Monday, May 28, 2012
Afgooye has for a long time been a stronghold of Al-Shabaab insurgents and is a strategic junction for routes to the north, west and south of Somalia.
"Since May 22 to date the UNHCR Somalia Population Movement Tracking (PMT) system has recorded 9,200 displacements from Afgooye due to military activity in the area," the UN agency said in its update released in Nairobi on Saturday.
UNHCR said the majority of these people have fled to Mogadishu with some to Lower Shabelle and Lower Juba regions, adding that there is no indication of any people arriving in Bay region.
Leaders of the Al-Qaida-affiliated terror group are believed to have fled the town, which was their main base in the region and where they were known to have been extorting revenues from farmers, traders and pastoralists.
The Afgooye town is also strategically located 30 km from the capital, Mogadishu, and governing routes to the port town of Marka, as well as the towns of Baidoa and Jowhar.
"Reports indicate that the IDPs seem to be arriving in all districts of Mogadishu, but mainly to Zona K in Hodan, Radaarka and Odweyne in Dayniile, Jiiroo Maskin and Ex-US embassy in Wadajiir among others," UNHCR said.
On Monday, AMISOM launched a joint military operation with the Somali National Army, code-named 'Operation Free Shabelle' with the objective of securing the Afgooye corridor, home to the world' s largest concentration of internally displaced people.
Operations are still ongoing to secure the market town of Elasha Biyaha. Harabsca, a trading center located 26 km from Mogadishu, has also been secured.