UN cuts Somalia relief over Islamic threats

NAIROBI: Attacks by Al Qaeda-linked rebels have led to the suspension of food distribution in large swathes of Somalia, leaving one million people outside the relief net, the UN food agency said today.

“Rising threats and attacks on humanitarian operations, as well as the imposition of a string of unacceptable demands from armed groups, have made it virtually impossible for the World Food Programme to continue reaching up to one million people in need in southern Somalia,” it said in a statement.

“WFP’s humanitarian operations in southern Somalia have been under escalating attacks from armed groups, leading to this virtual suspension of humanitarian food distribution in much of southern Somalia,” it said.

The radical Islamist insurgent group Shebab, whose leader last year proclaimed allegiance to Al Qaeda supremo Osama bin Laden, has overrun and looted several key UN compounds in southern Somalia in recent weeks. The latest to have been overrun was in Buale, which the WFP said was temporarily closed.