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NinBrown

Somali camps 'unfit for humans'

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The aid agency Oxfam has decried the conditions in which hundreds of thousands of refugees from the conflict in Somalia are being forced to live.

 

It says the overcrowded and badly managed camps in Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya are "barely fit for humans".

 

Dadaab camp in north-eastern Kenya was meant to hold 90,000 refugees, but is now home to almost 300,000 people, and a further 8,000 arrive each month.

 

Oxfam has called on Kenya's government to urgently allocate more land.

 

"We really need extra land, extra space, to be able to spread people out," Oxfam's Paul Smith Lomas told the BBC.

 

"And that land needs to be allocated soon. We've had assurances for months and months now. Now we need action."

 

Kenya's commissioner for refugees, Peter Kusimba, told the BBC that the pace may have been slow, but land was being earmarked to decongest the camp.

 

As fighting continues in Somalia many are unable to flee the country.

 

Afgooye, near the capital Mogadishu, is home to almost half a million Somalis and is the world's densest concentration of displaced people, the BBC's Will Ross reports from Nairobi.

 

Insecurity makes it increasingly difficult for local and international agencies to deliver aid there, he adds.

 

Oxfam has described the situation as a "human tragedy of unthinkable proportions" and says the international response has been "shamefully inadequate".

 

"The ultimate solution to the situation and the needs in Somalia has to be peace, has to be a politically negotiated peace settlement," Mr Smith Lomas said.

 

"Much is being done, and much more must be done. Until people experience safety and peace on the ground, then we will have to continue responding to these humanitarian needs," he added.

 

Somalia is nominally ruled by a UN-backed government, but Islamist insurgents control large areas.

 

The failed Horn of Africa state has not had a functioning central government since 1991.

 

http://news.bbc.co.u k/1/hi/world/africa/ 8235089.stm

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This is really sad. May Allah have His mercy on our people. The Dhadhaab camp was initially intended for 100,000 people and now there are over 300,000.

 

Illaahow Somaali u naxariiso.

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Oxfam has called on Kenya's government to urgently allocate more land.

 

"We really need extra land, extra space, to be able to spread people out," Oxfam's Paul Smith Lomas told the BBC.

 

"And that land needs to be allocated soon. We've had assurances for months and months now. Now we need action."

The key issue has always been Kenya's refusal to allow the camp to expand in a land that, most ironically, belong to those suffering Somalis (the occupied NFD, which clearly rejected Kenyan claims in an internationally supervised referendum, when that country became independent in 1960).

 

On the other hand, we have the worst humanitarian crisis in the vast occupied Somali Galbeed, where Addis Abeba is litterally starving children to deaths by their thousands.

 

 

How could an intelligent human being, let alone a Muslim, be focused instead on the "my-tuulo-will-starv e-last" contest, with scores marked by some visit by an obscure Westerner delegation?

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How could an intelligent human being, let alone a Muslim, be focused instead on the "my-tuulo-will-starv e-last" contest, with scores marked by some visit by an obscure Westerner delegation?

Aawey dadka tuulooyinkaas ku faantamo, mee ka jawaabaan this.

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Originally posted by Abu-Salman:

How could an intelligent human being, let alone a Muslim, be focused instead on the "my-tuulo-will-starv e-last" contest, with scores marked by some visit by an obscure Westerner delegation?

i would like to answer this question on behalf of my brothers - and here it is:

 

Because our intelligence and reasoning is clouded by disease called Clanism to point of being devoid of any Islamic/Muslim solidarity

my Allah (SWT) cure my brothers of this disease. Amiin.

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