Document #1333375
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
A history professor in the Department of
African History at Rutgers University in Newark stated that the
town of Borama is under the control of the Gadabursi (20 Jan.
1999). He stated Issas and Isaaqs also inhabit this area but they
are a minority.
The professor explained that although
Borama is under the government of Somaliland, it has its own local
administration, political and economic infrastructure.
According to the professor, the Midgan are
a minority in all parts of Somalia. He explained that the Midgan
have no protection because they have no militias of their own. They
are vulnerable and their lives are precarious."
A representative of the Horn of Africa
Relief and Development Organization (HARDO) based in Somaliland,
quoted in a report published by the Danish Immigration Service in
Copenhagen, stated that the Midgan population in other parts of
Somaliland, specifically Sool and Sanaag is not subject to
harassment (July 1998).
The Midgan population were not called
Midgan by the local population, but Gaboye. During the civil war
the Gaboye population were regarded as being supporters of
President Siad Barre. This was because he strengthened the Gaboye
population's position in political life. She emphasized that the
Gaboye population was not subject to any form of persecution or
harassment generally (July 1998).
Information on non-government organizations
(NGOs) in Borama could not be found among the sources consulted by
the Research Directorate. For additional information on the
situation in Somaliland in 1997 and NGOs in Somalia and Somaliland,
please refer to the attached document.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum. Please see the list
of additional sources consulted in researching this Information
Request.
References
Danish Immigration Services, Copenhagen.
July 1998. Fact-Finding Mission to Somalia and Kenya.
[Internet] http://www.udlst.dk[Accessed 14
Jan.1999].
History professor, Department of African
History, Rutgers University, Newark.
20 January 1999.
Additional Sources Consulted
Africa Confidential [1997].
January-December 1997. Vol. 38. Nos. 1-25.
Africa Research Bulletin: Political,
Social and Cultural Series [Oxford]. January-December 1997.
Vol. 34. Nos. 1-12.
The Indian Ocean Newsletter
[ION]. June-December 1997. Nos. 768-792.
Electronic sources: IRB Databases,
LEXIS/NWXIS, Internet, REFWORLD, World News Connection (WNC).
Two oral sources consulted did not
provide information on the requested subject.
Attachment
Danish Immigration Services, Copenhagen.
July 1998. Fact-Finding Mission to Somalia and Kenya.
[Internet] http://www.udlst.dk[Accessed 14 Jan.
1999]