BBC News
watch One-Minute World News
Languages
Last Updated: Tuesday, 8 May 2007, 19:22 GMT 20:22 UK
Red Cross appeals for Somalia aid
An AU peacekeeper at the Somali port of Mogadishu
The Somali capital has seen some of the worst fighting in over 10 years
The International Red Cross has launched an appeal for $15m (£7.5m, 11m euros) for Somalia after some of the worst fighting in over a decade.

Severe floods, droughts and recent fighting means that the population is more reliant on aid, the group said.

Aid groups estimate some 1,300 people have died and thousands have fled since fighting escalated in March.

The UN World Food Programme said it had carried out its first distribution of aid in Mogadishu since the flare-up.

Somalia has been without an effective national government for 16 years, controlled by rival militias and awash with guns.

An insurgency flared after Ethiopian-backed government forces defeated Islamist fighters in an offensive at the end of last year.

Map of Somalia

WFP country director Peter Goossens said that it was civilians who were bearing the highest cost of the civil war.

"These people are exhausted," he said from Nairobi.

"Most of them are women and they were either forced to flee their homes with their children during the recent fighting or they stayed in the city through the worst bombardments."

The WFP said it had distributed food to some 16,000 residents already and hoped the number would reach 114,000 by the end of the week.

The ICRC said it had been delivering safe drinking water to people living on the outskirts of the capital for the past three months.

It said some 3,000 people injured during the fighting had also been treated.


RELATED INTERNET LINKS
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites



FEATURES, VIEWS, ANALYSIS
Kenyans try to lose 'worst dressed nation' label
How protesters inverted Iran's political slogans
Bling, toxic debt, tweets... send us your favourites

PRODUCTS & SERVICES

Americas Africa Europe Middle East South Asia Asia Pacific