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Mogadishu Exodus Reaches Nearly 100,000 Since May

Issue 384

Front Page

News Headlines

Largest Batch Of Somalilander Graduates From Indian Universities

President Visits Buroa

Problems Facing Women Drivers
Parliament Debates Agenda

Syllabus Conference In Hargeysa

Somaliland Suspends Licenses Of Nine NGOs

Local and Regional Affairs

Desert Locusts Invade Somaliland

USA President Obama Visit To Africa Is Good Beginning For USA African Muslim Relationship

Somali PM Seeks Urgent World Intervention

Somali Displacement Grows Rapidly As The Fighting Rages On Somali Displacement Grows Rapidly As Fighting Rages

Eritrean President Slams 'CIA-Financed' Media

USACC U.N Give Me A Break -Somali People Can Solve Their Own Problems.

Former Somalia senior military officials to meet in Washington, DC

Mogadishu Exodus Reaches Nearly 100,000 Since May

Ethiopian Rebels Threaten Foreign Oil Companies

Teens Organize Benefit For Homework Clubs
Somalia battles kill at least 11, including child
Court Orders Ottawa To Let Abdelrazik Return To Canada

Somalia: Al Shabaab Reject Aweys 'Unity' Proposal

Bristol's Knife-Crime 'More Complicated'

Ethiopia admits reconnaissance missions in Somalia

Somali President Vows No Surrender As New Fighting Erupts

Companies Hire "Shipriders" Against Somali Pirates

Editorial

US Rhetoric Damages US Credibility

Features & Commentary

Somalia: The Cost Of Doing Business

Shadows Over Sharia Banking

U.S. Can't Afford To Ignore Situation In Somalia

Why Al-Shabaab Are On The Rise In Lawless Somalia

NEWS ANALYSIS: No Winner Seen in Somalia’s Battle With Chaos

Meet ‘Mr. Ali,’ Somali Pirate Negotiator

Inside Story Of Somali Pirate Attack

Inside The U.S. Department of State

Puntland Turns Against Somali Pirates
Are Ngos Really More Democratic Than Governments?
Free Somaliland: Our Readers Write

International News

 

Obama Says "Moment Is Now" To Restart Mideast Peace Process

Obama Hopes "New Beginning" With Muslims

Britain's Cabinet Reshuffle Revealed

Bin Laden Accuses Obama Of Following Bush's Steps

Opinion

Return Of The Vagabonds

World Emerging Markets

If You Can’t Attack The Message: Attack The Messenger

Do We Really Know Faysal Ali Warabe?

Demand of Recognition For Somaliland

Pertinent Historical Question: Which Country Really Rules the World?

NAIROBI, June 5, 2009 (Reuters) - The United Nations said on Friday that 96,000 Somalis had fled their homes during a month of battles between Islamist rebels and the government in Mogadishu.
They have swelled the more than 1 million internal refugees in Somalia, which aid agencies say has one of the world's worst -- and most neglected -- humanitarian crises.
A two-year insurgency, the latest manifestation of 19 years of conflict in the Horn of Africa nation, has killed around 18,000 civilians, and unknown numbers of fighters.
It has also drawn foreign jihadists into Somalia, enabled piracy to flourish offshore, and unsettled the whole region, with East African neighbors on high security alert.
Three million Somalis need urgent food aid.
In an update on the flows from Mogadishu, the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR said about 35,000 of those displaced since the latest flare-up began on May 8 were still in the city, seeking shelter, because they had no means to escape.
Another 26,000 had reached makeshift camps in the Afgoye area, about 30 km (20 miles) south-east of Mogadishu.
"According to UNHCR's local partners in Somalia, some 2,000 people have indicated that they plan to cross the border into Kenya. More than a thousand said they are ready to risk their lives and make the perilous journey with smugglers across the Gulf of Aden to Yemen," the agency said.
"Some 600 people told our local partners they were heading towards Ethiopia."
Source: Reuters, June 05, 2009
 


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