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UN: 27,000 Fled Mogadishu Since June

Issue 289
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Somaliland Interior Minister: “We Will Make More Arrests”

Ethiopian Airlines Becomes The First To Fly from Hargeysa Airport at Night

"The 'Puntland State of Somalia' Comes into Play"

Somali National Army To Integrate Puntland Forces

At Least 10 Dead in Latest Somalia Violence

E-passport gets into full swing

The Ministries of TFG are not the working bodies, but just the collection of pseudo-clerks

Attack on Somali Funeral Procession Leaves 1 Dead, 3 Injured

Mogadishu under house-to-house search operations

At long, long last, the UN flexes its muscles in Darfur

Lawmakers in Somalia debate over Prime Minister's future

Regional Affairs

Somaliland's Political Veterans Must Be Released Immediately

“No Political Prisoners in Somaliland”

Editorial
Special Report

International News

UN Security Council devotes August month to Africa

Seeking refuge: Displaced Utah families struggle to find housing

Campaign Memo: "Barack Obama Was Right"

Son of Ugandan Ex-president jailed for the murder of Somali man

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Ethiopia's dirty war

Is Pridnestrovie A State?

Hero of the Republic of Cuba Writing a Novel

The Motives Behind The Bush Administration’s Latest Terror Scare

Gebrselassie Wins NYC Half Marathon

Life without hope

Food for thought

Opinions

End To Unlawful Arrests Or The End Of Rayale’s Reign Of Tyranny

Faisal Ali Waraabti & Bashir Goth Missed This Time

Somaliland and the latest political issues...

Forward: To The International Community

Somaliland’s Forthcoming Presidential Election Is Predicted

Somaliland People Never Learn From History New Kind Of Siyad Barre In The Making In Somaliland

Desperate Measures From A Desperate Government


3 August 2007 - An estimated 27,000 people have fled Somalia’s violent capital since June, part of an exodus that has sent a fifth of Mogadishu’s 2 million residents fleeing for safety, the U.N. said Friday.

The city has seen little peace since December, when Ethiopian troops backing Somalia’s government ousted a radical Islamic militia. Insurgents vowed to launch an Iraq-style guerrilla war.

The unrelenting violence has stopped thousands of people who have fled Mogadishu from returning home, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said Friday. Only about 125,000 have returned, the U.N. said last month.

"Mothers are unable to buy food for their children and workers unable to make a living," the agency said.

Mortars slammed into homes Thursday, killing eight people, including a mother and her two daughters, witnesses said.

Police spokesman Yusuf Osman Hussein blamed the attacks on remnants of an Islamic militia driven from Mogadishu in December by Ethiopian troops backing Somalia’s fragile government. The militants have been waging insurgent attacks for months in an attempt to regain power.

Eric Laroche, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Somalia, said the unrelenting violence is preventing the return of thousands of people who have fled to squalid camps on the outskirts of the capital. Laroche spoke during an unannounced visit Thursday to the Somali capital.

The majority of those fleeing the capital are from districts near the building hosting a national reconciliation conference aimed at helping the country heal the wounds of 16 years of conflict. The meeting was delayed several times due to violence and infighting, and has been the target of insurgent attacks since it opened July 18.

Somalia has been mired in chaos since 1991, when warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and then turned on each other. The U.N.-backed government that formed in 2004 has struggled to assert its authority.

Many of the people who have left the capital live in squalid refugee camps.

Source: AP


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