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By Peter HeinleinU.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has expressed grave concern at the violence in Somalia. VOA's Peter Heinlein at U.N. headquarters reports officials also fear the consequences of Somalia's burgeoning1 humanitarian2 crisis.
| Displaced Somali children at the Elasha camp on the outskirts of Mogadishu, 26 Apr 2007 |
"I am gravely concerned about the on-going violence in Somalia and I have discussed with all parties concerned, while traveling with the Secretary-General of the League of Arab States and other leaders," said Ban Ki-moon. "I am also very much troubled by the fact that the Transitional Federal Government is not able to sustain the momentum5 thus created politically."
The top U.N. humanitarian official this week described Somalia as the most dangerous place in the world for relief workers to operate. Undersecretary General John Holmes said humanitarian aid operations were being hampered6 by probably the worst fighting in and around Mogadishu in 16 years.
"The U.N. had been helping7 something like a million people already, and that situation had seemed to be improving, which makes it particularly tragic8 the deterioration9 we've seen in recent weeks and recent days," said John Holmes. "The level of displacement10 from Mogadishu has reached something like 320,000 , which is one-third of the entire population of the city, and that figure is rising every day as the fighting continues."
Holmes said aid is reaching only about 60,000 of the 320,000 homeless. He described their condition as 'worrying'.
"They have virtually nothing, and a lot of them are living under trees, which they are apparently11 having to rent, for shelter, and they are in great difficulty," he said.
Holmes says civilians12 are being caught in the crossfire13 as Ethiopian and Somali force battle insurgents in the streets of Mogadishu. He accused all sides in the fighting of responsibility for failing to stay within international law. He said one hospital had apparently been deliberately14 targeted by shelling and artillery15 fire.
Somalia has not had an effective government since 1991. Ethiopian troops entered the country late last year to help the transitional government drive out rival Islamist forces who had control of Mogadishu. Islamist fighters are believed to make up the majority of the insurgents.
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