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War-torn Somalia appeals for urgent aid amid drought
by Staff Writers
Mogadishu (AFP) Aug 05, 2014


CAfrica govt steps down as violence erupts despite peace deal
Paris (AFP) Aug 05, 2014 - The government of the strife-torn Central African Republic resigned on Tuesday as part of a peace deal reached last month with Christian and Muslim rebel factions, interim president Catherine Samba-Panza said.

The deal, signed in Brazzaville after weeks of talks, is the first part of a wider peace agreement to end violence in which thousands have died and nearly a quarter of the population have been driven from their homes since a March 2013 coup.

The head of the interim government appointed in January, prime minister Andre Nzapayeke, 62, is a technocrat and former banker.

Despite the peace accord, tensions remain high in the country where several Seleka militiamen were killed on Tuesday in a clash with French peacekeepers in the north.

Last week, at least 22 died in fighting between the ex-rebel Seleka and mainly-Christian anti-balaka fighters.

Somalia's government begged for help Tuesday, warning the war-torn nation once again faced a hunger and drought catastrophe three years after famine killed more than a quarter of a million people.

"Drought has already reached several regions in Somalia," the government said in a statement, warning that "it anticipates that the situation will continue to deteriorate".

"The aid in form of food, water and medication must urgently reach the affected population," the statement added.

Last month the UN warned Somalia is sliding back into an acute hunger crisis, with parts of the capital Mogadishu facing near famine-level shortages and aid organisations unable to meet the needs of some 350,000 displaced people there.

"All members of parliament are calling on the international community and the United Nations to assist... to prevent the return of the deadly humanitarian crisis of the 2011 famine," the government said.

Somalia's internationally-backed government, selected in 2012, was widely hailed as offering the best chance in decades to repair the war-ravaged country.

UN assessments show "above emergency levels of malnutrition" in seven towns, including the major centres of Garowe, Gal kayo and Kismayu, with the "highest deterioration" reported in Mogadishu.

More than 250,000 people, half of them children, died in the devastating 2011 famine.

Reports of a hunger crisis inside the capital casts a further pall over the government's record following accusations of corruption and continued attacks by Islamist Sheba insurgents in even the most well-protected areas.

Thousands displaced by war live in basic makeshift shelters in Mogadishu, where Al-Baeda-linked Shebab fighters continue to launch regular attacks, including brazen commando raids on the presidential palace and parliament.

The hardline Shebab, which once controlled most of southern and central Somalia, has been driven out of positions in Mogadishu and Somalia's major towns by a 22,000-strong African Union force.

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