|
EDITORIAL
By www.banadir.com
Somalis in general are certainly worried sick about their
loved ones back home and in hostile countries after more than
a decade of crisscrossing the continents, face to face with
illegal racketeers, people smugglers, stony-faced immigration
officials, bigoted landlords, bullying security guards, racial
and religious- profiling, not to mention the harsh winter,
and culture shock.
Since the outbreak of Somalia's civil war in 1991, each new
cycle of turmoil has generated a fresh flow of refugees to
neighbouring countries. Somali refugee crisis reached the
worst mark after the country slided into anarchy again when
the TFG with the help of Ethiopian troops and the Islamist
started shelling each other inside civilian areas. The flow
of Somali refugees reached countries like Yemen and Egypt
where there were in the past tens of thousands of refugees
stranded already. Worthy mentioning here that the TFG is currently
based in Baidoa city, South of Mogadishu, due to the unending
armed struggle between Ethiopian troops and the Islamist.
Some of those making the crossings are driven by economic
reasons, but others are escaping conflict and persecution, people
of concern to UNHCR. Although The United Nations refugee agency
(UNHCR) in these countries try to help the refugees with their
living conditions, health care and resettlement issues, yet
the plight of these people are underestimated by UNHCR, host
countries and the developed countries as well.
A case in point is a young refugee who ended up in Egypt,
one of the countries who are reluctant to welcome Somali refugees
because of the overwhelming Arab Refugees from Palestine,
Iraq and Sudan. However, young man breathed unexpected sigh
of relief when his long lost half-sister, currently living
in Toronto, Canada, contacted with the stranded boy through
a Somali-Canadian visitor in Cairo give him the contact address
of his long separated sister due to the an un-ending bloody civil
war in their native country of Somalia.
Another case is a young mother of two in Dadaab Refugee Camp
in neighboring Kenya who lost her family in the early years
of the Somali Conflict but was unable to locate them. She
desperately searched with the local UNHCR office and the Red
Cross without results. But finally, she received a good news
last year from Somali Diaspora man who lives in Nairobi that
her elder sister lives in Minneapolis, US, and made her first
contact with her sister after 16 years of separation. Also
there are internally displaced persons, mostly the non-armed
tribes, otherwise known as the Somali Bantus who were caught
in clan feuds during the civil/clan wars. The warring functions
expropriated their farms, destroy their homes, and gang raped
their women during a running bloody battle and as a result
people start moving to neighbouring countries. It is a man-made
disaster in the making.
As if that is not enough, the world closed its eyes, covered
its ears and shut its mouth, even when it is evident that
the streets in Somalia still flows with blood, the seas are
full of boat people and the neighboring countries are overwhelmed
with young and vulnerable refugees, including women, children
and the elderly.
The Middle-Eastern governments should respect its international
obligations and continue to keep theirs doors open for the
defenceless Somali refugees, who might fear persecution, or
run from the civil war. Also UNHCR should keep its pledge
to help internally displaced persons (IDPs) and external refugees.
Also the developed countries should recognize the plight of
the Somalis which the United Nations Human Rights call the
worst disaster in Africa and should know that there is nothing
wrong with being a refugee or immigrant. After all it was
the refugees and immigrants who built the "New World" with
their sweat and blood.
Even Albert Einstein was a penniless refugee.
EDITORIAL
By www.banadir.com
|