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Deadly clan conflict in Jowhar forces mothers and children to flee to Mogadishu camps


Thursday May 15, 2025


Hawa Haji outside her makeshift shelter in Daynile camp, where she lives with her children after fleeing clan conflict/Hassan Aweis/Ergo

Hawa Haji Ahmed’s family of six currently lack everything that they had back in their home village in Middle Shabelle region – food, water, their own house, and a source of income from their farm.

Chased away by deadly clan conflict over farmland around their home in Timiro village, in Jowhar district, they have sought refuge in War-jano displacement camp in Deynile district of Mogadishu, along with hundreds of other mainly women and children from the district.

Hawa said that they were already struggling with the effects of the harsh drought, and the clan conflict that has spilled over to several parts of Jowhar made life even harder.

“We eat what our neighbours bring us here. Last night, we had nothing to eat. I cook once a night, and in the morning the children eat what is left from the night before. Life is like that! We ask God to give us food, we hope God helps us,” she said.

Hawa looks for laundry work in the morning but often returns in the afternoon without finding anything. She said this is because there are few opportunities in Mogadishu, and she is new here.

Some days she earns $3 but if there’s no work, she and her children go hungry. The youngest is only three years old.

When she can’t pay for a 20-litre bucket costing 2,000 Somali shillings, she asks neighbours for enough to last the day. She carries the heavy bucket on her back from a private well an hour’s walk from the camp.

Hawa’s family was forced to rely on strangers in the camp after, in an additional calamity, their hut was destroyed by sudden a storm in April.

“You can see the remains of the house we were living in, it’s on the ground. A good neighbour and the [camp] chairman told us they would rebuild it for us, but it hasn’t happened yet so my children and I sleep with the neighbour’s family now.”

Hawa said her husband died of high blood pressure shortly after they arrived in Mogadishu, leaving her to provide for the family alone.

The family owned a two-hectare farm in Timiro village in Middle Shabelle region, but they hadn’t planted anything in the last two seasons due to drought. When they fled, they left with nothing.

Other families from Jowhar district who fled the same clan conflict are also facing hardship in War-jano camp. Halima Yusuf Hirsi, a mother of five, fled their two-hectare farm in Buri area of Jowhar. She invested $100 planting cassava, bananas, and beans last December, although now they have nothing to eat.

“My children live off leftover vegetables people throw away,” Halima told Radio Ergo. “I collect them from Bakara market [Mogadishu] and make one meal a day. I tried to find work as a manual labourer, but failed.

“Sometimes we get something, sometimes we don’t. Last night, I couldn’t afford anything for my child. Yesterday I walked around all day and it drained me. I carried something for someone as a porter but I only made 3,000 shillings that I spent on the transport, so I came home with nothing. I put my child to sleep like that.”

Halima brought nothing with her from her home and farm in Buri. Her current shelter is a makeshift hut made from pieces of wood and cloth, offering little protection from the sun or rain. Her three children, who used to attend a free Koranic school at home, are now without lessons.

Halima said she never imagined being displaced and wants to return home, but ongoing fighting over the disputed farmland makes it impossible.

“If it rains, there’s nothing to stop it here due to this shelter. This place is too small for me and my children. We are in trouble, and only God can get us out of this situation. We used to eat two meals a day. That feels all in the past now,” Halima told Radio Ergo.

Her husband was killed late last year during the same clan conflict that forced them from their home, leaving her to raise the children alone.

Also living in War-jano IDP camp is Caynaba Ali Ubeyd, a 62-year-old mother of 10, who arrived in February after fleeing the clan violence in their area.

She supported her family off the five-hectare farm they owned in Hawadley, 40 kilometres from Jowhar, the capital of Hirshabelle state.

In January, she had started a mixed-use farm growing food and vegetables, borrowing $500 to start it. She was looking forward to the first harvest.

“I promised the people I borrowed the money from that I’d repay them after harvest, but now that hope is gone. They keep asking for their money, and I can’t even find food for my children.

“We don’t get food in the morning, afternoon, or night. We have no food. The weather is bad, it’s raining, and our children are hungry. We have nothing to give them. They suffer, I suffer…we survive from one night to the next,” Caynaba said.

She is unable to do manual labour, but took one laundry work although jobs are rare. Her husband is disabled and unable to help support the family.

The large family live in a single hut that offers no protection from the elements. She said she feels desperate and doesn’t know how to help her family escape their current situation.

Their home Hawadley was the scene of fighting between government forces and Al-Shabab, which caused significant displacement of farmers last year.

The combined impact of clan conflict and drought has forced hundreds of women like Hawa, Halima, and Caynaba into sudden displacement in an unfamiliar city, where they are stripped of a livelihood and unable to support themselves. Numerous others have been fleeing Middle Shabelle region due to the ongoing war against Al-Shabab. Few o the displaced find jobs or aid to support their families in Mogadishu.



 





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