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CAFOD responds to "Worst Humanitarian Crisis in Africa"
19 Nov 2007 16:05:00 GMT
CAFOD
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CAFOD responds to "worst humanitarian crisis in Africa"

As violence escalates in the Somali capital of Mogadishu, CAFOD is providing desperately needed humanitarian assistance to those forced from their homes by the fighting.

During the past two weeks an estimated 173,000 Mogadishu residents have fled the city and arrived in displaced camps.

CAFOD in partnership with Caritas Somalia, Islamic Relief and Christian Aid is helping more than 7,500 people at the Hawa Abdi camp, which is 20 kilometres from the capital.

It is the first time that CAFOD has worked in Somalia. Security concerns continue to make day to day operations dangerous and frustrating.

Davide Bernocchi, Executive Director of Caritas Somalia, says that he fears that Somalia is moving inextricably toward a humanitarian catastrophe.

"It's very frustrating because the security situation is so bad, aid agencies can't help all those in need. The obstacles not only stem from the war situation itself but also from the predatory attitude of those for whom the displaced are either a lucrative business or nothing at all.

"Our own medical coordinator had to rush back to the capital a few days ago, after his teenage daughter had been hit in the head by a stray bullet. Thank God, she survived, but she needs to be urgently transferred to Nairobi, which is in itself another challenge

Nik Bredholt, CAFOD's regional humanitarian coordinator for East Africa said: "The hope that the people had nine months ago when the transitional government took over Mogadishu has been eroded in the intervening months as the conflict has spiralled into extreme violence.

"The clear sign that things are really bad at the moment is the numbers of people fleeing. The United Nations High Commission for Refuges estimates that each day around 1,200 Somali refugees arrive in Kenya."

The UN special representative for Somalia, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah this week said "The humanitarian situation in Somalia is the worst in Africa, and I am talking about food security, malnutrition, and all these issues. The current crisis in Mogadishu can only make it worse."

For further information please contact: Fiona Callister on 020 7095 5558 or 07867 908720 or fcallister@cafod.org.uk

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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Actor Brad Pitt stands amidst the Pink Project, metal frames draped in pink fabric, in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans December 3, 2007. Pitt said on Monday he wants to build 150 environmentally friendly homes for families displaced by Hurricane Katrina in the hard-hit New Orleans neighborhood. REUTERS/Lee Celano (UNITED STATES)



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