Tuesday, 07 July 2009
Women's groups in embattled Mogadishu are stepping into the aid vacuum to assist thousands more displaced by fighting in the capital, civil society activists said.

"We have been helping in the past but now the situation is even worse so we have had to assume an even bigger role," said Asha Sha'ur, a civil society member and activist.
In the last few weeks fighting has flared in the capital of Mogadishu, with increased gunfights between rebel and government forces.
Due to insecurity, aid agencies have little access to internally displaced persons, but Sha'ur said women's groups could move more freely.
"We have had problems but both sides to the conflict have been good at allowing us [women] to help the needy. When they see a bunch of women they don't bother us," Sha'ur told IRIN.
Mogadishu has been a battleground for troops loyal to the government of President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed and two Islamist armed opposition groups, including the militant al-Shabab group, which controls much of the south and centre of the country.
The fighting has displaced almost 278,000 people since early May, according to a local human rights group.
Jowahir Ilmi, head of Somali Women Concern, have been collecting donations from the business community and Somalis in the diaspora. "Everybody is giving what they can afford," she said.
In the past few days, her group had distributed jerry cans and mosquito nets to 432 families using donations.
"I know it is a drop in the ocean, given the need that exists, but we have to start somewhere," Ilmi said.
Shaur said that Aid agencies should work more closely with women's groups, she said, "since we have better access".
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