Cape Times

Somali rebels block food aid to starving villagers

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AL-SHABAAB rebels are blocking aid from reaching Somali villages, compoundin­g the effects of the poor rains.

The Islamist group continues to hold sway over most rural areas in drought-ravaged southern Somalia and opposes the presence of internatio­nal aid groups, accusing them of colluding with its arch enemy, the Somali government.

Without access to food, about 160 000 people from across the region have walked, sometimes for days, to disease-ridden camps in government-controlled cities where aid is available.

Those who are too weak to make the journey are left at home to teeter on the edge of death.

Although the militia has been weakened and has lost much popular support, in part because of its obstructio­nism during a famine six years ago in which 250000 people died, it has still mustered recent attacks on UN aid agencies.

Thirteen aid workers were kidnapped by al-Shabaab and other local militias in April.

Since the previous famine, government-allied militias together with AU troops have regained control over Baidoa, a city near the centre of the drought. UN agencies and AU troops share a heavily fortified compound next to the city’s airport.

Aid workers travel with hired gunmen when they venture into the camps of displaced people in Baidoa or visit hungry towns.

UN staff often move in bulletproo­f vehicles with military escorts. Somali aid workers can travel with greater ease, but their associatio­n with aid groups makes them targets for al-Shabaab. “If they caught me, they would kill me,” said a Somali employee of Save the Children, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of security concerns.

Al-Shabaab does not just target aid groups, however.

The rebels often retaliate against people who flee to Baidoa’s camps, saying they may be divulging details about the militants’ whereabout­s to authoritie­s.

Many villagers, therefore, are reluctant to return to their homes when conditions improve. Aid workers worry that Somalia’s displaceme­nt crisis may thus prove intractabl­e.

“If they go back to their villages, they would have to answer to al-Shabaab,” said Edmore Tondhlana, who co-ordinates the UN’s drought-relief operation in Baidoa.

“(Al-Shabaab) will ask: ‘Where were you?

“‘Who did you speak to?’ They think that you have become a government informant. They can kill you.”

 ?? PICTURE: ANDREW RENNEISEN FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Soldiers from the Southwest Special Police Force ride in a truck on the outskirts of Baidoa, Somalia. Al-Shabaab militants continue to control much of the surroundin­g area.
PICTURE: ANDREW RENNEISEN FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Soldiers from the Southwest Special Police Force ride in a truck on the outskirts of Baidoa, Somalia. Al-Shabaab militants continue to control much of the surroundin­g area.

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