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SOMALIA: Women Go Where Aid Agencies Fear To Tread

Issue 389

Front Page

News Headlines

Terrorists Recruiting Somaliland Youth

French Embassy Suspends Cooperation With Somaliland’s Ministry Of Tourism

Interpeace Assures Political Parties About Readiness For Election

Somaliland’s Foreign Minister Answers Questions

Amoud University Graduates Third Batch Of Doctors

Vice President Shows Up At Restaurant Without Bodyguards

Somaliland Minister Of Finance Leads A Delegation To Ethiopia

Erigabo University Conference

ARDA Creates 250 Jobs For Farmers

Conference On Youth

Parliament Sacks Election Commission Member

Local and Regional Affairs

Chairman Of Electoral Commission Says Somaliland Election Rests In The Hands Of Foreign Countries

Sillanyo Held A Meeting With KULMIYE Party Officials In Hargeysa

“Does The Security Council Recognize Governments In Somaliland Or Puntland  As Sovereign Or Transitional Entities?”

Seven Somalis Beheaded By Extremists For 'Spying For Government'

Somalia Threatened By Foreign Invasion, Neighbors Warn

US Pays Uganda To Arm Somali Fighters

Pillay Accuses Somali Rebels Of Possible War Crimes

UN Council Warns Eritrea Over Somalia Insurgency

Relief After Woman Stranded In Nairobi Fingerprinted

Top UN Official: Without Global Support, Somalia Will Fall To Opposition

U.S. Pledges Increased Military Support To Somalia

Ethiopia: New Anti-Terrorism Proclamation Jeopardizes Freedom Of Expression - Amnesty International

Pirates 'Smuggling Al-Qaeda Fighters' Into Somalia

Somalia Hires UK Accountancy Firm

German Shipping Firms Arming Themselves Against Piracy

Somali Pirates Board Turkish Ship In Gulf Of Aden

Rethink On UK Foreign Aid Spending

Editorial

The Lies And Greed Of Sheikh Sharif (a.k.a Sheikh Xariif)

Features & Commentary

Ancient Ruins In Ainabo - Central Somaliland

Ralph Lauren Model Ubah Hassan Models The Latest Pre-Fall Fashion In Red

Somaliland Independence 26th June 1960: The World Press

And Nobody Will Be Satisfied: Thoughts On The Arguments At The ICJ Over Kosovo

President Barack Obama And Global Africa

Ghana Excitement Builds For Obama

Snapshots From The East

In The Line Of Fire

Africa Should Leave President Obama Alone

SOMALIA: Women Go Where Aid Agencies Fear To Tread

Snuffing Music, Dance And Film: The Taliban’s Cultural Invasion

Meeting Somalia’s Shabab: The Next Jihad

Scientific Evidence: Flight 77 Did Not Strike The Pentagon

International News

 

Obama Arrives In Ghana To Red Carpet Welcome

G8 Pledges $20bn To Boost Food Supplies

Jackson Death May Have Been 'Homicide', Says Police Chief

Google V Microsoft: Clash Of The Titans

Chinese Authorities Close Most Mosques And Muslim Women Lead Protests In Restive West China

Opinion

Open Letter To The Emir Of The State Of Qatar

A Pirate Inside United States Congress

Fleeing Somali MPs Seek Refuge In Somaliland

Somaliland Diplomatic Flop

Letter to Congressman Payne

NAIROBI, July 11, 2009 - Women's groups in embattled Mogadishu are stepping into the aid vacuum to assist thousands more displaced by fighting in the capital, civil society activists said.

"We have been helping in the past but now the situation is even worse so we have had to assume an even bigger role," said Asha Sha'ur, a civil society member and activist.

Due to insecurity, aid agencies have little access to internally displaced persons (IDPs), but Sha'ur said women's groups could move more freely.

“We have had problems but both sides to the conflict have been good at allowing us [women] to help the needy. When they see a bunch of women they don’t bother us," Sha’ur told IRIN.

Mogadishu has been a battleground for troops loyal to the government of President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed and two Islamist armed opposition groups, including the militant al-Shabab group, which controls much of the south and centre of the country.

The fighting has displaced almost 278,000 people since early May, according to a local human rights group.

Shaur said the situation in Mogadishu was worse than "at any time in the past. I know we have said so many times that the situation is bad, but I honestly cannot remember when the suffering was this bad."

Aid agencies should work more closely with women's groups, she said, "since we have better access".

Desperate IDPs

More and more desperate IDPs are arriving in camps located between Mogadishu and Afgoye (30km south), according to Jowahir Ilmi, head of Somali Women Concern, run by displaced women.

"The new ones are in worse shape than the old IDPs; they come with very little and for the most part have to share shelter with other families or stay in the open," Ilmi said.

She said the women's groups collected donations from the business community and Somalis in the diaspora. "Everybody is giving what they can afford," she said.

In the past few days, her group had distributed jerry cans and mosquito nets to 432 families using donations.

"I know it is a drop in the ocean, given the need that exists, but we have to start somewhere," Ilmi said. 

Exodus continuing

Meanwhile, the exodus from the capital continued, according to the Mogadishu-based Elman Human Rights Organization (EHRO).

Ali Sheikh Yassin, the deputy chairman, told IRIN many more people were leaving the city.

"The fighting is still going on and there is no end in sight," he said.

A local journalist, who requested anonymity, told IRIN that al-Shabab had warned government forces to lay down their weapons within five days or face the consequences.

A recording by their leader, Sheikh Mukhtar Abuu Subeyr, broadcast on local radio stations, warned that those who did not surrender would be brought before an Islamic court, according to the journalist.

"He is basically telling them to surrender to him," the journalist said.

Source: IRIN, 08 July 2009








 


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