LAS ANOD (SoOHS) – Ahmed Osman, who lives in Holhol village in Jidiinka-dodhada valley in northern Somalia’s Sool region, tuned in to Radio Ergo on 27th May and heard aweather forecast that made him take immediate action. The Wahar-iyarashe stream near his home was filling up as the heavy ‘Gu rains pounded the area. The broadcast carried a warning of impending floods as the water was rising above the …
Read More »Self-made Somali businessmen work their way up out of the IDP camps in Buhodle
BUHODLE (SoOHA) – Radio Ergo’s IDP camp series this week explores the hard road to success for two men displaced from their homes respectively by conflict and drought, who set up their own businesses in Buhodle in northern Somalia. After 12 years living in a shabby IDP camp, Yussuf Omar Mohamed can finally say he is living comfortably as a self-supporting businessman …
Read More »Afgoye farmer earns a living selling pot plants to Mogadishu homes and offices
MOGADISHU (SoOHA) – Hussein Mudey has hit on a successful way to earn a living, as well as enhancing the environment, by selling small trees and pot plants in Mogadishu. The father of three from Afgoye, in Lower Shabelle region, can be seen pushing his wheelbarrow loaded with young trees and pot plants in bags around the streets of Mogadishu, selling to hotels, offices, and home-owners. …
Read More »WHO declares Ebola outbreak ‘health emergency’ of international concern
The World Health Organization on Wednesday declared the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo a “public health emergency of international concern,” a rare designation only used for the gravest epidemics. “It is time for the world to take notice,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement, …
Read More »Somalia on list of countries with worst food crisis – UN report
A 2018 global report on food crises by the United Nations has listed Somalia as one of the four countries that experienced the worst food crises. Together with Somalia in the list are Nigeria, Yemen, and South Sudan. According to the report, around 124 million people in 51 countries face …
Read More »Somaliland farmers lose everything to swarms of locusts
HARGEISA (SoOHA) – Swarms of locusts have stripped large tracts of farmland across 10 districts in Somaliland, leaving farmers without any crops left to harvest. The locusts have eaten crops including pumpkins, pepper, tomatoes, lettuce onions, pawpaw, and oranges, in districts in Sahil, Marodi-jeh, Awdal and Sanag regions. Somaliland’s minister of agriculture, Ahmed Mumin Seed, told Radio Ergo they had assigned a committee to assess the losses caused …
Read More »KSrelief delivers 120 tons of dates dedicated to Somalia to WFP in Kenya
NAIROBI (SoOHA) – King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) delivered yesterday 120 tons of dates to the World Food Programme in Nairobi to be distributed to needy people in Somalia, in the presence of Saudi Deputy Ambassador to Kenya Hamza Al-Qurashi; Head of the WFP Office in Somalia …
Read More »Displaced and disabled – how families struggle for a dignified existence in IDP camps in Somalia
BELEDWEYNE (SoOHA) – Bedridden and poor, 55–year–old Ahmed Farah Gedi embodies the hardships faced by disabled people and their families living in IDP camps in Somalia. In this part of our series, Radio Ergo visits Kulmiye camp in Beledwyene, Hiran region. Ahmed Farah Gedi, 55, is one of the people living with disabilities in Kulmiye camp, Beledweyne. He was previously a proud …
Read More »University doctors in Kismayo conduct free medical camp for poor families
KISMAYO (SoOHA) – University staff and students in Kismayo have treated hundreds of low income people at a free medical camp in three villages that lack access to health services. A team from Plasma University in Kismayo conducted free diagnosis and treatment for 540 people in the villages of Bulabartire, Istanbul, Khamkham and Yontoy. Shukri Abdullahi Abdi and her three children were among those treated …
Read More »Somali coffee farmers vexed by poor roads and transport in Puntland
GAROWE (SoOHA) – Rough terrain and impassable roads are reducing profits for small scaleSomali coffee farmers in Puntland. The farmers in the Al–Madow mountain range, stretching west from Bossaso to the northwest of Erigavo, are forced to use donkeys to transport their coffee beans to an accessible transit point, where they pay commercial lorries for onward transport to the northern port city of Bossaso. Mukhtar Abdullahi Isse, who lives in Dadan village, has two plots measuring 2.5 hectares …
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Somali Observatory for Humanitarian Affairs The Voice of Reality.. The Eye of Humanitarian Truth in Somalia