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September 2005
Pharmacist Anab Mohamud Mohamed
"In Somalia there is no freedom because guns point at us permanently"

Anab Mohamud Mohamed is a Somali pharmacist who has been working with the Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in Somalia since 1997. In late June, and thanks to a special visa (Somalia is stateless and its citizens do not have valid passports to leave the country), she visited MSF's office in Barcelona where she shared her views about the situation in Somalia.

Mogadishu was a beautiful, quiet town before the war. Somalis were respectful and kind. Now, everything is different. Life seems to have lost its value; we have become aggressive and do not care about anything.
– Anab Mohamud Mohamed

You were born in Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia, and have worked there all your life. Some people say that it is the most dangerous city in the world. What was your life in Mogadishu like before the war and what is it like now?

Things have changed a lot. Mogadishu was a beautiful, quiet town before the war. Somalis were respectful and kind. Now, everything is different. Life seems to have lost its value; we have become aggressive and do not care about anything. Somalis have been the first ones to neglect our country. Somalia has fallen into oblivion among the rest of the world's countries.

How does the situation affect the daily life of the Somali people?

We cannot plan, we have no freedom to choose... and all this because we live under an armed menace. With guns pointing at us permanently, it is impossible to talk or make decisions. We can only let ourselves be carried along by the situation.

You have been working with aid organizations for more than ten years. What do you see as the major humanitarian needs in your country?

The main problem, in addition to violence, is the lack of public services. Nearly all of the existing structures in Somalia are private and, therefore, inaccessible to most of the population. MSF health centers in Mogadishu are among the few, if not the only health facilities that are free of charge in the entire city and this is why they are so congested. People die from diseases such as malaria or malnutrition that could be cured easily if people had access to health care.

What does your work with MSF consist of?

I am the project pharmacist and assistant to the medical coordinator and am responsible for the pharmacy: I follow up drug consumption and prepare orders. I also collect data on mortality and epidemiological surveillance.

Last October the latest attempt was made to set up a government in Somalia, is there any hope that this can bring stability this time?

We always keep our hopes up. But, frankly, we do not know what is going to happen from now on. I hope that everything goes well and that at last we have peace, but I don't know if it will be so.

MSF runs a primary health care clinic in Yaqshid in the north of Mogadishu. The center carries out more than 12,000 medical consultations every month.

 
Somalia Feature Stories
Weathering the Storm: Humanitarian Aid Amid Somalia's Chaos
Violence Stalks Civilians in Somalia
Saving Lives in An Abandoned Land
Voice From the Field: "In Somalia there is no freedom because guns point at us permanently"

 

 

  Voices From the Field
Press Release
11/07/07
Somalia: No Safety in Mogadishu Press Release
08/20/07
Access To Medical Care Dangerously Scarce In and Around Mogadishu, Somalia News Update
07/25/07
Mogadishu, Somalia: New wave of violence keeps people from seeking medical care Press Release
07/23/07
Situation Worsens For Newly Displaced Families in Somalia News Update
07/11/07
MSF staff member killed in Somalia Voice From the Field
06/29/07
Somalia: Covering basic health needs in Afgooye and Hawa Abdi News Update
06/09/07
One Civilian and Two MSF Staff Members Victims of Shooting Incident in Mogadishu, Somalia Voice From the Field
06/06/07
Voices from Somalia: Stories from those who fled Mogadishu Voice From the Field
05/08/07
Somalia: "What I saw when I was in Afgooye was a desperate humanitarian situation." Press Release
04/24/07
Somalia – Tens of Thousands Fleeing Violence in Mogadishu Face Critical Humanitarian Needs Press Release
04/11/07
Cholera Epidemic and Several Weeks of Intense Fighting in Mogadishu, Somalia Open Letter
01/17/07
Somalia: The Need for Independent Humanitarian Aid 2006 Activity Report
12/31/06
Somalia Press Release
12/28/06
After a Week of Intense Fighting in Somalia, MSF Extremely Concerned About the Security of Medical Staff and Safety of Patients News Update
11/25/06
SOMALIA: Floods Increase Humanitarian Needs

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