Hargeisa – A massive blaze has destroyed the central market in the northern Somali city of Hargeisa, wiping out hundreds of small businesses, officials said on Saturday.
Fierce flames tore through the Waheen open market late on Friday, sending huge clouds of smoke billowing into the night sky over Hargeisa, the capital of the breakaway region of Somaliland.
The cause of the inferno that engulfed the sprawling market – the economic heart of the city and home to an estimated 2,000 shops and stalls – is not yet known.
This is horrific — #Hargeisa’s market is engulfed by a major urban fire.#Somaliland needs urgent international firefighting support to stop this inferno.
When the fire is put out, its decimating economic impact would also need to be addressed.
— Abdirashid Hashi (@AnalystSomalia) April 2, 2022
Officials have issued urgent appeals for help to recover from the disaster that injured more than two dozen people and is certain to inflict further hardship on thousands more in the impoverished city.
“The town has never witnessed such a massive calamity,” Hargeisa’s mayor Abdikarim Ahmed Moge told reporters at the scene.
Firefighters battled the flames for hours before the blaze was largely brought under control on Saturday, as the overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim country joined Muslims around the world in ushering in the holy month of Ramadan.
The mayor said fire could have been contained before causing such extensive damage but firefighters’ efforts were hampered by problems of access in the crowded warren of shops and makeshift stalls.
‘I have lost everything’
Images of the aftermath in and around Waheen showed charred and blackened buildings with their windows blown out.
Passers-by watched as firefighters turned their hoses on still smouldering structures from streets strewn with rubble.
The leaders of several countries including Britain, which once ruled Somaliland, and neighbouring Ethiopia, voiced their shock and sympathy over the disaster.
Somalia’s President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, better known by his nickname Farmajo, also telephoned Somaliland president Muse Bihi Abdi, his office said on Twitter.
“I call on all Somalis wherever they are to extend their assistance to those affected by the disaster,” Farmajo was quoted as saying.
ALSO READ | UN worried about lack of funds to tackle Somalia drought
Abdi said about 28 people, nine of them women, were injured, but that there was no loss of life.
He said the government of Somaliland – which declared independence from Somalia three decades ago – would be releasing one million dollars to help with the emergency response.
Hargeisa Chamber of Commerce chairman Jamal Aideed said the loss of the market was immense as it accounted for 40 to 50 percent of the city’s economy.
“I have lost everything tonight, this fire was the biggest I have ever seen in my life,” said market trader Bashi Ali.
“I had several businesses in the market and all of them burned to ashes.”
‘We need your help’
Hargeisa councillor Abdirahman Abdi appealed for people everywhere to come to the aid of the devastated city.
“I want to ask everyone who hears of this disaster to help: fire brigades, national armies, media and the people of Hargeisa.”
British government ministers including Prime Minister Boris Johnson voiced sympathy over the disaster in Somaliland, an area that was once a British protectorate.
“We are in close contact with the Somaliland authorities, our international partners and aid agencies operating in-country, and are considering what assistance is needed,” Britain’s Minister for Africa Vicky Ford said on Twitter.
ALSO READ | Baidoa: Crossroads of despair in drought-ravaged Somalia
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said he was “shocked and saddened” by the blaze that had caused “incalculable losses”.
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) in Somalia said the blaze had affected thousands of people including migrant workers, and pledged to work with the authorities to help people recover.
Hargeisa, a trading and watering hub, is also a transit point along a people-smuggling route through the Horn of Africa and many migrants wind up stranded there.
Somaliland declared independence from Somalia in 1991, an act still unrecognised by the international community that has left the region of 4.5 million people poor and isolated.
Somaliland has however remained a comparative beacon of stability while Somalia has been wracked by decades of political violence.
Follow African Insider on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
Source: AFP
Picture:
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com