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A Somali girl's childhood ends in shelling, burns and terrible scars

News Stories, 21 February 2008

© UNHCR
Hamda with her mother.

TEFERIBER REFUGEE CAMP, Ethiopia, February 21 (UNHCR) Hamda Mohamed Yusuf somehow survived the artillery blast and the burns over most of her face and body. But the 13-year-old Somali refugee, disfigured by inadequate medical treatment in an ill-equipped Mogadishu hospital and facing a lifetime of pain, often wonders if she wants to continue living.

"What happened in May 2006 scarred my whole body and devastated my future," she told UNHCR visitors to Teferiber Refugee Camp in north-eastern Ethiopia, where she fled with her family. "I was burned in a terrible fire, so terrible that my survival was seen by my family as little short of a miracle."

Hamda remembers a carefree childhood spent with close friends. "I have had very happy days playing with friends and laughing all day." With the chronic violence of Somalia marked by widespread rape and murder none of them attended school. But she could not escape the violence.

"My mother told me that an artillery shell was fired at our home in [the Somali capital] Mogadishu when we were all sleeping," she recalled, adding that the ensuing blaze gutted the house, killed her eldest sister Sahra and left Hamda somewhere between life and death.

"I was covered in burns and blood and was rushed to the Madina Hospital in Mogadishu, where I was in a coma for a few months and somehow recovered," Hamda said. "But, Madina is a poorly equipped hospital with a very limited capacity and the staff could not do much more than save my life and dress my burns."

The burns, and the limited medical care, left her with permanent, though avoidable, deformities: her lower lip stuck to her cheek, the skin on her arms fused to her upper body and her chest covered in keloid scarring.

She didn't even get a chance to continue recovering at home. In December 2006, when fresh fighting erupted between the Ethiopian-backed Transitional Federal Government of Somalia and the Union of Islamic Courts she fled with her mother and eight sisters and brothers to Ethiopia.

"You can imagine how hard it was for me to travel all the way from Mogadishu ... nursing my severely painful sores," she said. "The pain persists and it itches so much. When I scratch it, it bleeds and another cycle of pain and itching starts. I have also developed a cardiac problem. I cannot stretch my hands. My breasts are developing with great difficulty; and as they develop, they push my chest forward which forces my burn-covered skin to crack and bleed. "

Not surprisingly, the trauma of the attack itself and the resulting deformities caused her to increasingly avoid family and friends. Hamda is hoping that some international humanitarian organization will help her to escape the lifelong pain and isolation she faces.

"Many times over, the idea of ending the pain and my life crosses my mind," she said. "But I haven't done that so far, for good or bad. Please do something about my burns or it will not be long before I give in to my persistent urge to commit suicide."

By Kisut Gebre Egziabher in Teferiber Refugee Camp, Ethiopia

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UNHCR country pages

Crisis in Horn of Africa

Tens of thousands of Somalis are fleeing conflict and drought into Djibouti, Ethiopia and Kenya.

Somalia Emergency: Urgent Appeal

Widespread malnutrition among Somali refugees requires immediate action.

Donate to this crisis

Children

Almost half the people of concern to UNHCR are children. They need special care.

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UNHCR aims to help 25,000 refugee children go to school in Syria by providing financial assistance to families and donating school uniforms and supplies.

There are some 1.4 million Iraqi refugees living in Syria, most having fled the extreme sectarian violence sparked by the bombing of the Golden Mosque of Samarra in 2006.

Many Iraqi refugee parents regard education as a top priority, equal in importance to security. While in Iraq, violence and displacement made it difficult for refugee children to attend school with any regularity and many fell behind. Although education is free in Syria, fees associated with uniforms, supplies and transportation make attending school impossible. And far too many refugee children have to work to support their families instead of attending school.

To encourage poor Iraqi families to register their children, UNHCR plans to provide financial assistance to at least 25,000 school-age children, and to provide uniforms, books and school supplies to Iraqi refugees registered with UNHCR. The agency will also advise refugees of their right to send their children to school, and will support NGO programmes for working children.

UNHCR's ninemillion campaign aims to provide a healthy and safe learning environment for nine million refugee children by 2010.

Iraqi Children Go To School in Syria

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A UNHCR-funded project in Kabul, Afghanistan, is helping to keep returnee children off the streets by teaching them to read and write, give them room to play and offer vocational training in useful skills such as tailoring, flower making, and hairstyling.

Every day, Afghan children ply the streets of Kabul selling anything from newspapers to chewing gum, phone cards and plastic bags. Some station themselves at busy junctions and weave through traffic waving a can of smoking coal to ward off the evil eye. Others simply beg from passing strangers.

There are an estimated 50,000 to 60,000 street children in the Afghan capital alone. Among them are those who could not afford an education as refugees in Iran or Pakistan, and are unable to go to school as returnees in Afghanistan because they have to work from dawn to dusk to support their families. For the past seven years, a UNHCR-funded project has been working to bring change.

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Afghan Street Children Turn from Beggars to Beauticians

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Kenya Floods Threaten Refugees

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