MSF condemns attacks on aid workers and calls for the release of abducted colleagues. These attacks threaten life-saving humanitarian work in Somalia.
Aid workers attacked
Philippe Havet (right) and Andrias Karel Keiluhu, better known as ‘Kace’ (left). © MSF
Two Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) Doctors Without Borders colleagues, Philippe Havet and Andrias Karel Keiluhuo, were killed last week by a gunman while implementing emergency assistance projects in Mogadishu.
Three months ago, two MSF aid workers, Montserrat Serra and Blanca Thiebaut, were abducted in Dadaab refugee camp in Northern Kenya while carrying out emergency assistance for the Somali population.
MSF condems attacks
These attacks on aid workers must be condemned in the strongest of terms.
They put in jeopardy life-saving medical projects that are already far from adequate in addressing the scope of the medical needs of the Somali people.
Somali people are extremely vulnerable after 20 years of civil war, international interventions and institutional collapse. They get less assistance than they need.
MSF is confronting the difficult dilemma of working in a place like Somalia where the needs are not only extremely great, but the risks are also exceptionally high for the safety and security of all our staff.
Safe release
As we consider this dilemma, MSF is requesting that all people, especially the authorities in control of areas in Somalia where our kidnapped colleagues are being detained, do everything possible to facilitate the safe release of Blanca Thiebaut and Montserrat Serra.
Assisting Somali people
MSF mobile team performing measles vaccinations, screening for malnutrition and providing care to the sick children in internal displacement camps of Hodan District, Southern Mogadishu, Somalia. August 2011
© MSF/ Feisal Omar
MSF has been present in Somalia continuously since 1991 assisting Somalis in need on all sides of ongoing fighting and conflicts.
Over the last six months, MSF has treated 225,000 patients in Somalia, vaccinated 110,000 children and cared for 30,000 malnourished children in 14 projects.
Additionally, MSF provides assistance to Somali refugees in nine projects in Kenya and Ethiopia, where finding the balance between the massive medical needs of the population and the risks that MSF teams are forced to endure is increasingly challenging.
Safety essential
“To effectively continue our medical humanitarian work in Somalia to support the population affected by the conflict, MSF needs all parties to the conflict, the leadership as well as the people of Somalia to support us in this work and help ensure the safety and security of humanitarian workers,” says Dr.Unni Karunakara, International President of MSF.
“For our colleagues Philippe and Kace, this failed tragically. For Blanca and Mone, the leadership and people of Somalia have the responsibility to facilitate the safe and prompt resolution of their abduction.”