Médecins Sans Frontières MSF (Doctors Without Borders) staff are treating dozens of injured following an aerial bombardment on the town of Jilib that hit a camp for internally-displaced people at around 1.30pm on Sunday.
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Update 31/10/2011 11.30am: MSF can confirm five casualties and is currently treating 45 wounded, 31 of whom are children. The lesser number is due to people dismissed from hospital since last night.
At the time of writing at least three people are reported dead and 52 injured, mostly women and children.
MSF is transporting the wounded to the hospital in Marere, in Lower Juba, southern Somalia, for stabilisation and treatment, and may have to refer some patients to other facilities due to limits to the surgical capacity at the hospital.
Somalia has been hit by a severe humanitarian crisis since May this year and hundreds of thousands have been displaced due to violence and drought.
Jilib houses a population of around 1,500 displaced households and MSF had been providing them with medical care, including therapeutic feeding for acutely malnourished children. The organisation also distributes basic relief items such as soap, cooking oil, blankets and sheltering materials.
MSF urges all parties to the conflict in Somalia to respect the rights of civilians in conflict.
MSF has been working in Somalia continuously since 1991 and currently operates 13 projects in the country, including medical activities related to the current emergency, vaccination and nutritional interventions.
In Dadaab, Kenya, MSF resumed operations in 2009, while assisting Somali refugees in the camps of Dolo Ado, Ethiopia.