Topic: Refugees
Feature
IDPs Create Dilemma: Too Risky to Assist?
Mogadishu IDP Camp
©Somalia Report
Mogadishu IDP Camp

The children sit in a makeshift tent made from twigs, tattered sacks and worn out polythene bags, that lets in rays of the scorching sun, and water when it rains. Their mother left early in the morning to beg for food. Al-Shabaab militants killed their father at a food distribution centre when the militiamen thought the rations would get finished before they got their share.

“Move. You have stayed here for too long,” an armed African Union peacekeeper says. It’s an order to stop offering the few remaining biscuits to hungry children and move away from them, for the sake of our security.

“This is a danger zone. You can’t go near the tents alone. You can’t get close to the displaced person. You have to be near an armed soldier if on foot. And always be close to the armoured vehicles and the rest of the group,” the soldier further warned, with his gun ready for any eventuality.

Like other Somalis, they suffer and live in danger because of the war on al-Shabaab by African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) forces and allied fighters. A number of attacks have occasionally killed women and children and a number of youth who never dreamt of taking up arms. Satellite images have captured more than 500 internally displaced persons (IDPs) settlements in areas surrounding Somalia’s capital city Mogadishu alone. Two decades of war have seen children born and become adults in makeshift camps in this insecure country, which celebrated its 52nd independence day on July 1.

Rarely do humanitarian workers stay at an IDP settlement camp for more than 45 minutes. Not even when speaking to young children who appear harmless.

“Even spending the 45 minutes can be too risky,” Kilian Kleinschmidt, the UN’s deputy humanitarian co-ordinator in Somalia, and a veteran of crisis who helped set up the world’s largest refugee camp Daadab in Kenya, says.

For over two decades, Somalia has suffered state collapse, violent lawlessness and warlordism, internal displacement and refugee flows, that has resulted in what the UN describes as one of the ultimate “hardship spots” in the world.

It’s a case of a human tragedy. Nobody knows the actual figures.

Since the United Nations came back to Somalia last year, UN officials have been struggling to give hope to Somalia’s displaced people.

During the World Refugee Day on June 20, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said it was difficult to put exact figures to the number of internally displaced people inside Somalia. The UN relief agency estimates there are about 1.35 million displaced people inside Somalia.

“The displaced persons move frequently and satellite images pick up only temporary, makeshift shelters that remain empty most of the time, except when there is an aid distribution,” the UNHCR representative for Somalia, Bruno Geddo, told journalists in Nairobi.

Mr. Kleinschmidt describes Somalia as the “most complicated, logistically difficult and most dangerous place in the world to offer humanitarian assistance today,” while the UNHCR terms it as “the heart of one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world”.

Recently, the horn of Africa country, believed to have some of the most beautiful beaches in Africa, was ranked first in the Failed States Index which uses factors such as demographic pressures, presence of internally displaced persons and refugees, group grievance, uneven development and respect for human rights. It was the fifth consecutive year that Somalia was topping that list.

In its photo essay "Postcards From Hell 2012, What does living in a failed state look like?", Foreign Policy Magazine painted a grim picture of the country, “Last year, one of the deadliest droughts in decades resulted in a famine that killed tens of thousands of people and displaced hundreds of thousands in the country, where 16 per cent of the population was internally displaced in 2011 — the highest rate worldwide.”

“We want help. We have lost our livelihoods. People are sitting idle, there is no place for them to work and most of us have no skills,” Halima Mohammed, a mother of seven whose husband was killed by a mortar in Bakara market two years ago, pleads.

The camps, with their domed shelters made of rags and sticks, are now surrounded by stagnant water. There is a heavy stench of human waste and there are rising cases of sexual violence. Survivors sit among the clouds of flies.

IDP Children in Mogadishu
©Somalia Report
IDP Children in Mogadishu

“It’s not just here. All the 6,000 toilets constructed to assist the displaced people are now full. We are more afraid about what happens next since Mogadishu has no sewerage disposal system,” says Hibaaq Ahmed, the committee chairperson of Sonak IDP camp.

The water is contaminated, keeping Mogadishu and its environs permanently alert over cholera outbreaks.

Families scoop a few mouthfuls of water to drink from muddy pools. Everyone asks when the next food rations will arrive. And when they arrive, they wonder how long they will last.

Most of Somalia is a desert of rock, stone and sand, with some mountains. A scorching sun allows almost nothing to grow for most of the year, except vicious thorn scrub and cactus.

In addition, years of fighting in a country with masses of weapons supplied by the world’s superpowers have forced millions of Somalis to either flee to exile, or take their chances in its sprawling IDP camps.

The IDP camps are very similar. You come across thousands of people waiting for help from international aid workers and UN agencies.

Somalia is still extremely dangerous for foreigners, especially humanitarian workers. According to the Aid Worker Security Database accessed on February 19, 2012, between 2000 and 2011, 260 aid workers were killed. The worst year was in 2008, when 87 foreign workers were either gunned down or killed by explosives.

In January, US Navy SEALs rescued an American aid worker and her Danish colleague after three months of captivity in central Somalia. Last December, a disgruntled member of Médecins sans Frontières shot and killed two of his colleagues in Mogadishu.

Very few foreign aid workers spend significant time in Somalia’s capital city, Mogadishu. Areas in the south have remained inaccessible for several years.

On November 28, al-Shabaab banned 16 aid agencies, among then UNICEF and WHO, from its areas of control in southern and central Somalia, regions where drought and famine were most acute, accusing them of financing, aiding, and abetting subversive groups seeking to destroy the Islamic penal system.

In Xayo town, a family surrounded by fields of green watches the planting season pass them by. “We have nothing to plant. Even when we plant, the al-Shabaab will say that we have received planting material from groups (international aid organisations) that they have banned and destroy the food. We depend on handouts,” says Ahmed Yusuf.

We met Sofia Agane standing outside her makeshift hut on the outskirts of Afmadow town, waiting for help. “The locals have no power to defend themselves. You can plant and then the al-Shabaab will come and take away all the crops,” she said.

With the Kenyan Defence Forces’ (KDF) incursion into Somalia in October last year, only a few officers have been allowed into the area.

“These people needed any kind of help. We started by offering them food, water and medicine,” Colonel Cyrus Oguna, the KDF spokesperson, recalls.

Ahmed Ali, a clan elder from southern Somalia, says only places like Kismayo, Somalia’s most urbanised town in the south, is served by three international non-governmental organisations (NGOs). “But they all use local operators,” he clarifies.

In Afmadow, al-Shabaab militia destroyed books, chalk and other materials donated by UNICEF, before fleeing the town.

Athman Seif, an official of the Islamic Relief Organisation, says UN agencies face high risks. “We keep away from where they eat and visit so as to minimise the chances of being attacked,” Mr Seif says.

IDPs in Mogadishu
©Somalia Report
IDPs in Mogadishu

Although they remain high-value targets of elimination by al-Shabaab militants, the return of the UN to the country last year, after UN agencies and peacekeepers were kicked out in the early 1990s, is creating new hope.

At various IDP camps, the eyes of children are glowing with anticipation and joy, and those of the adults, often characterised by brutality, reflect a glimpse of a new future.

“It is still a complex problem, but this is a new chance for us to make a difference. Even when we get to save a single life, it’s very important for us in Somalia,” Kleinschmidt says as he points at a severely malnourished diabetic woman they rescued from an IDP camp, now recovering at the Egyptian-run Zam Zam hospital.

“The UN is now assisting in coordinating humanitarian assistance. This is something we thought would take several years, but through their help we are getting a more organised effort,” says Amina Hosi, the executive director of Save Somali Women and Children.

Some efforts are already bearing fruit. The Somali Transitional Federal Government (TFG) has allocated four-square kilometres of land just outside Mogadishu to build a camp for displaced persons, the first one in the country, which is expected to meet UN standards.

“The problem we have is that the site like many others is flooded with land mines and other unexploded ordinance. The UN mine action service is working with Amisom and TFG to clean up the place,” Mr Kleinschmidt explains.

He estimates that construction at the site will start in the next three or four months.

Breaking News
Refugee Camp in Chaos as Police Restore Security
By SUCAAD MIRE 05/15/2012
Refugees in Dadaab (File Photo)
©Somalia Report
Refugees in Dadaab (File Photo)

At least three people were killed when someone dressed as a woman detonated a suicide bomb jacket in a busy livestock market in the Dagahaley sub-camp of Dhadhaab refugee camp in north-east Kenya.

Hassan Momamed Gure, an eyewitness at Dagahaley refugee camp, reported a policeman and student were amongst the dead. "I saw a police officer and student lying dead on the ground, and another policeman was pleading for his life," Hassan said.

Police Chief George Kibambo in Lagh Dera confirmed to Somalia Report that three were killed. "The refugees are not giving us information, so it is difficult to know who is criminal and who is not, but so far at least three," said Kibambo.

The attack targeted a police vehicle which was passing the area at that time. Dozens of peoples were arrested after the explosion, fear is widespread and local businesses are closed.

There have been high tensions and curfew over recent months after a series of roadside bombs.

Dadaab camp is the biggest refugee camp in northeast Kenya, having three sub-camps: Dagahaley, Hagadera and Ifo. Most residents are Somali refugees.

Feature
Refugees Fleeing Somalia Detained in Tanzania Face Difficult Circumstances
By AHMED MOHAMED 03/04/2012
Refugees await smuggling boats in this file photo
Refugees await smuggling boats in this file photo
Many Somali men and women who are eager to migrate to countries in southern Africa travel through Tanzania. Some of them fall into the hands of Tanzanian authorities and find themselves behind bars. Were it not for the corrupt nature of the police in this country, very few refugees would be able to continue. To learn more about this unfortunate situation, Somalia Report interviewed Mohamed Abdi, who was recently released from Tanzanian custody.

Thanks for your time, Mohamed. What took you to Tanzania in the first place?

I thank Somalia Report for their concern. In June of last year, I discovered that there were smugglers taking people to South Africa for $1000 US, personal expenses not included. My father struggled and acquired this amount. We departed with a group of other Somalis, both men and women. The route was to take us through Tanzania, I didn’t have any intention of going to Tanzania otherwise. We were arrested here for illegally trespassing the border.

How were you arrested?

We were passing through a checkpoint in a town known as Mpanda. The police asked for our identification. Most of us were not even able to communicate in Kiswahili, and we didn’t have enough money to give to them because we paid a lot of bribes at previous check points. They arrested us and took us to their prison. We did our best to convince them to free us, because we meant no harm to them, but they did not listen.

How is life in those prisons, and what was the worst condition you encountered?

It was the most difficult moment of my life, waking up every morning on the cold cemented floor and finding yourself in such a place is an experience that no-one would wish to find himself in. The facility was not conducive and we really suffered a lot as we waited to be taken to court. Language was a major problem as you cannot even ask for anything. They just reply ‘nini’, meaning what.

Were you all taken to court at the same time?

No, they took us in groups, almost twenty people were taken to court at a time. Also they were considering those with the same case. As some wait for trial, others other were being taken to court to answer their cases.

Were you allowed to defend yourself?

In court, you are only allowed to confirm your presence, they don’t give you chance to speak. There was no lawyer for us, or any other form of assistance whatsoever. They call your name, after which you are required to raise your hand. You could not even hear what they are saying, because the translator was not fluent in Somali. It was difficult to bear with them, because you are required to be attentive throughout the session.

On which conditions were you released?

After the court order, we were then taken back to the prison, Later on, we got information through the guards that we were required to reach our relatives to pay $250 US so that we could be released and deported back to Somalia. We contacted our relatives to send us the money so that we can go home, through the Somalia ambassador to Tanzania. The ambassador demanded a lot of money, imagine the heartless man collected $700 US from just me and another refugee. I even have the receipt from Tawakkal money transfer (hawala). This so-called ambassador is very corrupt. Instead of assisting us to be freed, he is there to oppress his own country men and women - what a shame!

Are there any other Somali officials in Tanzania?

I don’t think so, apart from that self-serving ambassador. And even if there are, they they didn’t show up to assist us.

Do you know his name or ever heard it before?

I have never had him before, but my colleagues say that he is called Diriye somebody. I am not certain about this.

What is your message to the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) of Somalia concerning this ambassador?

I know that His Excellency, President Sheikh Sharif, is good to his people. Those he gave posts, to represent the government, are letting him down, and these are who should be blamed. I think the president should take immediate action against these people.

How many other Somalis are still detained in Tanzania?

I don’t have the exact figure, but Somalis travel daily across Tanzania and they are caught and held in police custody. Hundreds of them are currently being held there, amongst them are vulnerable women, who are not strong enough to face the tough challenges.

Do Tanzanian authorities have a policy for the refugees?

I don’t know, maybe they have. But they don’t treat us like refugees, they treat us the same as the Ethiopians who were in the country illegally.

Are you allowed to get identity cards or the UNHCR registration?

This was not possible. How can you think of identity cards when you can’t even express yourself? And you are in custody most of the time. I did not see any UNHCR representative in the area I was held.

Analysis
Refugee Health of Children Mothers and Elderly At Risk; Schools Also Closed
By ABDIHAKIM WARSAME 02/26/2012
Refugees on the Outskirts of Dadaab
Refugees on the Outskirts of Dadaab
Since NGOs suspended their work in the Dadaab refugee camp in northeast Kenya due to insecurity, there have been notable humanitarian concerns for refugees in the camp, including poor health conditions and the loss of other social amenities including education. However, the health sector is the most affected area, resulting in the death of many people including young children, expectant mothers and elderly who have not received proper medical treatment. Somalia Report's Abdihakim Warsame investigated.

Recent reports from local hospitals indicate a high number of deaths.

“The security problems in Dadaab refugee camp has undermined the work of the hospitals and caused death of many people, especially young children below ten years and pregnant mothers who need special care. International health aid workers have abandoned the refugee camps due to insecurity and threats from al-Shabaab insurgents, therefore many hospitals have no doctors or medicines at all,” said Abdu-Nuur Mohamed, a health worker in Dadaab camp.

The mothers of children who have died due to lack of proper medical attention have called for an international aid workers to resume their work and save the refugees who used to get medical support and treatment from them.

“As refugees, we suffer from ill-health and are requesting the NGOs concerned with health matters to continue serving us. This rainy season there might be an out-break of malaria and other communicable diseases and that may increase the number of both young and old people who will fall sick to serious diseases which need to be immediately treated or fatal,” said Mumino Kafi, a Dhagahley resident who spoke to Somalia Report.

UN officials in Dadaab assured refugees the services will resume as soon as security matters have been addressed. “We have talked to aid workers about returning to take up their work effectively. Although there have been a tough negotiations, we finally managed to settle the issue over the security matters and they are coming back soon,” said Sophia Abdirahman, a UN official in Dadaab refugee camp.

On October 13, two Medicins Sans Frontiers (MSF) aid workers were abducted by gunmen who crossed from Somalia and seized them while they were working in Dadaab refugee camp. Since al-Shabaab started hunting foreign aid workers in the refugee camps, many aid workers have relocated to Nairobi, those who remain have faced serious threats and intimidation from al-Shabaab extremists.

UN agencies have encouraged the government of Kenya to beef up security in the refugee camps and maintain law and order, to protect foreign aid workers from kidnapping and other security threats.

The schooling available in the refugee camps has also declined due to the withdrawal of aid workers, because many schools relied on foreign NGOs for educational material.

High schools have been most affected, some schools have no started this year, due to lack of teachers.

“The schools were run by Kenyan teachers from other parts of the country, and for security reasons they left and never come back. The schools are still closed because teachers never turned up for the work. When I contacted them, they told me that they are not coming to work due to the lack of security in the area. So I have no choice but to tell the students to go home until further notice,” said Yussuf Abdirisack, principal of Halane high school.

Exclusive
Mother of A Child Soldier Speaks to Somalia Report
By SUCAAD MIRE 02/24/2012
Child Soldier
© Somalia Report, all rights reserved
Child Soldier

Somalia Report has previously interviewed the mother of an al-Shabaab fighter and the mother of a pirate. Today, our correspondent talks to Hawa, the mother of a child soldier recruited by al-Shabaab in a Elasha Biyaha madrasa. Hawa currently lives in the Dadaab refugee camp in northern Kenya.

Please tell us about yourself.

I am Hawa (Ed: not her real name), 35, a mother of three kids, Ramla, Said and Huda.

Why did you leave Somalia?

I used to live in Mogadishu, then when the fighting there intensified we fled to (the al-Shabaab stronghold of) Elasha Biyaha, me and my two daughters. Said was living with his uncle in the countryside, then when we reached Elasha Biyaha, he come to live with us. I didn’t have enough money to pay for his studies, but then al-Shabaab established free schooling in a madrasa. Said, Ramla and Huda joined the madrasa, and then my son was recruited by them as a soldier.

How did al-Shabaab recruit your son? How old was he when he was recruited?

When classes ended my son and his teacher used to stay at the school for hours. When I asked him why he stayed in the class after it ended, he said to me “my teacher teaches me jihad lessons and how to pray.” It was late 2009, and he was 12 years old at the time.

When did you learn exactly what your son did when he stayed late>?

In the first half of 2010 rumors started in Elasha Biyaha that many kids like him had gone missing, who also used to attend the free study classes funded by al-Shabaab. Parents started pulling out their kids from al-Shabaab funded schools, but me I didn’t hadn't have enough money to pay for my son’s schooling.

I started asking questions about what he studied. One day he said to me, “Mom, if I join the jihadist group, what would you think of that?” He told me his teacher had told him to do this, and so I stopped him going to the madrasa.

Three days later, an al-Shabaab emir (commander) came to my home and asked me why I had pulled my son out of the madrasa, and ordered me to let him go back. I had no choice, because I had two daughters, one of whom was 15, who could have faced punishment from al-Shabaab.

When he went back to the madrasa they started teaching him how to prepare and clean guns, and how to use hand grenades. Sometimes we only saw him two or three days in a week.

You said you have two daughters who could have faced punishment from al-Shabaab. What would they have done to you and your daughters?

If I had disobeyed their order they would have taken my daughters as a punishment and married them by force. They have no hearts they always exploit your weaknesses. I feared for my daughters, but they never threatened my girls directly.

Was your son recruited by force or did he volunteer to join al-Shabaab?

My son was only 12 when he was recruited, how could he have properly made such a decision? They cheated him and made him false promises, like saying they would give him good money, that he would go to Jannah (paradise), and so many other falsehoods.

Where is your son now?

He is with me here in Dadaab. He is fine, thank God, and he realized how he had been deceived. I informed his uncle what had happened, and so he came and talked to Said. Said was raised by his uncle, so he listened to him. His uncle advised him to leave al-Shabaab, so he did.

Can we talk to Said?

No. I don't want him to remember his dark past. Thank God he wasn't hurt.

Do you know other kids that were recruited by al-Shabaab?

Yeah. Many others like him were recruited in a similar way. Al-Shabaab takes advantage of financially unstable families. They give their kids free education then they recruit them as fighters.

Did Said ever see foreign fighters?

Yes. One day he told me that a foreign fighter had visited him in the study place. He said he was an Arab, who instructed him on how to shoot.

When did you leave Elasha Biyaha? And how did you get to Dadaab?

We left last July, and arrived in Dadaab in August. At the beginning we travelled by vehicle between Elasha Biyaha and Kismayo, then took another vehicle from Kismayo to Dhobley. Then we reached Liboi in Kenya, and from there we went on foot, reaching Dadaab after seven days.

How is your life in Dadaab ? What do you do for work?

So far we are happy for being in a safe place, and we get a little support from aid workers. I work at a small tea house, but what I earn is not enough. But I have what is very important for every person: peace. I go to my makeshift house without worrying about insecurity.

What message would you like to send Somalis and al-Shabaab fighters?

For Somalis I would like to say that peace is what makes you human beings, and to al-Shabaab to please stop what you are doing, you have done enough. I wish to see Somalia at peace sooner rather then later.

Thank you.