Al Qaeda claims to have a deed to part of Dr. Hawa Abdi's land.
Dr. Amina Adan Mohamed (right), daughter of the camp's founder, Dr. Hawa Abdi, with mothers and infants awaiting treatment, Farah Abdi Warsameh / AP Photos
"Al-Shabab sees me as especially vulnerable because I am a woman," Abdi says.
At the heart of the conflict in Somalia, a small but precious piece of land is once again under attack. Property owned by Somali humanitarian Dr. Hawa Abdi—on which she once walked with U.S. President George H.W. Bush on his tour of the war-torn country in 1993—has been overtaken by members of the al Qaeda–backed militant group Al-Shabab. Now, after more than 20 years of civil war, hundreds of the camp's internally displaced people are once again facing homelessness.
"These men are coming for our land because they can no longer operate in Mogadishu," says Abdi, referring to Al-Shabab's loss of control over Somalia's capital in January, when the militants were driven out by U.N.-backed African Union troops. "Now they want to establish a base of power in our area."
One of Somalia's first gynecologists, Abdi has lived on this sandy stretch of land known as the Afgooye corridor since 1978; part of her property has belonged to her family for 10 generations. She established a one-room women's clinic along the corridor 20 miles from Mogadishu in 1983, and when Somalia's government collapsed eight years later, patients began flocking to her for safety. Recent estimates of the population of internally displaced people in her camp have been as high as 90,000—a veritable city that has lived in relative peace for more than 20 years.
"Al-Shabab sees me as especially vulnerable because I am a woman," Abdi says. "I am a target because my area has law and order, and the people living with me don't accept the injustice their group is enforcing." One of Al-Shabab's precursors, Hizbul Islam, attacked Abdi's camp in May 2010; after a standoff of more than two weeks, the militia relinquished control and issued an apology to Abdi.
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