From Garoweonline.com
As Somalia Crisis Swells, Experts See a Void in Aid
By
Nov 20, 2007 - 2:50:03 AM
The worst humanitarian crisis in Africa may not be unfolding in Darfur, but here, along a 20-mile strip of busted-up asphalt, several top United Nations officials said.
A year ago, the road between the market town of Afgooye and the
capital of Mogadishu was just another typical Somali byway, lined with
overgrown cactuses and the occasional bullet-riddled building. Now it
is a corridor teeming with misery, with 200,000 recently displaced
people crammed into swelling camps that are rapidly running out of
food.
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| Mustafa Abdi/Agence France-Presse - Getty Images |
Natheefa Ali, who trudged up this road a week ago to
escape the bloodbath that Mogadishu has turned into, said Monday that
her 10-month-old baby was so malnourished she could not swallow.
“Look,” Ms. Natheefa said, pointing to her daughter’s splotchy legs, “her skin is falling off, too.”
Top
United Nations officials who specialize in Somalia said the country had
higher malnutrition rates, more current bloodshed and fewer aid workers
than Darfur, which is often publicized as the world’s most pressing
humanitarian crisis and has taken clear priority in terms of getting
peacekeepers and aid money.
The relentless urban combat in
Mogadishu, between an unpopular transitional government — installed
partially with American help — and a determined Islamist insurgency,
has driven waves of desperate people up the Afgooye road, where more
than 70 camps of twigs and plastic have popped up seemingly overnight.
The
people here are hungry, exposed, sick and dying. And the few aid
organizations willing to brave a lawless, notoriously dangerous
environment cannot keep up with their needs, like providing milk to the
thousands of babies with fading heartbeats and bulging eyes. “Many of
these kids are going to die,” said Eric Laroche, the head of United
Nations humanitarian operations in Somalia. “We don’t have the capacity
to reach them.”
He added: “If this were happening in Darfur, there would be a big fuss. But Somalia has been a forgotten emergency for years.”
The
officials working on Somalia are trying to draw more attention to the
country’s plight, which they feel has fallen into Darfur’s shadow. They
have recently organized several trips, including one on Monday, for
journalists to see for themselves.
“The situation in Somalia is
the worst on the continent,” said Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, the top United
Nations official for Somalia.
That situation has included floods, droughts, locusts, suicide bombers, roadside bombs and near-daily assassinations.
United
Nations officials said the recent round of plagues, natural and
man-made, coupled with the residual chaos that has consumed Somalia for
more than a decade, have put the country on the brink of famine. In the
worst-hit areas, like Afgooye, recent surveys indicate the malnutrition
rate is 19 percent, compared with about 13 percent in Darfur; 15
percent is considered the emergency threshold.
The officials, in
making the comparison, were not trying to diminish the problems in
Darfur, where more than 200,000 people have died from violence and
disease since 2003. But they said they were concerned that the crisis
here was increasingly urgent.
Unlike Darfur, where the suffering
is being eased by a billion-dollar aid operation and more than 10,000
aid workers, Somalia is still considered mostly a no-go zone. Just last
week, a Somali aid worker and a guard were shot to death at an aid
distribution center in Afgooye. United Nations officials estimate that
total emergency aid is under $200 million, partly because it is so
difficult just getting food into the country.
Pirates lurking
off the coast of Somalia have attacked more than 20 ships this year,
including two carrying United Nations food. The militias that rule the
streets — typically teenage gunmen in wraparound sunglasses and
flip-flops — have jacked up roadblock taxes to $400 per truck. The
transitional government last month jailed a senior official of the
United Nations food program in Somalia, accusing him of helping
terrorists, though he was eventually released.
United Nations
officials now concede that the country was in better shape during the
brief reign of Somalia’s Islamist movement last year. “It was more
peaceful, and much easier for us to work,” Mr. Laroche said. “The
Islamists didn’t cause us any problems.”
Mr. Ould-Abdallah called
those six months, which were essentially the only epoch of peace most
Somalis have tasted for years, Somalia’s “golden era.”
Somalia’s ills have always come in waves, starting in 1991 when
clan-based militias overthrew the central government and the country
plunged into anarchy. That fighting, like the fighting today, disrupted
markets, kept out aid shipments and led to rapid inflation of food
prices. As a result, hundreds of thousands of people starved.
The United States tried to come to the rescue in 1992, sending
thousands of soldiers to Somalia to assist with humanitarian operations.
But
American troops abruptly pulled out after Somali militiamen shot down
two Black Hawk helicopters in Mogadishu in October 1993.
After
that, the United States — and much of the rest of the world — basically
turned its back on Somalia. But in the summer of 2006, the world
started paying attention again after a grass-roots Islamist movement
emerged from the clan chaos and seized control of much of the country.
The
United States and Ethiopia, Somalia’s neighbor and rival, quickly
labeled the Islamists a threat and accused them of harboring terrorists
from Al Qaeda.
Inside
Somalia, the Islamists were very popular, at least initially. But then
they overplayed their hand and declared a holy war against Ethiopia in
December 2006, which provoked a crushing Ethiopian response. American
military commanders funneled key satellite imagery to Ethiopian troops
as they rolled across the Somali border; American planes bombed fleeing
Islamists. One American official said the operation was considered an
antiterrorism success.
The transitional government arrived in
Mogadishu at the end of December. It has struggled ever since against
an insurgency that is a mix of Islamist fighters, rival clans and
profiteers who have made a fortune as a result of the anarchy, whether
by importing expired baby formula or renting out former government land.
“Those criminals are our biggest problem,” said Abdi Awaleh Jama, an ambassador at large for the transitional government.
The African Union
promised to send 8,000 peacekeepers to help. But because of the focus
on building a 26,000-strong force for Darfur, only 1,600 Ugandans have
arrived. Clearly, some of Somalia’s problems are not the government’s
fault. Neither is the drought-flood-drought cycle that has left an
impenetrable crust of rock-hard silt over Somalia’s fields, causing the
worst cereal harvest in 13 years.
But most Western diplomats
agree that unless the transitional government reaches out to Islamist
elements and becomes more inclusive, it will fail — like the 13
transitional governments that came before it.
“This government
doesn’t control one inch of territory from the Kenyan border up to
Mogadishu,” said a Western diplomat, who spoke on the condition of
anonymity, citing diplomatic protocol.
Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, the
warlord turned transitional president, recently forced out the prime
minister and is looking to replace him with a leader who can bridge
clan divides.
“This is basically the last chance,” the Western diplomat said.
But
the people in Afgooye’s squatter camps do not have a lot of faith. “We
want the Islamists back,” said Mohammed Ahmed, a shriveled 80-year-old
retired taxi driver.
Mr. Mohammed said he was not especially religious. “But,” he said, “at least we had food.”
Source: New York Times
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