NAIROBI, April 6 (Xinhua) -- About 124,000 people have fled the Somali
capital of Mogadishu since February due to the recent fighting between
Ethiopian-backed transitional government and insurgents and the number of
displaced continues to increase daily, the UN refugee agency said on Friday.
According to an update from the Office of the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR), over 11,000 people have so far left since the beginning of
this month.
It decried that the lack of access to the city and its surroundings due to
the bloodshed has severely hampered humanitarian agencies from scaling up
responses to meet vast needs.
"So far, among them over 11,000 have left since April 1, nearly 73,000 have
left in March and 40,000 have left in February," the UNHCR said in a statement
issued in Nairobi.
Most of the displaced civilians have been heading for neighboring provinces
of Shabelle Hoose (Lower Shabelle) and Shabelle Dhexe (Middle Shabelle).
Violence in the bullet-scarred Mogadishu has increased since the
Transitional Federal Government backed by Ethiopian forces dislodged the Supreme
Council of Islamic Courts from Mogadishu and much of the rest of the country at
the end of last year.
There are currently an estimated 400,000 internal displaced people in
Somalia, which has been torn apart by factional fighting and has not a
functioning central government since 1991.
Thousands of others have fled to neighboring countries.