
4
3.1Economic Collapse and
Unfolding of an Unprecedented
Humanitarian Catastrophe
The figures and statements dealt
here are incomplete economic as
there has not been a
comprehensive survey and data
collection based on real basic
production and productive forces
such industrial and agricultural
outputs, labour and
productivity, import-export and
terms and balance of trade,
fiscal and monetary elements
such revenue and budget, banking
and insurance systems, etc. but
on some UN empirical reports
about the manifestations of
market prices, inflation, and
humanitarian and poverty
statistics which are as a result
inadequate and cannot portray
the real economic situation or
poverty levels prevailing in the
country due to the insecurity
and lack of access to all
regions to find out all that
necessary information.
Consequently, within four months
of the Ethiopian occupation’s
devastating actions, the UN top
Humanitarian Affairs declared
‘In terms of numbers and access
to them Somalia is a worse
displacement crisis than Darfur
or Chad or anywhere else this
year’(2) in reference to the
massive displaced people and the
rest of the dispossessed
population trapped in the city.
This humanitarian disaster
unprecedented in the history of
Somalia has split over to other
regions which were negatively
impacted by this rapacious and
destructive occupation or
received and hosted tens of
thousands of IDPs from
Mogadishu.
Thereafter, the humanitarian
situation started to constantly
and rapidly deteriorate. On 23rd
July 2008 the UN OCHA issued
warning report that in Somalia
the humanitarian situation ‘was
fasting deteriorating’ and ‘in
January (2008) the target
(needy) population was 1.5
million’ and again on 8 August
2008 the UN estimated ‘that 2.6
million people in Somalia need
aid, a 40 percent increase in
the number of vulnerable people
since January. Some 3.5 million
Somalis or half the total
population could require
assistance by the end of the
year - an increase of 900,000
people in one month.’(3) Later
after four months the above
figure of 3.5 million was
rectified as ‘3.2 million people
in Somalia – 43 per cent of the
population – are in need of
humanitarian assistance as a
result of the combined effects
of conflict and drought’ (4)
without any explanation. Did the
300,000 people left out died or
become well-off? Or was the
previous number was inflated?
The report added that ‘Despite
the challenging security
circumstances in Somalia, WFP
has managed to provide food aid
to more than 1.5 million needy
people in the country each
month. WFP shipped some 260,000
metric tons of food to Somalia
in 2008, almost four times what
it provided in 2007 ’ which
means the UN and other
humanitarian agencies were
unable to provide food aid to
1.7 million people who were
either in ‘Acute Food and
Livelihood Crisis (AFLC) and
Humanitarian Emergency (HE)
according to the UN itself. Out
of the above figure of 3.2
million, ‘1.2 million are rural
people in crisis’ and 2 million
people, are urban poor and
internally displaced population
-IDPs.’ (5)
Since then the
humanitarian crisis has been
deteriorating from one
unprecedented level to another.
Prof. Abdi Ismail Samatar
accused the Bush US
Administration for the
destruction of Somalia by
stating ‘The Ethiopian invasion,
which was sanctioned by the U.S.
government, has destroyed
virtually all the
life-sustaining economic systems
which the population has built
for the last fifteen years.’(6)
The UN too in directly
acknowledged that the occupation
forces created this humanitarian
catastrophe by declaring ‘the
worst humanitarian situations in
the last 17 years’ (7) which
means that the situation has so
dramatically deteriorated during
the last two years that Somalia
was under Ethiopian occupation.
On 7 October 2008, 52
international and national NGOs
dealing with Somalia in a press
release drew the attention of
the international actors to
their failure in addressing the
runaway inflation and sky-high
prices and dismal humanitarian
situation prevailing and
directed this blame
A New York Times
correspondent journalist
reported a famine prevailing in
the central regions where ‘many
Somalis are trying to stave off
starvation with a thin gruel
made from mashed thorn-tree
branches called jerrin’(8)
in Galgadud and Galmudug. The
Resident and Coordinator of
Humanitarian Affairs for Somalia
warned ‘Somalia is really at a
stage where the situation is
getting increasingly acute and a
cause for major concern.’(9).
and UNICEF warned that ‘It is
our view that 2009 will break or
make of security-wise and
humanitarian-wise for the Somali
people.’
(10)
There is growing urban Poverty.
According to the UN there are
705,000 urban poor people (22%
of urban population) living in
the main cities like Afgoi,
Mogadishu, Dusa Mareb, Las Anood,
Bossaso, Erigavo, and Burao and
rural settlements of whom
556,000 are in Acute food and
Livelihood crisis (AFLC) 140,000
are in Humanitarian Emergency
(HE). Additionally, there are an
‘estimated 1 million new IDPs
from the increased conflict over
the last two years, plus 275,000
protracted IDPs, who are equally
affected by the food price
crisis.’ And ‘The rural crisis
is more severe in that more than
half or 680,000 people are in
Humanitarian Emergency (HE),
requiring emergency livelihood
and life-saving’ in April 2008
and ‘the largest concentrations
of rural populations in crisis
are in the south (66%) and
central regions (29%). Increased
civil insecurity is leading to
distressed population movement
both internally and
cross-border. Since July ’08,
it is estimated that the number
of IDPs has increased from
870,000 to 1,020,000 (UNHCR,
January 9, ’08), and there are
more than 275,000 protracted
IDPs.’(11) while keeping in mind
that there are multitude of poor
and destitute people not reached
out and reported by the UN and
other humanitarian agencies
because of inaccessibility due
to insecurity as UN itself
conceded ‘At present,
south-central Somalia is almost
entirely off limits to the
international staff of aid
agencies.’(12) For example,
‘Twenty four (24 ) aid workers,
of whom 20 were Somalis and four
(4) foreigners, have been
intentionally killed and were
missing in Somalia especially in
Mogadishu and adjacent regions
in 2008’(13) and there were
country-wide 153 security
incidents on in January 2009
(same report).which came down to
75 incidents in February 2009 –
a 51% reduction.’’(14)
In this connection, sparing
direct blame from the Ethiopian
occupation forces’ devastation
and policy of ‘kill by bullet
and starvation’, a US academic
and Somali analyst succinctly
described the aid obstruction by
the Ethiopian troops and then
TFG leaders in this way ‘The
humanitarian nightmare in
Somalia is the result of a
lethal cocktail of factors. The
large-scale displacement caused
by the fighting in Mogadishu is
the most important driver. The
displaced have fled mainly into
the interior of the country,
where they lack access to food,
clean water, basic health care,
livelihoods, and support
networks. . . . IDPs, are among
the most vulnerable populations
in any humanitarian emergency.
He adds ‘Humanitarian agencies
in Somalia are facing daunting
obstacles to delivery of food
aid. There is now virtually no
“humanitarian space” in which
aid can safely be delivered.
Until recently, the TFG and its
uncontrolled security forces
were mainly responsible for most
obstacles to delivery of food
aid. TFG hardliners view the
provision of assistance to IDPs
as support to an enemy
population—terrorists and
terrorist sympathizers in their
view—and have sought to impede
the flow of aid convoys through
a combination of bureaucratic
and security impediments.
Uncontrolled and predatory TFG
security forces, along with
opportunistic criminal gangs,
have erected over 400 militia
roadblocks (each of which
demands as much as $500 per
truck to pass) and have
kidnapped local aid workers for
ransom.’ (15)
On 2/10/2008 the British
Magazine The Economist
acknowledged that during the two
years period of the Ethiopian
occupation period Somalia has
been ruined by these words ‘Over
the past 18 months, Somalia has
descended into a terrible levels
of displacement and humanitarian
need, armed conflict and
assassinations, political
meltdown, radicalization and
virulent anti-Americanism.’ And
on 12/11/2008 Reuters joined the
few Western media agencies which
acknowledged the disaster in the
making in Somalia by writing
‘Somalis are suffering
dreadfully as violence compounds
the misery caused by drought and
soaring food prices in a country
that was already one of the
world’s poorest. About one
million Somalis are
international refugees. Aid
workers, hampered by attacks on
them, say it is one of the
world’s worst crisis’ while on
5/12/2008 fifty two (52) NGOs
dealing with Somalia declared
‘The international community has
completely failed Somali
civilians. The average Somali
has seen price increases for
food ad water of up to 1,000 per
cent plunging many into
worsening poverty’ –said the 52
NGOs. ‘At present,
south-central Somalia is almost
entirely off limits to the
international staff of aid
agencies.’(16)’ while ‘70% of
the population lacks reliable
access to safe water.’ (17).
The severe drought effects in
the country especially the
pastoral hinterlands during the
last couple of years have not
yet been fully assessed because
of inaccessibility due to
insecurity. Even so, the UN
could sum up the situation as ‘A
severe water shortage and
deepening drought in many parts
of Somalia is exacerbating the
humanitarian crisis in the
country. Field reports confirm
livestock are dying in huge
numbers and remaining water
sources cannot meet both humans
and livestock needs.
Humanitarian agencies are
trucking water in the most
critical areas but activities
are far from meeting the
enormous needs. . . The
deepening drought in Somalia
provides a continuing basis for
concern as it is accompanied by
high rates of malnutrition and
the long term loss of assets and
livelihoods’ (18) but complete
numbers of livestock lost and
people perished were not given.
For the period of Diraac
2008-2009 (Jiilaal) the UN and
other sources have collected the
following anecdotic and
inadequate figures and
statements at the beginning of
the drought season. In Galgadud
region due to drought and recent
fighting there is serious
humanitarian crisis apart from
the 130,000 IDPs from Mogadishu
complicated by deteriorating
security. (19); in Galmudug
besides the already known 40
-50,000 IDPS from Mogadishu, the
UN reported 38,000 nomads in
Galmudug needed immediate
assistance. (20), in El Dheer
district of Middle Shabelle ’30%
of goats and sheep and 40% of
cattle’ are said to have died.
(21) And in Puntland some 400
nomadic families [2,400 people].
Pastoralists who lost they their
livestock flock to cities where
(22) that various relief
agencies distributed food
220,000 drought victims in the
following regions: 36,019
households in Gedo region,
60,000 and 10,000 households in
Galgadud and southern Mudug
(Galmudug) regions respectively
and 20,000 beneficiaries (3,250
households) in Bay, Bakool and
Hiran; and additional 48,000
people in Bakool region and
54,000 people in Gedo and Bay
regions. (23)
On top of that, concerned of the
disastrous humanitarian
situation in Somalia in general
and the current Gu’ (spring)
rain shortfall much below its
normal level which ensues the
severe droughts of the last four
years that decimated most of the
pastoralists’ livestock in
particular, the UN Resident and
Humanitarian Coordinator, Mark
Bowden, a in letter (24/4//2009)
addressed to the Somali people
asking them to work together in
this difficulty time and making
assurances that the UN will do
more to save lives and alleviate
the hardships of the Somali
needy millions as much as they
can, he laments that the
humanitarian agencies cannot
have access to and unable to
reach out many populations in
needy due to insecurity
especially parts in the
south/central regions and
Mogadishu where there are
killings and abductions of aid
workers of whom 18 are currently
under captivity of their
abductors. Mr. Bowden
appreciates the social and
economic developmental
contributions played by the
Somali Diaspora in Somalia in
the past years which he says
have recently shrunken owing to
the effects of the Global
Recession where the Somalia
Diaspora communities live and
that the UN plans to help
encourage such contribution and
efforts of he Diaspora. Finally,
he appeals to the Somali
‘community leaders, elders ad
the people to help ensure the
security and safety of
humanitarian staff’.
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