How Safe Is Going Home To Somalia? – Analysis

Sally

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It appears that the Somalis in South Africa have a dilemma on their hands. There is plenty of crime in South Africa, but yet all of Somalia is not safe. However, we can understand why many want to be reunited with their families.

How Safe Is Going Home To Somalia? – Analysis


By IRIN

November 30, 2013

By Kristy Siegfried

Not so long ago, Somali asylum seekers were arriving in South Africa at a rate of about 1,500 a month. Even a year ago, about 100 a week were still trickling in, according to the Somali Association of South Africa. These days, many more are departing than arriving, and most of them are leaving on flights bound for Mogadishu, Somalia’s capital.

“Life is difficult for them in South Africa,” said Reys Ofman, general secretary of the Somali Association. “But mainly… [they are going] because of the changes in Somalia.”

To read entire article go to:

How Safe Is Going Home To Somalia? - Analysis Eurasia Review
 
Somalia Parliament Under Attack...
:eek:
Al Shabaab militants attack Somali parliament, 4 dead
May 24, 2014 - Al Qaeda-linked militants attacked Somalia's parliament on Saturday, killing at least four people in a bomb and gun assault, the Islamist group and police said.
"A car bomb exploded at the gate of the parliament house - then it was followed by a suicide bomber explosion. So far we have confirmed four policemen dead," a police colonel, Farah Hussein, told Reuters. "The lawmakers and the other workers were rescued as soon as the car bomb exploded. But the terrorists are still firing from inside a mosque nearby," he added. A Reuters witness who saw four bodies on the ground and one wounded man fleeing the scene said the fighting was ongoing.

Al Shabaab, the Al Qaeda-affiliated group that was pushed out of the capital about two years ago and has since waged a sustained guerrilla campaign, said it had launched the attack. "We are behind the suicide bombing, explosions and the fighting inside the so-called Somali parliament house, and still heavy fighting is going on inside," Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, al Shabaab's spokesman for military operations, told Reuters.

Since being ousted from Mogadishu, al Shabaab has intensified its attacks in Somalia and in neighbouring Kenya, which sent troops across the border to fight the Islamists. In September, the group killed 67 people in a shopping mall in the capital Nairobi. In February at least 11 people were killed when it attacked the presidential compound.

Al Shabaab militants attack Somali parliament, 4 dead - Hindustan Times

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Al Shabaab attacks Somali parliament, at least 10 dead
– Al Shabaab militants stormed Somalia’s parliament on Saturday, killing at least 10 security officers in a bomb and gun assault that the United States condemned as a “heinous act of terrorism.”
The attack started with a car bomb at a gate to the heavily fortified parliament compound, followed by a suicide bombing and then a gun battle that continued for hours. Al Shabaab is an al Qaeda-linked group that killed 67 people at a Kenyan shopping mall last year. “Ten government forces died and 14 others were injured in the attack today. Four lawmakers were also injured. Seven of the fighters who attacked the house were also killed as you see their bodies,” Kasim Ahmed Roble, a police spokesman, told reporters at the scene. Roble made no mention of any civilian casualties.

A spokesman for al Shabaab, Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, said the group’s fighters had killed 30 people. “We killed 30 from the AU (African Union) and from the various forces of the so-called Somali government,” he said. The al Shabaab estimate of the death toll was not independently verifiable. Reuters witnesses saw four bodies at the scene and a soldier fall from a rooftop after being shot. Reuters television pictures showed a large pool of blood near a blast site, and a man with his shirt drenched in blood running away from the scene.

2014-05-24T130330Z_1007650001_LYNXMPEA4N06O_RTROPTP_3_OUKWD-UK-SOMALIA-BLAST.JPG


The fighting continued for hours after the initial explosion, with gunfire and smaller blasts being heard around the parliament. “We are behind the suicide bombing, explosions and the fighting inside the so-called Somali parliament house, and still heavy fighting is going on inside,” said the al Shabaab spokesman. The African Union Mission in Somalia said in a statement that all the lawmakers who were in parliament before the attack were safely evacuated.

The attack on parliament, a building about 300 metres (328 yards) from the president’s palace that is guarded by African Union peacekeepers and Somali forces, showed that the al Qaeda-linked group remained capable of hitting the centre of Mogadishu despite being pushed out of the capital two years ago. “The terrorists have once again shown that they are against all Somalis, by killing our innocent brothers and sisters. These cowardly, despicable actions are not a demonstration of the true Islamic faith,” said Prime Minister Abdiweli Sheikh Ahmed.

The U.S. State Department strongly condemned the attack, offering condolences “to those affected by this heinous act of terrorism.” “We continue to stand firmly with the Federal Government of Somalia and the many international partners working to support its efforts to root out the threat posed by al-Shabaab,” State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said in a statement. “Cowardly acts such as these will not shake our resolve.” Nicholas Kay, the U.N. secretary-general’s special representative for Somalia, said: “The Federal Parliament represents the people of Somalia and their hopes and aspirations for a peaceful and stable future. Today’s attack is an attack against the people of Somalia for which there can be no justification.”

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