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Aid group Doctors Without Borders pulls foreign staff from Somalia after workers killed
Issue 315
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Ministry of Water & Minerals about to Strike Deal with Rogue Puntland Oil Company: Range Resources Ltd

Jendayi Frazer Visits Somaliland

Halo Trust Officer Wounded After Being Shot By Aggrieved Ex-Employee

Somaliland Parliamentary Cross-Party Committee Travel To London

Justice & Welfare Party Calls Investigation of Omission

A Bill On Somaliland Recognition To Be Introduced To US Congress

UN’s Ethiopia-Eritrea force at risk

Somaliland Frees Puntland Pows - Puntland Vows To Retake Las Anod City

Somali soldiers storm central bank

Africa summit wraps up

Mogadishu faces its most difficult time

Rethinking Somalia’s plight

Regional Affairs

US envoy in surprise visit to Somaliland: Somaliland spokesman

Somaliland Responds To Statement Reportedly Made By Somali Leader

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Kosovo independence declaration possible in 10 days

Board okays black-focused school

US Presidential Contenders Prepare For Super Tuesday

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

UCL Archaeologist Returns To Somaliland

Australia police inquiry of mining firms should extend to Somalia

UN Chief Seeks Way Out of Kenya's Post-Election Chaos

Leopard among the women: "Shabeelnaagood" A Somali play by Hassan Sheikh Mumin

Gulf investors eyes lured by high return Business Venture In Somalia

New US Commander prepares for Africa Assignment

JFK's Daughter Endorses Obama

Africa summit wraps up amid concern over Kenya, Chad

Food for thought

Opinions

Death of Somali Nationalism and Emergence of Siadist ends

What are the problems of somaliland’s national audit office and their possible solutions?

The Clan Rivalry Among Somalis Must End!

The Presidential trip: “The Most successful event”

In response To The Funny Kulmiye

Somaliland is at the critical junction

A tribute to Hassan Sheikh Mumin

 
PARIS February 1, 2008 - The medical aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres pulled all its 87 foreign employees from Somalia after three colleagues were killed there earlier this week, the group said Friday.

MSF said in a statement it was "deeply shocked by the murder of its team" in an attack that it called "probably premeditated."

Some 800 Somali employees are still carrying out MSF activities in the country.

Three staff members of the Dutch branch of the group were killed and one wounded when their vehicle hit a land mine Monday on a stretch of road between the international staff members' home and the hospital where they worked in the southern Somali town of Kismayo, said Malika Saim of MSF's headquarters in Paris.

Those killed were a Kenyan surgeon, a French logistics expert and a Somali driver, she said. She said the route was one the group took almost daily, and that the car was clearly marked as belonging to MSF.

Saim said it was unclear who was behind the attack or whether an investigation was under way.

"Out of respect for the victims and because of the opaque circumstances around the attack," MSF evacuated 87 international staff working on 14 projects in Somalia, the group said.

Christophe Fournier, head of the international board of MSF, said in the statement that the departure of the international staff would "deeply affect" medical services provided by MSF in Somalia.

He called the attack "a serious violation of the humanitarian action that our colleagues were involved in."

The group noted that the attack came as the country is already in a critical state and facing mounting violence that is increasing the need for urgent medical care. MSF has been in the country for more than 16 years.

Source: AP


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