Somalia: Rights group says all sides guilty of crime










Women and children arrive at a camp in Mogadishu, Somalia (13 Aug 2011)

HRW says Somalis are not being given the protection they are entitled to



Human Rights Watch has said all sides in Somalia's conflict are guilty of serious violations of international law.

The campaign group says civilians are bearing the brunt not just of a famine but also a failure by any side to protect them.


It says Islamist group al-Shabab is guilty of unrelenting
brutality, while government troops carry out arbitrary arrests and
detentions.


HRW also criticises the West for not exerting pressure to stop the abuses.


A spokesman for the Transitional Federal Government (TFG)
denied the accusations, and said the body was committed to human rights.


The HRW report, You Don't Know Who to Blame, says all sides
in the conflict should end abuses against civilians and ensure Somalis
have access to aid.


The report's author, Ben Rawlence, told the BBC that
al-Shabab carries out unrelenting daily repression and brutality in
areas under its control, taxing the population for access to water,
forcefully recruiting men so they cannot grow crops and restricting
access to aid agencies.


"Al-Shabab must carry the burden of that responsibility for
the way in which the demands of the fighting has led to human rights
violations which have contributed to famine," he said.


Mr Rawlence said al-Shabab often fired from within populated
areas towards TFG troops and UN peacekeepers, who responded "without
paying too much attention to who is there".


The report also accuses the TFG of carrying out arbitrary
arrests and detentions, and says those who flee the country face more
problems, enduring rape and extortion, allegedly by the Kenyan police.


'Trouble everywhere'
Mr Rawlence said support for the TFG had to come with pressure
for it to respect human rights and improve accountability of its
security forces and government.





Al-Shabab fighter runs away from burnt-out tank




But Abdi Rashid Aseed, a
spokesman for TFG, said the information used for the report was
inaccurate and denied the accusations in it.

"When you are restoring law and order certain things are
going to happen; collateral damage happens not only in Somalia but in
all parts of the world where there is trouble and wars," he told the
BBC.


"This Transitional Government is committed to human rights. We are happy to listen but criticism has to be constructive."


Somalia has been without an effective government for 20 years
- much of southern and central Somalia is controlled by al-Shabab,
which has links to al-Qaeda and has imposed strict Sharia law.


Some 1.4 million people have been displaced within the
country and hundreds of thousands have fled to neighbouring countries to
escape fighting and food shortages. The World Health Organisation
estimates that 2.8m people are in need of food aid.

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