Somali Deputy Prime Minister's Useful Advice to NGOs - "Ignore Threats"
Published October 13, 2008 @ 12:20PM PT

At some point, there will be an optimistic story written about Somalia, but today isn't the day. Earlier this month, a leader of Al Shabaab - perhaps the most extreme of all Somali insurgent groups - explicitly threatened two NGOs (CARE and IMC), causing them to suspend operations in part of south and central Somalia. According to OCHA, this will affect over a million Somalis who rely on these programs.
In response, the Somali Deputy Prime Minister had this useful advice: "The threats come from small groups who are not bothered by the suffering of the Somali people, therefore the [aid] agencies should ignore them."
Which is well and good, except for the fact that 24 aid workers have already been killed in Somalia this year alone. Two UN staff were injured on October 6th in an explosion outside of Marka, while a clan elder who worked closely with IMC was killed on October 7th in Belet Weyne.
To get a sense of what this insecurity means for Somalis themselves, read the excellent article With Spotlight on Pirates, Somalis on Land Waste Away in the Shadows from Friday's New York Times.
In related news, 820 Burundian soldiers arrived in Mogadishu over the weekend to reinforce the peacekeepers already there under the mandate of the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM). Somali insurgents wasted no time attacking the new arrivals, injuring two of the Burundian soldiers hours after they arrived. (Overall, 10 AMISOM peacekeepers have been killed since 2007.)
There are now 3,020 AU troops in Somalia (all from Burundi and Uganda), guarding key sites in the city and (theoretically) supporting the Somali Transitional Federal Government.
Finally, heavy rains in the lower Shabelle region left thousands of IDPs without shelter last week. According to a regional medical officer: "The heavy rains, with wind, have combined with lack of shelter and lack of adequate food to have a negative impact on their health. We need to get them some form of shelter urgently before it is too late. The more they remain in the open the more likely [it is] that many will die."
For a map of rain-affected areas, see here.
Image: Distribution of aid supplies in Somalia - Photo from Germany Foreign Office
Share this Post
Related Posts
-
Why Somalia Is the Worst Place in the World
-
Humanitarian Access; Not So Much
-
Looking Back - When Humanitarians Become Targets
Comments (2)
Comments on Change.org are meant for further exploration and evaluation of the ideas covered in the posts. To that end, we welcome constructive comments. However, we reserve the right to delete comments that are offensive, abusive, or off-topic; that contain ad hominem attacks; or that are designed to subvert or hijack comment threads rather than contribute to them. Repeat offenders may be permanently removed from the site at our discretion.
Facebook
Twitter
Digg
StumbleUpon
Delicious
Email


















my name is yusf ali, I am somali community in bristol uk. I have worked with the somali community based in uk and how their lif e is effected by the civil war . I Have also helped them in terms of advice generally living in uk as well as family engaging programmes . I will be usefull if you can cotactme . I ready to help million s of soamali ,es who engulfed by the civil war in soamlia for the last 18 yrs.
please have your say
kind regards
yusuf ali
somali community support worker
Posted by yusuf ali salah on 12/22/2008 @ 10:38AM PT
You must be signed in to report content.
somali community support worker in uk is ready to help to over come millions of somali whose effected by the 18 years civil war .
my name is yusf ali
my email adres is ylucknow@hotmail.com
kind regards
yusuf ali
Posted by yusuf ali salah on 12/22/2008 @ 10:42AM PT
You must be signed in to report content.