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Hibo

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More than 30 Somalis who were living in the

United States say they have been deported to

Somalia in conditions that one woman

described as "illegal" and "brutal".

 

They said they were rounded up by the United

States Immigration Services two weeks ago

and put on board a plane which flew them to

the Somali capital Mogadishu via Amsterdam

and Djibouti.

 

During the journey,

the men were

reportedly shackled.

 

Most claim to have

immigrated to the

United States as

teenagers to escape

civil war and anarchic

clan fighting in

Somalia.

 

The east African

country is still prone

to factional fighting

nearly 10 years after an ill-fated US-led

military intervention that had been intended to

restore stability.

 

'No information'

 

Fawzia Abdi Mohamed, 24, the only woman

among the deportees, said she had been living

in Atlanta, Georgia for more than 10 years and

working as an electrician.

 

She told the BBC that she had been taken from

her home early in the morning and prevented

from driving to work.

 

"Every time you asked a question they would

tell you, shut up ... they didn't tell us nothing,

no information whatsoever," she told the BBC.

 

She was speaking from Hargeisa in the

breakaway republic of Somaliland - where she

said she had gone after she was "almost killed

several times" in Mogadishu because of

rumours that she and other deportees were

American spies.

 

Expulsions 'unlawful'

 

Complaining that her deportation had been

"illegal and brutal", she said: "Cockroaches get

treated better than that."

 

Another deportee, 23-year-old Abdirizak

Mohamud Mohamed, said he was a college

student.

 

He said he had lived in the US for 20 years and

that his parents, six brothers and two sisters

were still there.

 

He said immigration officers had taken him from

his college.

 

"I was never told anything and whenever I

spoke I was told to shut up," he said.

 

Both he and Fawzia Abdi Mohamed say they

are not fluent in the Somali language and feel

more at ease in the United States.

 

The UK newspaper The Times reported that

some of the deportees were staying at a

squalid Mogadishu hotel without money or

passports.

 

The newspaper said one man, Yussuf Hussein,

a Somali who emigrated to the United States

as a teenager, was arrested without warning

from the computer company Intel Corp, where

had earned $70,000 a year, in late January.

 

'No phone call'

 

He said officers of the Immigration

Naturalisation Service refused to tell him what

he had been charged with, taking him instead

to a cell without access to a lawyer or a

telephone to contact his wife and two children

in Boston.

 

He told the Times that he was arrested three

days after the 18 January release of Black

Hawk Down - a film about fighting between

Somalis and US forces on October 3, 1993,

during the international mission to restore

peace and stability to chaotic and violent

Somalia.

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