4500 CIVILIANS KILLED WOUNDED IN SOMALIA SINCE 2016 SAYS UNITED NATIONS
The United Nations says more than
4,500 civilians have been killed or wounded in the conflict in Somalia since
the start of 2016. The United Nations Human Rights Office and the U.N. Assistance Mission
in Somalia (UNSOM) have issued a new report that implicates parties to the
conflict in the death and injuries sustained by the civilians.
In the report, covering a period
from January 1, 2016 until October 14, 2017, UNSOM documented 2,078 civilian
deaths and 2,507 injuries. The worst perpetrators of the killings against
civilians are the al-Shabab militant group that is responsible for more 60
percent of the casualties according to the report. About a quarter of the death
toll comes from the October 14 truck in Mogadishu where a special committee
tasked to investigate the incident reported that 512 people were killed and
more than 300 others were injured. Al-Shabab has been blamed for the attack.
“They are by far the worst when
it comes to activities that kill civilians in conflict,” said United Nations Special
Envoy to Somalia Michael Keating. “Of the incidents attributable to al-Shabab,
79 percent are as a result of the use of IEDs [improvised explosive devices]
whether they are vehicle borne or otherwise.".
The report says clan militias are
responsible for 13 percent of the casualties, while state actors, including the
army and the police, are responsible for 11 percent. The report says the
African Union Mission to Somalia (AMISOM) is responsible for four percent. A
further 12 percent of the casualties was caused by unidentified or undetermined
attackers, the report said. The U.N.'s Keating said civilians are paying the
price for the failure to resolve Somalia’s conflicts through political means.
“Parties to the conflict are
simply not doing enough to shield civilians from the violence. This is
shameful,” he said. The U.N. report coincides with the International Human
Rights Day. The United Nations expressed concern over the death of some
civilians in the hands of Somali security forces and AMISOM because they
“undermine the Somali population’s trust in the Government and the
international community”.
The U.S.-based Human Rights Watch
welcomed the report. Senior researcher Laetitia Bader told VOA Somali this
report is “very important” given the difficulties in getting data about human
rights violations in Somalia. “Too often the extent and the
magnitude of the toll on civilian from the ongoing conflict in Somalia has been
been undermined in many ways because of the lack of data, so this report which
seeks to offer a baseline to quantify casualties is a very important insight
into just how many civilians have been lost,” she said.
The report says the conflict
disproportionately affected children, exposing them to “grave violations”
during military operations. In the first 10 months of 2017, 3,335 cases of
child recruitment were reported with 71.5 per cent attributed to al-Shabab,
14.6 per cent to clan militia, and 7.4 percent to the Somali National Army, the
report says. Bader said some of the report’s findings corroborate their own
research in Somalia.
“A lot of the grave abuses which
are documented in this report and quantified to a certain extent are ones which
we ourselves have continued to document, whether it is cases of sexual violence
against internally displaced people, whether it’s ongoing recruitment of
children by al-Shabab in Baidoa,” she said. “I was recently in Baidoa looking
into the recruitment trend in Bay region, so a lot of the things they document
in this report are ones which confirm our own research.”
No comments:
Post a Comment