution for some 32,000 people displaced by violence in Somalia has begun despite continuing volatility, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) announced today.

According to the agency, the new distributions began yesterday in three areas of the country, which has not had a working Government in 16 years and recently saw heavy fighting envelope the capital, Mogadishu.

As there are problems finding ships to move food to the East African country, a $2.9 million grant from the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) to WFP is allowing the rehabilitation of an airstrip and is paying for air transport of relief items and cost-reduced passenger flights.

In addition, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) reports that some 650 families in Baidoa recently received relief kits, with another 6,000 kits targeted to those in need in Mogadishu and elsewhere.

Meanwhile, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) says that some 90,000 people displaced by the latest violence have returned to the Mogadishu.

According to UN figures, 340,000 people, roughly one-third of the capital's population, fled the hostilities in Mogadishu since February, while at least 1,000 have sustained injuries.

Source: UN News Service


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