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UN Staff In Somalia Mourn Loss Of Colleagues Killed In Deadly Blast

Issue 354
Front Page
Index
News Headlines
Message Of The UN Resident Humanitarian Coordinator To Somalis
Local and Regional Affairs
Muslim Cleric Arrested In Somali Bombings
Massive Security Deployment In Somaliland As Death Toll Rises
UN Staff In Somalia Mourn Loss Of Colleagues Killed In Deadly Blast
Ban Deplores ‘Outrageous' Attack On UN Office And Other Sites In Northern Somalia
Mark Malloch-Brown Condemns Attacks
Form cabinet, Somalia told
Deadly Car Bombs Hit Somaliland
Bombings Have Markings Of Al-Qaeda: US Official
FIDH Condemns the Suicide Attacks in Somalia
AP IMPACT: Security Firms Join Somali Piracy Fight
Shipload of supplies escorted to Somalia
Flashback: Israeli Revealed as owner of South Sudan bound weapons ship
Editorial
 
The Terrorist Attacks On Somaliland
Supporting Somaliland's Democracy Against The Terror Act ?
Somaliland & Unisa's Department of Religious Studies represented at London 's 2008 Think Tank of the
Kenya On Heightened Terror Alert After Somaliland Bombings
Features & Commentry
Somalia 's Pirates Flourish In A Lawless Nation
‘It's A Great Time To Be A Pirate'
Somaliland Witness: 'Terrible Day'

Opinion

Somaliland Stands Firm Against Terrorism
It's Time To Take On The Gangsters Of The Sea
President Bush's Speech on Terrorism Undercut by Attacks in Somalia
Somalia 's Descent Into Chaos Predicted
Somaliland Organizations In Diaspora Condemn The Terrorist Attacks In Somaliland
Message Of Condolences And Condemnation
Will White People Riot?
The Hon Stephen Smith MP
 

Nairobi , October 30, 2008 – Unite Nations staff in Somalia are mourning the loss of two of their colleagues who were killed in yesterday's explosion at the UN compound in Hargeysa, which also seriously injured six others and was part of a wave of attacks in the north of the strife-torn nation.

Mark Bowden, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia , has confirmed that Mohammed Geele and Sayid Hashi were killed in the car bomb attack on the UN Development Programme (UNDP) compound that occurred on Wednesday morning.

Mr. Geele, a Local Security Advisor who had worked for the UN for five years, is survived by his wife and five children.

Mr. Hashi had been a driver for the UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS) since 1997 and leaves behind a wife and three sons.

“Our deepest condolences go out to the families and colleagues of our two staff members who died in the explosion,” Mr. Bowden said in a news release issued in Nairobi , where his office is based.

“Right now our immediate concern is for the well-being and support of the families of the victims and staff members who have survived this trauma. Given the extremely violent and targeted nature of the attack, many are severely shaken and mourning the loss of their colleagues,” he added.

Six other staff members were injured, and two of them with serious injuries were evacuated to Djibouti for immediate medical attention. Their condition is now stable.

Several buildings in the UNDP compound – which also houses other agencies such as Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), UNOPS, UN Political Office for Somalia (UNPOS), the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS and the Resident Coordinator's Office – suffered significant damage.

There were 74 international and almost 200 national UN staff working in Hargeisa at the time of the attack, which was vehemently condemned by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

“The Secretary-General deplores these outrageous acts of violence deliberately targeting innocent civilians and United Nations personnel who work tirelessly to alleviate the dire suffering of Somali citizens,” Mr. Ban's spokesperson said in a statement yesterday.

Somalia has been beset by fighting and massive humanitarian suffering for the past two decades but the violence has flared anew this year, particularly in and around the capital, Mogadishu , and caused widespread displacement. The country has not had a functioning national government since 1991.

“While Somalia is one of the most dangerous places in the world for aid workers, Hargeysa has been relatively stable and consequently many United Nations staff were stationed there,” said Mr. Bowden.

“It's because of the stability that the UN has been able to help move forward the reconstruction process, constructing schools, drilling boreholes, and building on the peace which has been achieved there since 1998,” he added.

UN agencies are working in Hargeysa and the northwest regions with the local government and communities to deliver much needed services such as water and health care. They are also providing assistance for returnees, helping build local institutions and responding to the drought.

Source: UN News

 


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