Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Somalia Tops Minority Threat List

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Somalia Tops Minority Threat List

    SOMALIA TOPS MINORITY THREAT LIST

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/in_dep th/6472007.stm
    Published: 2007/03/20 17:10:15 GMT

    Somalia has overtaken Iraq as the world's most dangerous country for
    minority groups, a study has found.

    Sudan, Afghanistan and Burma followed in the global survey by the
    Minority Rights Group International (MRG).

    It alleges the US ignored abuses of minorities in countries supporting
    the US "war on terror" including Pakistan, Turkey and Israel.

    Sri Lanka saw the highest rise in persecutions with renewed fighting
    between government and rebel forces.

    "A new government in Somalia has raised hopes for democracy, but it
    is also a uniquely dangerous time," said MRG's director Mark Lattimer.

    "There is the spectre of a return of large-scale clan violence - and
    groups that supported the old order are now under tremendous threat."

    MRG said the Darood, Hawiye and Issaq clans are under threat as well
    as the Bantu group.

    Darfur crisis

    Sudan is the third worst offender, said the State of the World's
    Minorities report, because of the violence in Darfur.

    FIVE WORST COUNTRIES Somalia Iraq Sudan Afghanistan Burma Source:
    Minority Rights Group International Most computers will open this
    document automatically, but you may need Adobe Reader

    More than two million people have been displaced since the fighting
    began in 2003 and the UN says refugee camps in the region are almost
    full.

    At least 200,000 have been died in the ongoing violence between
    pro-government Arab Janjaweed militia groups and rebel groups in
    Darfur.

    The MRG said farmers from the Zahgawa, Masalit and Fur groups,
    amongst others, have been targeted.

    Minority groups in Iraq including Christians, Yezidis and Mandaeans
    face targeted killings, abductions and torture.

    The group's study links tensions in Turkey surrounding the EU
    accession process to a surge in religious and nationalist extremism
    behind attacks on minorities - such as the murder of Turkish-Armenian
    writer Hrant Dink at the end of 2006.

    "US allies have managed to barter their support for the war on
    terror in return for having their human rights records ignored,"
    said Mr Lattimer.

    The MRG also blames the "war on terror" for a rise in anti-Muslim
    attacks and intimidation within the European Union affecting millions
    of ethnic Arabs, South Asians and other Muslim minorities.

    In Sri Lanka, minority Tamils and Muslims are caught up in fighting
    and increasingly becoming targets for abduction and disappearance
    after the breakdown of peace efforts between Tamil Tiger rebels and
    government forces last year.

    "In three-quarters of the world's conflicts, the killing is now
    targeted at particular ethnic or religious groups," said Mr Lattimer.

    "Because they are usually minorities their suffering is largely
    ignored."
Working...
X