Dokument #1052453
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
2) The only figures found among the sources
presently available to the IRBDC, indicate that in 1978, 198
physicians -118 of them Somalis- worked in Somalia; [ Somalia: A
Country Study, (Washington: American University Foreign Area
Studies, 1981), p. 126.] in 1980, 262 physicians and two dentists ,
[Encyclopedia of the Third World, (New York: Facts on File,
Inc., 1987), p. 1807.] while in 1988, a total of 1,250 physicians
worked in the country. [ Europa Year Book 1988, (London:
Europa Publications, 1988), p. 2370.] No mention of where they were
trained is made in the available sources.
3) No details on the current mayor of
Mogadishu could be found among the available sources. A report
indicates that the mayor of Mogadishu in May 1986 was Hasan Faarah
Abshir, who was driving the president of Somalia, general Siyaad
Barre, when their car collided with a bus. [ Somalia: A Nation
in Search of a State, p. 168.] The report indicates that five
passengers in the colliding vehicles died, but does not indicate
whether the mayor survived or if he continued governing Mogadishu
after the accident. However, it is reported that important
positions of power are held by members of the
Marehan-Ogaden-Dolbahanta (MOD) clan alliance. Somalia: Nation in
Search of a State, (Boulder: Westview Press, 1987), pp. 92-94.
Mogadishu is the exception in the structure
of local governments of Somalia: its region is headed by a mayor
and a city council, and each of its 14 quarters have a committee
composed of six "ex-officio" and 20 appointed members.
[Encyclopedia of the Third World, pp. 1798-1799.]
For a reference to the local governments'
relation to the central government, please read the second
paragraph of the attached copy of Somalia: A Country Study,
page 195.
4) Health and Welfare Canada stated that
Quarantine and de-rattization (elimination of rats) certificates
are standard requirements at all international seaports, although
these certificates do not usually guarantee a clean environment for
much time after they are issued. The department also stated that
each country applies its own criteria in health control of incoming
foodstuffs, and, in many countries, port authorities apply these
criteria at their own discretion. Additionally, it is reported that
food shipments have spoiled at Somali ports because of a shortage
of trucks needed for transport and distribution. [ Somalia:
Observations Regarding the Northern Conflict and Resulting
Conditions, (Washington: United States General Accounting Office,
May 1989), p. 9.]
5) Regarding freedom of expression, Somalia
reportedly has one of the world's worst records, [ Encyclopedia
of the Third World, p. 1798.] and various sources report
arbitrary arrest and indefinite imprisonment of people,
professionals of various fields included, on vague or non-defined
grounds. [Ibid, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1987,
and 1988: Somalia, (Washington, U.S. Department of State, 1988 and
1989, respectively), Critique (of the Country Reports for
1987), (Washington: Human Rights Watch, June 1988), and Somalia:
A Long Term Human Rights Crisis, (London: Amnesty
International, September 1988), Scientists and Human Rights in
Somalia, (Washington: National Academy of Sciences and Institute of
Medicine, 1988), various pages.]
6) Although no specific information on
student demonstrations occurring in Mogadishu in or around April
1987 could be found among the available sources, it has been
reported that student unrest increased in 1984 and government
response to frequent demonstrations became increasingly brutal.
Confrontations between students and Somali authorities reached a
peak in 1987, when the army instituted a dusk-to-dawn curfew in
Mogadishu. [ Somalia: Observations Regarding the Northern Conflict
and Resulting Conditions, p. 3.] The only demonstrations reported
in the available sources, are a series of popular riots which took
place in August 1987, in response to economic measures decreed by
the government. [ Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for
1987, p.263.]
7) No reference to the term "Liberated
Professorio" could be found among the sources available. However,
for a general view of the composition of the judicial system of
Somalia, please find attached a copy of page 1806 of Encyclopedia
of the Third World, and of pages 195 to 198 from Somalia: A
Country Study ("Legal System", "Sources of Law" and "The
Courts"). These documents also contain a description of changes in
the judicial system as a result of the 1969 military coup.
8) No information on a cooking-oil shipment
from Spain to Somalia in 1978 could be found among the available
sources.