Today's date:
Press Release
Friday 28 May 2010
Heavy clashes continue to
kill and displace thousands of civilians in Mogadishu
More than 17,000 people have been displaced from
their homes in the Somali capital Mogadishu in May. Over 14,300 fled
in the past two weeks alone, following renewed, heavy fighting between
the Transitional Federal Government troops, supported by the African
Union Peace Keeping Force (AMISOM), and armed opposition groups.
We
note with grave concern that the rates of casualties and displacement
have increased over the past 14 days. According to information we are
seeing in field reports, at least 60 people have been killed and more
than 50 wounded and injured in street clashes. An estimated 200,000 Somalis
have been displaced since the beginning of the year.
The majority of Somalis
who were forced to flee from their homes in the past fortnight are
displaced within the capital - an estimated 9,300 people. Mogadishu
already shelters more than 350,000 internally displaced people (IDPs).
The number of displaced families, living in the streets of Mogadishu
in extreme conditions is gradually increasing, according to reports
from our partners. Many families are in desperate situations, stuck
in the embattled city. They cannot afford transport to the makeshift
camps in the Afgooye corridor, already hosting 366,000 IDP's and just
15 kilometres west of Mogadishu.
The more fortunate families are being
hosted by relatives or friends living in relatively safer neighbourhoods
of the capital. However, overcrowding means that on average three families
are having to share a single place of accommodation. According to our
partners, many more are on their own in the streets of Mogadishu, settling
under a plastic sheet or whatever material they can find to build a roof.
These are the most vulnerable and utterly dependent on scarce aid the
humanitarian agencies manage to deliver and meagre remittances from
relatives living abroad. Hundreds of children are forced to beg in
the streets of the capital and many women beg in the main markets.
Our
partners in the Somali capital report that people are exhausted, tense
and hungry, but they still constantly listen to the radio, hoping they
will hear that the fighting has ended.
Somalia is one of the countries
generating the highest number of forcefully displaced in the world.
An estimated 1.4 million Somalis are displaced within the country,
while more than 580,000 live as refugees in the neighbouring countries.
Approximately
43% of the Somali population lives below the extreme poverty line and
one in seven Somali children die before the age of five. |