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SOMALIA: Children, women most
affected by fighting
January 12, 2007 (IRIN) Scores of
women and children have been separated from their families or wounded
in fighting between Somali government forces and remnants of the
Union of Islamic Courts (UIC), sources said.
A source in southern Somalia, close to the area
where air strikes have hit suspected UIC bases, told IRIN on Friday
that some civilians, including women and children, "have been
killed and others wounded". There are reports of many children
between the ages of five and 15 missing from the village of Hayo
(10 km from the area where the air strikes have been taking place),
he added. "We have no way of knowing how many dead or wounded
are out there in the bush," another source said. "We cannot
get to them and neither can the nomadic communities, for fear of
being killed themselves."
In a statement, the United Nations children's fund
(UNICEF) and Save the Children-UK (SC), said they were very disturbed
by reports that children and women were among the casualties of
the aerial bombardment. "Any continuation of conflict within
Somalia would do much to compromise the modest gains that have been
achieved … over the past 15 years," UNICEF Somalia representative,
Christian Balslev-Olesen, said.
El Khidir Daloum, SC country director, said: "Children
in Somalia, and in particular the south, are suffering the consequences
of a triple humanitarian crisis: drought, flooding and now conflict.
"Unless the situation stabilises rapidly, no one can guarantee
the safety of Somali children. More will be separated from their
families, orphaned and vulnerable to abuse and neglect."
But in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi the United
States ambassador, Michael Ranneberger, said: "Contrary to
press reports, US actions have included only one strike against
a group of al-Qaeda in southern Somalia. No civilians were injured
as a result of this action." UNICEF and SC said they were concerned
by accounts that camps for internally displaced people had come
under grenade attack. Information has also been received that children
were randomly shot in the street while others risk being recruited
to fight by re-emerging warlords. Children had featured prominently
in recent fighting as active combatants. "The agencies say
this is unacceptable under any rules of engagement," UNICEF
and SC said in a joint statement. "[We] demand that all children
associated with armed forces or groups must be immediately released
from their ranks or from detention centres where they might currently
be held." They noted that the fighting, which had displaced
more than 65,000 people, had severely affected school enrolment,
and restricted access for humanitarian workers to reach vulnerable
populations.
The country's security situation remains fragile
and attacks by unidentified persons on Ethiopian and government
forces continue. At the same time, the government was continuing
its discussions with community leaders in the city.
"Last night [Thursday] they [gunmen] attacked
the Ambassador Hotel at 8:20 pm local time, where many government
people including the chief of police, are staying," a local
resident, who requested anonymity, said. The attackers, he said,
used grenade launchers and engaged government forces guarding the
hotel for about 20 minutes before disappearing. "This sort
of attack has become common in the city for the last week,"
he added. There were reports of casualties.
On Friday, six people were reported dead after
gunmen fired a rocket-propelled grenade on the presidential compound
in Mogadishu. Somali government spokesman Abdirahman Dinari said
it was "working very hard to bring the security situation in
the city under control as soon as possible. There are consultations
going on with community leaders to get the situation under control
peacefully."
He said while the consultations were going on,
the government was dealing with the insecurity. "We have already
dismantled a number of roadblocks and arrested about 20 criminals,"
Dinari said. He added the crackdown would continue until the city
was "safe and secure". Residents living in areas with
a military presence, however, were reported to be leaving for fear
of being caught in a crossfire, said a civil society source.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57042&SelectRegion=Horn_of_Africa,%20&SelectCountry=Somalia
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