Sunday, October 17, 2010

Save the Children demands release of Briton seized in Somalia

Gunmen have freed just one of two kidnapped aid workers

Save the Children today called for the immediate release of an unnamed Briton abducted by masked gunmen in Somalia.

The aid agency confirmed that a Somali national who was also taken from a guesthouse in Adado, a small town close to the border with Ethiopia, had been released unharmed.

A spokeswoman said: “The other man abducted at the same time – a British national who was born in Zimbabwe – remains captive.

“Save the Children is extremely concerned for his welfare and is calling for his immediate and unconditional release.

“The two men were working with Save the Children while the agency carried out a feasibility assessment into setting up a programme to help sick and malnourished children and their families in the area.”

Save the Children said it had not been contacted by the group that took the two men.

Tensions are running high in the region, where armed forces include pirate gangs and factions of militias allied to the government. Kidnapping for ransom is not uncommon in the area, though hostages are usually released unharmed.

The Horn of Africa country has been beset by famine and years of fighting between rival warlords, leading to thousands of deaths. Somalia has had no functioning central government for nearly 20 years, but the western part of the country had been considered one of its safer areas.

Although most aid agencies have pulled out of the region, some had recently considered a return.

Save the Children has been working in Somalia for more than 40 years, with a focus on improving access to food, basic healthcare and education. The charity is largely based in the central Hiran region, Karkaar in the north east and in the Togdheer region of Somaliland.

Its work had been limited by the security situation, but this year it began to pool resources with two other branches of the International Save the Children Alliance – Denmark and Finland – to become a unified presence in the country.

A friend of the British consultant described him as an avid skier and mountaineer who had worked for humanitarian organisations for several years.

Spurce: guardian.co.uk

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