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Rights Group Accuses Somalia of 'Large-Scale' Abuses


Displaced children peer through holes in the fabric used to make their temporary tent at Sayyidka camp in the Howlwadag district, south of Mogadishu, August 19, 2013.
Displaced children peer through holes in the fabric used to make their temporary tent at Sayyidka camp in the Howlwadag district, south of Mogadishu, August 19, 2013.
The forced evictions of thousands of Somalia's poorest from makeshift camps amid rebuilding efforts in the war-ravaged capital has led to "large-scale human rights abuses," Amnesty International said on Friday.

The group said forced evictions in Mogadishu have "gathered pace" in recent months despite the government's failure to find an alternative safe location.

Amnesty International's Somalia researcher, Gemma Davies, said government has "a responsibility to protect this vulnerable sector of society."

Amnesty says more than 300,000 people live in settlements in the seaside capital where the international organization says Somalis are "sheltering from cyclical drought, famine and a two-decades-long armed conflict."

"It is completely unacceptable for people who have fled to the capital for protection to be forcibly evicted," said Davies.

In August, an eight-year-old child and a mother of nine were killed when members of Somalia's armed forces opened fire in response to a protest by residents facing eviction.

Amnesty International has called on Somalia to halt all the evictions until "safe and adequate" alternatives in line with "obligations under international human rights law" can be provided.

Davies said now that Somalia "finally has a central government, it's high time" to focus on a durable solution for Somalia's displaced that allows them to be part of the country's reconstruction.
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