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News, December 2008

 

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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 
Sharif Sheik Ahmed Returns to Somalia as Ethiopian Occupation Forces Leave to Fight Civil War in Ogaden

Editor's Note:

Arabic TV stations reported today that Ethiopian occupation forces are leaving Somalia in few days.

Ethiopia: Fighting Between Govt Soldiers And ONLF Kills 10

  All Africa, 10 December 2008

Wardher —

At least ten people were killed and dozens were injured after Ethiopian soldiers and Ogaden Liberation Front (ONLF) fought in Dannod district, Wardher region in eastern Ethiopia, Radio Shabelle correspondent reported on Wednesday.

The fighting started after Ethiopian soldiers attacked ONLF fighters that were attending Eid-Al-Adha prayers on Monday.

Residents said the saw wounded Ethiopian soldiers treated in Wardher hospital.

The Ethiopian troops in the region have reportedly hampered the circulation of the traffic and shut businesses to restrict the movement of ONLF.

ONLF rebles are ethnic somalis fighting for independence from Ethiopia.

The Ethiopian military is involved wars in the Horn of Africa region that could hurt the development in the region.

Somalia: Top UN Envoy Welcomes Opposition Leader's Return to Capital

  All Africa, 10 December 2008

The top United Nations envoy to Somalia today welcomed the return of an opposition leader, who took part in reconciliation talks with the strife-torn Horn of Africa nation's Government, to the capital Mogadishu.

The Secretary-General's Special Representative, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, characterized the return after a nearly two-year absence of Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed, who heads the Alliance of the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS), as "a most welcome development."

Under June's Djibouti Agreement, the ARS and the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) decided to end their conflict and called on the UN to deploy an international stabilization force to the troubled nation, which has not had a functioning national government since 1991.

Somalia has been beset by fighting and massive humanitarian suffering for the past two decades but the violence has flared anew this year, particularly in and around the capital, Mogadishu, and caused widespread displacement.

Mr. Ould-Abdallah also issued a call for Somalis of all political or other affiliations, during the period of Eid al-Adha to agree on pressing ahead with reconciliation, security, unity and dignity.

Somalia: Blast Occurs in Galkayo

 All Africa, 10 December 2008

Somalia —

At least two people were injured when a blast hit an MSF Holland vehicle and another car that were traveling in south Galkayo, the provincial capital of Mudug region, residents said on Wednesday.

The car of Colonel Abdi Jamaa Hared, an official from Galmudug administration was also targeted and no major casualties reported except minor injuries to the security staff of the colonel.

Security forces from Galmudug administration immediately came to the scene but they did not arrest any one.

MSF Holland pulled out its foreign staff from Somalia about eight months ago after increased attacks against its staff.

Somalia: Human Rights Day is 'Just Another Day of Suffering'

All Africa, 10 December 2008

Nairobi —

War-weary Somalis have little reason to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the signing of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights on 10 December.

"I don't know what this day means," Faliz Ali, 33, a mother of two, said. "I am more worried about how I am going to take care of my children."

She said human rights in Somalia were "just words and nothing more".

Ali, whose husband was killed in the civil war, lost her right leg when a shell landed on her home in Mogadishu in 2007. She now nurses a left arm broken after she was hit by a military truck.

Bashir Qaadi, a displaced person in Karan district of north Mogadishu, told IRIN: "There are no human rights or any others here; we are always the ones who suffer and no one seems to care. We are lost in the middle."

Qaadi has been displaced five times after he and his family were caught up in fighting between Ethiopian-backed forces of Somalia's interim government and insurgents. "Two of my children died and three were injured after rockets hit our camp," he said.

A human rights activist, who requested anonymity, told IRIN that for most Somalis, Human Rights Day was "just another day of suffering. They are too busy trying to survive to think about this day.

"I don't think there is any country in the world that is comparable to Somalia today in terms of human rights violations."

Up to one million Somalis are internally displaced, while some 3.5 million need assistance, according to the UN.

Ali Sheikh Yassin, acting chairman of the Mogadishu-based Elman Human Rights Organisation, said: "Far more atrocities are taking place in Somalia than in any other country in the world today, yet all you hear about is Zimbabwe, DRC [Democratic Republic of Congo] or Darfur, because there are powerful countries that are interested."

War crimes allegations

Human Rights Day is being marked two days after Human Rights Watch (HRW) issued a report accusing the warring parties in Somalia of war crimes.

Local human rights and civil society groups said the report did not go far enough and "only covered less than 20 percent" of the atrocities committed.

Yassin said the report, while welcome, "did not cover most of the crimes being committed here. There is a lot more going on than has been reported and it is getting worse every day."

Another civil society activist told IRIN that HRW was too easy on the perpetrators and "adopted a soft approach".

"They should have said who is committing what and on what scale," he said, adding that although all sides were committing crimes, "some were committing far worse atrocities than others".

The HRW report, So Much Fear: War Crimes and the Devastation of Somalia, states that the Transitional Federal Government [TFG], its Ethiopian allies and the insurgents, were "responsible for numerous serious human rights abuses".

It said: "TFG security forces and militias have terrorised the population by subjecting citizens to murder, rape, assault and looting."

The report accused the insurgents of subjecting "perceived critics or TFG collaborators - including people who took menial jobs in TFG offices or sold water to Ethiopian soldiers - to death threats and targeted killings".

Yassin said his group had documented 16,000 deaths, with another 30,000 injured in 2007 and 2008.

"These are the figures we were able to verify. There are many more unaccounted for," he added.

Government spokesman Abdi Haji Gobdon told IRIN on 10 December that while there was some truth to the HRW report, it failed to accurately reflect the realities on the ground and the efforts of the government to put a stop to crimes against the population.

"Hundreds of detainees were freed on orders of the Prime Minister [Nur Hassan Hussein] and he has made it a priority to protect the civilian population," he said.

Gobdon said the government forces were under instructions not to target civilians.



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