Mogadishu – The autonomous Somali region of Somaliland launched an international appeal on Wednesday for $2 billion in aid after a huge fire destroyed the main market in the capital Hargeisa, wiping out hundreds of businesses and devastating the local economy.
The blaze broke out on Friday evening and swiftly engulfed the sprawling Waheen market, injuring more than two dozen people but causing no loss of life.
“We are launching for a combined $2 billion to urgently deliver humanitarian and livelihood support to an estimated 5 000 small, medium and large family businesses,” Somaliland President Muse Bihi Abdi said in a statement issued in English.
He said the fire in one of the largest markets in the Horn of Africa had caused losses estimated at $2 billion, or around 60% of Somaliland’s gross domestic product.
Hargeisa endured in the last 24hours the worst inferno ever experienced in the history of Northern Somalia, the modern day Somaliland.
The fire smouldered #Wahen market located at the heart of the Capital, an incident onlookers squandered to describe until now!#HargeisaFire! pic.twitter.com/vzXvhefQDr— Garad A Garad (@GaradAGarad) April 2, 2022
ALSO READ | Somaliland capital counts cost of devastating blaze
An investigation team is looking into the cause of the fire and its report is expected to be disclosed to the media in the next few days, Abdi added.
“This is an emergency of the highest magnitude and time is of the essence,” he said.
Several countries including Britain, which once ruled Somaliland as a protectorate, and neighbouring Ethiopia and Djibouti have offered support and sympathy over the disaster.
Somaliland declared independence from Somalia in 1991 but the move has not been recognised by the international community, leaving the region of about four million people poor and isolated.
Its GDP in 2020 was just over $2.9 billion, shrinking 3.1 percent from the previous year largely because of the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, according to official figures.
The breakaway region has however remained relatively stable while Somalia has been wracked by decades of political violence and an Islamist insurgency.
Follow African Insider on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram
Picture: Twitter / @GaradAGarad
Source: AFP
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com