Friday, September 13, 2013
Somali crisis: Amnesty criticises evictions in Mogadishu
Amnesty International has denounced the
forcible eviction of tens of thousands of
homeless people from makeshift camps in the
Somali capital, Mogadishu.
The human rights group says the process has led to
"large-scale human rights abuses" including the
killing of two people during protests.
Some 370,000 people have been living in the camps,
having fled drought, famine and fighting.
But their presence is hampering the government's
drive to rebuild the city.
In the past year the authorities have gained greater
control of Mogadishu from the Islamist group al-
Shabab.
The government announced in January a plan to
relocate hundreds of thousands of displaced people
to camps on the outskirts of the city.
The Amnesty report says the "relocation plan
could have been a positive development" if it had
respected "the security, fundamental rights and
basic needs" of displaced people.
However, Amnesty added, the government plan
proved to be "inherently flawed" and "seems to have
resulted in large-scale human rights abuses and
forced evictions".
Shelters flattened
The report says an eight-year old child and a mother
of nine children were killed and several other
residents were injured on 14 August when security
forces opened fire on residents protesting against the
eviction of a large settlement.
Some residents told Amnesty bulldozers had
flattened their shelters, destroying their possessions
and leaving them with nowhere to go.
When Amnesty delegates visited the area on 21
August they said they had seen evidence of a large
number of shelters having been recently destroyed.
The Somali authorities have not yet responded to the
Amnesty report.
In March, Human Right Watch said displaced women
in Mogadishu were reporting being gang-raped in the
camps.
The group said managers of the camps - often allied
to militias - were siphoning off food and other aid.
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