Hargeisa’s Forgotten Children



Page last updated March 30, 2009

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Somaliland youth risk death in search of better life

HARGEISA, 30 March 2009 (Somalilandpress) – Harir Omar Yusuf, about to finish high school, should be choosing a degree course and deciding on a career direction; instead, he spends most of his time planning a perilous escape from his hometown of Hargeisa, capital of the self-declared republic of Somaliland in the northwest of Somalia, to Europe.

“As soon as I finish high school I will go there, because I have nothing to stay for in Somaliland,” he told IRIN, adding that his parents could not afford university fees and he was not assured of a place even if they could.

Yusuf has many friends who have made the journey – first through Ethiopia, then Sudan and Libya and finally to Italy via the Mediterranean Sea – and are now living as illegal immigrants in Italy and other European nations. He also has many friends languishing in Sudanese or Libyan jails, arrested for entering the country illegally, and knows of many who died making the trip, but he remains determined.

Tens of thousands of Somalis also try to cross the Gulf of Aden into Yemen every year aboard small vessels run by people-traffickers operating from Somali ports; according to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), one out of every 20 people attempting the journey in 2007 died.

Yusuf says he would rather risk death than live a life of certain poverty in Somaliland.

Unemployment

“The issue of young people running away is very problematic in Somaliland,” said Omer Ali Abdi, the director of the youth department in the Ministry of Youth and Sports. “Year after year, graduates from secondary schools are increasing and our universities just don’t have the capacity to take in all of them – and even when they graduate from university, there is no guarantee they will get a job.”

According to Ahmed Hashi Abdi, vice-minister in the Ministry of Planning and Coordination, only 10-20 percent of people under 35 are employed.

“Because it is unrecognised internationally, Somaliland has no access to bi-lateral funding, which has caused our economy to suffer, especially after the livestock ban of 1999, which destroyed the main source of income of most of our people,” Abdi said. “For the same reason, international scholarships and higher education exchange programmes are not open to our students.”

An outbreak of Rift Valley Fever in Saudi Arabia in 1999 resulted in a regional ban on imported livestock from Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Sudan, Kenya, and Djibouti; the ban on Somalia remains in place and now includes several other Middle Eastern nations.

After the ban, remittances became the main foreign exchange earner; thousands fled the country during an outbreak of war in 1988, and regularly send money to their families. The Ministry of Planning estimates remittances account for US$500 million – or about 80 percent of Somaliland’s economy.

“When people leave the country legally, we are happy that they are able to send back money, but as much as possible we try to discourage young people from leaving illegally – then it becomes a matter of life and death and we cannot encourage that,” Abdi said.

Despite the risks, many families scrimp and save to send their children on these journeys. Over the past year, Amina Rooble (not her real name) has spent more than $6,500 on transport, communication, paying traffickers and bribing prison officers, all in an effort to get her son Hashim to Italy.

Although his boat sank, Hashim survived and is now seeking asylum in Italy. “Even though my son was rescued, two other members of my family died on that boat,” Rooble said.

Incentive to stay


Photo: Abdi Hassan/IRIN
A street in Hargeisa. Young people are leaving Somaliland in droves because of insufficient opportunities (file photo)

The government and local NGOs have run campaigns to discourage young people from leaving, but according to Yahye Mohamoud Ahmed, head of the Somaliland National Youth Organisation NGO, unless the government can provide some motivation, young people will continue to escape in droves.

“They have no incentive to stay – no jobs and no businesses, so it is fairly futile to tell them to stay,” he said. “They need to be given the capacity to feed themselves here.”

Ahmed added that many young men were now taking swimming lessons and using hi-tech communication equipment – such as satellite telephones to make SOS calls – to make their trips safer.

“When they hear about their friends and relatives in London or Italy, they get encouraged to go; even when their relatives have no jobs there, they still think they have a better life than here,” he added.

According to Ahmed Abdi, the national development plan includes the creation of two vocational training institutes in every region of Somaliland to boost the number of tertiary institutions and the variety of courses available.

“We also intend to set up micro-finance schemes to enable them to be self-supporting,” he added.

He noted that despite the continued livestock ban, a few countries in the Arab world were starting to buy Somaliland’s meat, and the government hoped the Saudi ban would be lifted, restoring the industry.

Youth policy

The Ministry of Youth and Sports, in partnership with the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), is drafting a national youth policy – due to be passed by parliament in 2011 – that hopes to address issues of youth emigration, unemployment, education and political participation.

“What we need more than anything is resources from our international partners focused on development rather than strictly emergencies – resources focusing on education and building the economy would encourage young people to stay and build their own nation,” the Ministry of Youth’s Abdi said.

Source: IRIN

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Published by: Qalinle Hussein

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One Comment on "Somaliland youth risk death in search of better life"

  1. Abdinour Obsiyeh on Sat, 2nd May 2009 4:11 am 

    Poor Nation, Yes we are, but we are not alone.

    I think one of the reason for us being far way behind other poor nations is the luck of technical education, All we study and have access to is administration and business courses, we don’t have much field educations in Somaliland, I think the major change for our people can come from those who have already changed their life, who made their journey to other countries for the sake of change get educated and who found opportunity to do that, experience the life without having problems of fights and hunger, without thinking of who will pay your next semester tuition fees, those supposed to come back and help others.

    Yes we are a poor country, but we have to know that there is other poor countries in the world, when you see them you will find them all kind of workplaces in other countries generating more revenue for their country, as we know many of Asian countries are poorer then Somaliland, but yet they are the largest man power of many fields to many countries, such as Europe, Australia, and middle east, the differences is their educated comes back with experience and teach others, example if you see Philippines, they are the largest man power of construction workers, Nurses and hospital labors, Marin labors, ect..ect, if you see Indians what made their country economic is their educated people and those who works and do business out side India, who sends billions if dollars per month for investment and establishing businesses and creating more opportunity for those remained back.

    Eritrea is another poor country they nation are spread outside the world, there is a monthly tax payable to their country for those who are outside the country, they believe what national hood means and they understand what contribution is all about, their government doesn’t take as a salary or to boost they own interest instead they pay to the development of their country.

    If we do the same as other nations started doing many years ago, we can be the same in a few years, instead of thinning everything depends of recognition, if the farmers are educated then they can cultivate better, I believe if our people have the necessary skills and language that other poor nations have, many companies would have come to our homeland hire many of us from their home without them going to find it or invest in the country to get cheap labor, we don’t have educated cheap labor, and I don’t think anyone of us who want to invest something out side his country would have never chosen any county with a high pay labor.

    The other problem of us is we are a very proud nation having no education, no money, yet we are very proud and most of the people may have not agreed the low pay, considering them self they know everything and they have to be paid high, because we help each other and give everything to each, then person thinks while his brother, sister, or other relatives are giving him a monthly pay to life and having a free home of no much bills to pay, then they would never think they have to work hard and get less because of their level of education, for those who have no education.

    Let me take and example which really shocked me a lot, I have paid a visit to several European countries for the 1st time , exploring the living standard, the work and education available and how we life as a Somali-Landers in Europe, When I spoke to many young generations and even elders in Sweden which I fist landed, they told me that there is no enough jobs!!!!, and they have to go to labor office almost everyday for looking a job to do, while the rest said the work pay that we can do is the same pay of welfare, so better to take little money while at home and not wake up early in the cold, they are not thinking of working hard and while working learn and enough and go little by little up till you reach your goal, they want to start either high or stay at home and get welfare, the world that comes to my ears from everybody of almost wherever I visited was “Europe is not as everybody thinking, we thought that there is a lot of money with a hassle free” and “ If I know it is like this I wouldn’t have spend all the money that I spent to reach here” “ I am waiting the acceptance as a refugee so I can be eligible to the welfare” some of them have told their families that they have been accepted and everything is alright just to not let their mood and feeling down, so they can celebrate back home and say we is been accepted and given a house.

    So let us create not only website but consulting firms for the young, who directs them the right way to their career, because of them don’t have access to website or even don’t fellow because they are busy planning the lifetime journey to Western countries.

    At last but not the least, let us create not only website but consulting firms for the young, who directs them the right way to their career, because of them don’t have access to website or even don’t fellow because they are busy planning the lifetime journey to Western countries we need to make our self attract investors, we have to make sure we are a trustee worth people, I believe government itself can’t do everything and we don’t have to expect from them all, because the government is just people among or from us and unless we help them they won’t do their duty.

    Abdinour Obsiyeh
    Dubai,UAE





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