Photo: OCHA/IRIN and USAID
Map of the Somali region of Ethiopia 
ADDIS
ABABA, 8 November 2007 (IRIN) - UN agencies have begun to deploy staff
in Ethiopia's Somali region in an effort to step up humanitarian aid
delivery to the area, officials said.
Paul Hebert, head of the
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in
Ethiopia, said several UN agencies had set up offices in Kebridehar and
Degehabur. These include the UN World Food Programme, UN Children's
Fund, OCHA and the Food and Agriculture Organisation.
Twelve NGOs have also been accredited to work in the five zones of Degehabur, Gode, Fik, Warder and Korahe, according to OCHA.
“We
intend to do an exploratory mission into the Somali region within the
next few days,” said Nondas Paschos, spokesman and fundraising director
of Médecins sans Frontières-Greece, one of the accredited NGOs.
The
new UN offices in the Somali region have been set up in addition to the
organisation's other bases in the larger Gode and Dire Dawa towns.
The
Ethiopian government and the UN reached an agreement in October on
measures to ensure that aid would reach vulnerable people in the Somali
region.
The UN and Ethiopia's Disaster Preparedness and
Prevention Agency (DPPA) decided to establish joint support centres in
the most affected areas of the southeastern region to facilitate the
logistics of delivering food, medicine, veterinary services and
livelihood support.
"The centres will help in the coordination, monitoring and evaluation of aid for the area," said DPPA spokesman Sisay Tadesse.
The
UN has expressed concerns over the humanitarian situation and human
rights in the area, saying 1.8 million people could be affected.
Our intention is to find out what the needs are in the region and the conditions under which we can work
In
a report issued on 5 October, Hebert warned that a major crisis loomed
in the Somali region unless livestock trade, commercial and
humanitarian food distribution, urgent healthcare, and access by
government service providers and humanitarian partners resumed. Hebert
led a mission to the region between 30 August and 5 September.
International
aid access to the remote and arid area - bordering Somalia and where
government troops are cracking down on the rebel Ogaden National
Liberation Front (ONLF) - has been limited, sometimes due to
insecurity.
The conflict has affected trade with neighbouring Somalia, livelihoods and access to basic services.
The
Somali region is poor and largely pastoralist, and the food security of
the population is highly sensitive to changes in rainfall and market
prices for livestock and staple foods.
In a statement to the
media on 7 November, ONLF welcomed the opening of the new UN offices,
but expressed concern that the government might not allow the agencies
to operate in a "free and unfettered manner".
"The TPLF regime
[Ethiopian government] is still unjustly paranoid of international
humanitarian organisations as demonstrated by the fact that it
continues to deny the ICRC [International Committee of the Red Cross]
access to the Ogaden," ONLF said.
The ICRC was expelled from
the region in August 2007 after the Ethiopian government accused it of
spreading baseless accusations.
The DPPA has already started
transporting relief food from its Dire Dawa depot to Fik, Gode and
Korahe zones, using 99 lorries. The agency said it delivered 2,640
metric tons of cereals, grain and edible oil to the affected zones.
"Additional relief food will be sent to other zones on the coming few days," Sisay said.
SOURCE: IRIN, November 8, 2007
ETHIOPIA: Relief agencies bolster operations in Somali region
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