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Tipping Point

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"Every individual Somali fights to stay himself, a person." (Gerard Hanley in 'Warriors') The atmosphere can change in a matter of seconds while working in Somalia.

Today we were traveling with a militia south of Mogadishu in part so that Philip could take some photos of a 'technical', the well-known battlewagon in Somalia popularized in the fighting of the 1990s. All went well until we reached the limit of where the militia could operate and we stopped momentarily at the border to say goodbye before moving off to the next area on our own.

Mustafa, our fixer, said we should get out of the car and Philip takes a photo as we get out. Small discussions break out around us. We have two guards in the car with us, but between militia soldiers and the border checkpoint soldiers there are perhaps 20 other men armed with anything from an AK-47 to the large Duska/Duskia anti-aircraft gun mounted on the back of the technical. Our own two militiamen get out of the car, shouting all the while.

To our right, two men raise their weapons both holding the barrels of each other's gun. The soldier is tall and has his finger on the trigger of his half-metre long automatic weapon. Philip and I are a metre away, moving slowly back into the car. Our guard is confronting the border guards and all the militiamen have cocked their weapons against each other. Now they're lunging out, snatching each others' weapons.

Our two guards are disarmed. Philip is telling me to get back into the car. I swing into the left-hand side at the back, keeping the door open with Philip to my right. The atmosphere is tremendously tense and everything is happening too quickly. The right side of the car is now a whirl of movement, people repositioning themselves. I look for Mustafa and tell the driver we should leave. He stays.

Mustafa walks calmly round the back and gets in on the left side. Militiamen still arguing, with arms locked and outstretched in anger, our guards are handed back their AK47s through the right window. We are slowly moving off but still we leave them mid-argument. Throughout the whole incident - which lasts perhaps three minutes, but feels a lot longer - I have no real idea what is going on or what the problem is.

One of our guards jumps on the outside frame on the right-hand side of our 4WD car and we pull out of the dusty square on the side of the road. Philip lights up a cigarette; I look at him, take a deep breath. Turns out the soldiers at the border checkpoint assumed we had paid the militiamen to have the right to take photos. They were demanding money from us. Another day. Another story. [Photos from today viewable here.]

2 Comments

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jeffs | May 3, 2008 10:02 PM | Reply

people like Mustafa are gems



calmness and helpfulness are a blessed combination, esp in a native-speaker... take care


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Gerard White | October 14, 2008 9:38 PM | Reply

My friend Keiko Akahane a female Japanese doctor was kidnapped on the 22nd of September in the Ogaden region of Somalia along with her colleague William Sools a Dutch male nurse. The were both volunteers with Medicins Du Monde a French NGO and were doing their best to help in a region ravaged by famine, drought and war.



I have known Keiko for 10 years since she was a university student. I have always admired her amazing self effacing manner, she only cares for others. Keiko graduated top of her class from a leading university, her classmates went into highly paid positions in the medical profession and Keiko began a career as a paediatrician caring for premature babies and their family. For years she worked 18 hour days, living in the hospital and never taking a day off being paid less than the basic salary at McDonald's.



Last year she used her savings to go back to university to learn how to administer medicines in disaster relief zones and immediately after graduation she volunteered her skills to Medicins Sans Frontier and Medicins Du Monde, within weeks she was in Ogaden as the sole doctor for 450,000 people. At the time she wrote "I can only give medicine but they have no water to take medicine, the people need food and water more than medication".



On October 9th Keiko was due to leave Ogaden having completed her six month contract. Keiko was not returning home with a suntan and some cool Africa experience on her CV. The mission had changed her. After 10 years as a doctor in Japan it is true to say that there are many hundreds of people, mostly children under the age of 10 who would not be alive today if it were not for the dedication, care and attention of Keiko Akahane. After 6 months in the Ogaden region there are countless thousands of people whose life has been touched directly by Keiko. In Keiko's typical practical approach she had decided to return to Japan and study to be a surgeon so that she could return to the region and help more people.



The kidnapping of Keiko Akahane and her colleague Willem Sools is a crime against the thousands of people who owe their lives to the work carried out by NGO's in the region. It is potentially disastrous for many thousands more people immediately now as the NGO's have had to cease their activities in the region because of security fears.



The kidnappers paraded Keiko and Willem last week in front of journalists in Mogadishu stating that they do not want money they want Somali prisoners held by Ethiopia to be released in return for the safe return of Keiko and her colleague.



I am struggling to understand the logic of abductors who remove the only hope that hundreds of thousands of their people rely on for survival in order to try to negotiate the release of a few hundred of their comrades. Do they not care for the thousands of innocent people who are and will suffer as a direct result of their actions?



I am desperately seeking any help, assistance, advice or guidance anyone can offer.

Is there anyway to communicate messages of encouragement and hope to Keiko and Willem? Is there anyway to communicate with the kidnappers, appeal to their humanity and make them aware of the damage they are doing to the people of Ogaden and Somalia by abducting Keiko and Willem?



I hope there may still be a way of resolving this matter in a positive manner. I believe if the kidnappers were to release their hostages and make some statements about how they are being oppressed, about what is really happening in the region it might be possible to win world sympathy for their plight.



As a matter of urgency, please alert anyone who may be able to help in anyway



If you think you can help please email me as soon as possible. If you would like to voice your support or express your feelings please do so at http://missingdumonde.blogspot.com/ Please do not do nothing



This is an appeal for immediate and urgent action. The Aid workers in the region are the last hope for hundreds of thousands of people. Many agencies have ceased operations in the field because of security concerns. The kidnappers must be made to understand the damage they have done. Unless of course that is their real intention.



I am getting so desperate I am considering going to Mogadishu myself. Can anyone offer any help or advise?

What do you think?