SOMALIA:
Kismayo's only hospital closes as aid workers killed .
(Kismaayo,
January 29,
2008 Ceegaag Online)
Services at the only hospital in Somalia's coastal city of
Kismayo, 500km south of the capital Mogadishu, stopped on 29
January, a day after four people - including two foreign aid
workers - were killed in a blast, local sources told IRIN.
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF-Holland) took over running the
hospital in October 2006, after it had been abandoned by MSF-Belgium
in 2001 due to insecurity.
Thousands of demonstrators also took to Kismayo streets to
protest at the killing of the two MSF-Holland staff, their
driver and a local journalist.
Civil
society groups and the local administration organized the
protest, according to Hawo Ugas Farah, leader of a women's
group and one of the organizers.
"We
are demonstrating to show our anger and dismay at the murder
of people who had came to help us," Farah said.
She
said it was also meant to show the families and friends of
the victims that "the people of Kismayo were grieving with
them".
The
four people were killed on 28 January in what eyewitnesses
described as a "bomb blast".
"They
just left the hospital to go their residence close by, when
the bomb hit," a local journalist, who requested anonymity,
said.
The
journalist said patients at the hospital were milling around
the compound in hopes of getting treatment "but there was no
help".
In a
statement issued on 29 January, MSF said the dead were a
Kenyan surgeon, Dr Victor Okumu, 51, French logistician
Damien Lehalle, 27, a local driver, Mohammed Bidhaan, and a
journalist, Hassan kaafi Hared Ahmed. Four other people, all
Somalis, were reported to have been injured in the blast.
"It is
with great sadness that we confirm that yesterday morning
three staff from Médecins Sans Frontières was killed in the
Somali town of Kismayo, not far from the hospital where we
work," MSF said.
MSF
has evacuated the rest of its staff from Kismayo, the
country's third largest city.
"This
[killing] was aimed at the people of Kismayo," Kismayo
deputy governor Mohamed Nur Hassan said. "Those who
committed this murderous act were not targeting the aid
workers only but the people of our city."
He
said the police were pursuing a number of leads to catch the
perpetrators. "We will not rest until we catch them; we will
show them as much mercy as they showed us," he said.
He
said the city had enjoyed relative peace and calm until this
happened. "Whoever did this is an enemy of the people," he
added.
The
city has declared three days of mourning.
Farah
said the international community should understand that the
people of Kismayo were "deadly opposed to those who carried
out this act".
Something terrible and tragic happened in Kismayo yesterday,
but it will be even more tragic if the world were to punish
us [the people] for the deeds of criminals," she said.
She
urged the international community "not to abandon the people
of Kismayo".
Source: Irin News
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