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Mogadishu 08,Nov.07 ( Sh.M.Network)-The
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) today urged all sides to
the current conflict raging in Somalia's capital Mogadishu to allow
safe access for women and children across checkpoints so they can
receive life-saving medical care.
"UNICEF is deeply concerned and distressed that checkpoints
and roadblocks are posing an additional challenge to wounded or
sick children and women as they try to get medical assistance,"
said the agency's Representative to Somalia, Christian Balslev-Olesen.
In a press release, UNICEF said that it has heard reliable reports
that children, adolescents, pregnant women and mothers - some of
whom have sustained injuries by shells and stray bullets - are being
turned back at checkpoints while trying to reach health posts.
Those who have not been allowed to cross the checkpoints include
women requiring antenatal and post-natal care and many children
urgently needing medical care for conditions such as diarrhoea,
the agency reported.
"To be denied access to basic health services in such critical
circumstances greatly compounds the distress of the children and
women who are amongst those most heavily affected by the current
conflict - fighting that has left many children killed, maimed,
displaced and orphaned," Mr. Balslev-Olesen noted.
Additionally, doctors, nurses and other medical practitioners are
also prevented from reaching their workplaces to help those in need.
These checkpoints also hinder children from attending schools, which
could provide shelter and serve as a safe space. Some 80 per cent
of all Mogadishu schools have been closed due to the capital's dangerous
environment.
Due to the violence, an estimated 600,000 people have fled Mogadishu,
Jennifer Pagonis of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
said late last month.
The city is also now home to over 40,000 internally displaced persons
(IDPs), the agency reported.
Source (UN Serivice)
Shabelle
Media Network Somalia
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