Aid slow to arrive for people in northern Somalia fleeing Las Anod fighting

 Aid slow to arrive for people in northern Somalia fleeing Las Anod fighting

‘The only thing we get is water, but there is no food.’

Temporary tent shelters in an informal refugee camp outside Kalabaydh, Somalia, in May 2023. More than 185,000 civilians have fled the fighting in nearby Lasanod.  But now they need assistance to establish their livelihood

Overcrowded camps

Kalabayd, a town of roughly 7,000 residents before the fighting broke out, now supports some 30,000 refugees, camped in the town and surrounding areas. The influx has pushed every aspect of life to the brink. Schools have shut down, their grounds dotted with makeshift tents and tarp shelters for those unable to find a spot inside classrooms, where families have crowded into every corner. 

“They do not have shelters that can protect them from rain. Women do not have toilets.”
A plot of land outside town was set aside for the displaced to create a camp, but water is only available when trucked in by tankers, and food is even harder to find. Local residents have been bringing what food they can to displaced families, but it is not nearly enough.

“Drought has compounded the situation,” said Merick Freedy Alagbe, who oversees operations for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in northern Somalia. “With this new wave of displaced people, it is difficult for the host communities to support them. People already have their resources completely depleted.”

The ICRC has been giving cash assistance to some 6,000 families, providing them with $130 per month to buy food and supplies, but with informal camps springing up around the region, and families being absorbed into neighbouring towns, it’s difficult for aid agencies to reach all those in need. 
The current lull in major fighting has allowed the ICRC and other agencies to work in the area safely, but security and the potential for renewed clashes are an ongoing concern.

Hawa Abdi Ali Kaar, a volunteer from Garowe, the Puntland region’s capital, has been providing services to the displaced since the outbreak of the violence. She has shifted the focus of her charity – the Daryeel Volunteer Women’s Organisation – from peacebuilding and awareness-raising around gender-based violence to supporting the influx of families.

Hawa Abdi Ali Kaar (in the centre) runs a women’s charity working to support civilians who have fled the fighting in Las Anod.

“Our biggest problem is that people here do not have enough food,” she told The New Humanitarian. “They do not have shelters that can protect them from rain. Women do not have toilets.”


For the last three months, she has coordinated with diaspora donors to deliver food rations and water trucks. Currently, her organisation is working on sanitation projects for the camps, but she is also mediating between the host communities and displaced people as the strain on local resources increases.


The federal government in Mogadishu, dealing with drought, displacement – as well as the fight against the jihadist group al-Shabab – doesn’t have the capacity to provide additional aid to those displaced by the Las Anod crisis.


“We’ve tried to help as much as we can, but due to the scale of the devastation, we don’t have the means,” said Jama Hassan Khalif, Somalia’s minister of communications, on a visit to Las Anod in May.


No end to the conflict

Khalif called on the international community to increase their response to both the conflict and the humanitarian needs of the displaced, calling the lack of engagement a “black spot”. 


Since 18 May, there have not been any major clashes between the two warring sides, although shelling has hit Las Anod, with mortars exploding at the regional hospital and in residential areas as recently as 1 June. 


This month, the UN Security Council issued a statement condemning the violence against civilians and calling on Somaliland’s forces to withdraw from their positions in the region. 


That retreat is unlikely, and Somaliland’s de facto foreign ministry responded with a statement accusing the Dhulbahante militia of engaging in “incitement, violence, and misinformation” against the breakaway region’s forces. 


Leaders in Las Anod, from clan elders to the mayor and the transitional council working to administer the would-be state of SSC-Khaatumo, are all steadfast in their resolve that all Somaliland forces must withdraw – not just from the front lines outside the city, but from the entirety of the Sool, Sanaag, and Cayn regions inhabited by the Dhulbahante. 


That would mean a massive land concession by Somaliland – a move that president Muse Bihi and his administration in the self-declared capital of Hargeisa are almost sure to find unacceptable. 


For now, the forces of both sides remain in the field, exchanging artillery fire, but either unwilling or unable to engage in an offensive that would dramatically shift the conflict in either direction.nd gender-based violence to supporting the influx of families.





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