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Hundreds of thousands need urgent aid, says government

An IDP family, who fled their home in Mogadishu, in a makeshift hut in Burbishaaro, 20 km north of the Somali capital. Part of an IDP camp on the northern outskirts of Mogadishu. Hassan Mahamud Ahmed/IRIN

Somalia's transitional federal government has appealed for urgent humanitarian assistance for hundreds of thousands of people affected by drought, floods and displacement.

[Read this story in Arabic]

"We need urgent assistance if we are to avert an impending humanitarian crisis," Information Minister Madobe Nuunow said on 20 September. "The government will take any step necessary to support those who come to help our people."

He called on international relief agencies to "move quickly before it is too late". "We need help now," he added. The majority of those affected were in southern and central regions, he said, adding: "Some regions are experiencing drought, while others have been flooded."

In the south, the Middle and Lower Shabelle regions and the Middle and Lower Jubas, Bay and Bakol are hosting thousands of displaced while also suffering the effects of drought and floods, he said.

"Mogadishu [the capital] has a lot of people who have fled their homes and are currently in makeshift camps with very little shelter, food or health facilities," said Nuunow.

The situation of internally displaced persons was most problematic. "They are the ones who need greatest attention," the minister said. "The `Deyr’ [short rains] is upon us and most of them don’t have shelter, enough food or medical care."

Displaced by violence

Thousands of people continue to be displaced by violence in Mogadishu between Ethiopian-backed transitional government forces and insurgents, according to civil society groups.

Nuunow said that although there were security problems in Mogadishu, "it was not directed against international agencies and therefore should not be used as an excuse not to help."

According to the August 2007 report of the UN Food and Agricultural Organization's Food Security Assessment Unit (FSAU), the number of people in need of humanitarian assistance has increased 50 percent, from 1 to 1.5 million.

"Those are the figures generally accepted by the humanitarian community," Peter Goossens, the UN World Food Programme country director, said.

According to FSAU, 295,000 require life-saving interventions, and 490,000 face an acute food security and livelihood crisis requiring livelihood support.

In addition, there are 325,000 people who are newly displaced from Mogadishu who need both life- and livelihood-saving interventions, said the report.

ah/cb


This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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