TWO MEDECINS SANS FRONTIERES AID WORKERS FREED IN BOSSASO (SOMALIA)Bossaso- Somalia/Barcelona - Mercedes García and Pilar Bauza, a Spanish doctor and an Argentinian nurse, who work for Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in Somalia, have been freed today at 14:30 local time. MSF is relieved that the two have been freed after one week in captivity. Mercedes and Pilar are in a good health. The two expatriates were abducted by force by a group of armed persons on December 26 while riding in an MSF vehicle on their way to work in a feeding centre where MSF is assisting some 7000 children under five who suffer from malnutrition. These children are among the estimated 25,000 internally displaced people living in 19 camps in the region. The international medical humanitarian organisation has demanded the immediate and safe release of its two staff members since the first moments of the incident. “They have been freed and are healthy. We also want to thank everyone involved in helping to resolve this incident safely and peacefully”, said Dr.Paula Farias, president of MSF in Spain. “The civilian population pays the consequences of the ongoing conflict in Somalia, and the survival of the majority of the Somalis depends on external assistance given by a few humanitarian organisations and international agencies,” stated Farias. “Somalia has been a forgotten crisis and such incidents only increases the suffering of the Somalis”. In the countries where humanitarian action takes place, the level of violence can be very high. We have suffered incidents in the last years in Chechenia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Colombia and Iraq. Although part of the international personnel has been evacuated, the MSF programmes in Somalia will continue to assist the thousands of people affected by the conflict. [There will be no more comments until they are out of Somalia]
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