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  • The Somali Wire 399
  • The Ethiopian Cable 31
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Archive
Filter by tags
Somalia (43) Al Shabaab (37) Villa Somalia (32) Hassan Sheikh Mohamud (25) Farmaajo (22) Somalia politics (17) Puntland (17) Mogadishu (16) Ethiopia (16) Somalia elections (15) Somaliland (13) Somalia political crisis (12) Jubaland (10) Somalia crisis (8) Somali politics (8) NISA (8) Fahad Yasin (8) AUSSOM (7) Mohamed Hussein Roble (7) Abiy Ahmed (7) Somalia security (7) Tigray (7) Eritrea (7) Kenya (7) Sudan (6) SSC-Khaatumo (6) African Union (6) Somalia drought crisis (6) Somali opposition (6) TPLF (6) Amhara (6) Horn of Africa (6) Addis (6) USAID (5) Nairobi (5) OLA (5) HSM (5) Somali elections (5) Horn of Africa geopolitics (5) Somali culture (5) Somalia elections 2022 (5) South Sudan (5) Politics (5) Humanitarian (4) Conflict (4) US (4) Healthcare (4) China (4) Somali National Army (4) Somalia humanitarian crisis (4) Tigray Peoples Liberation Front (4) Federalism (4) Oromo Liberation Army (4) History (4) Poetry (4) Disarmament (3) Fano (3) Somalia elections 2021 (3) Federal Government (3) Women (3) Security (3) OPOV (3) Kenya Somalia relations (3) GERD (3) Elections (3) Fighting (3) RSF (3) Qatar (3) Gulf (3) Mogadishu bombing 2022 (3) Somali security forces (3) Troop Contributing Countries (3) Villa Somalia crisis (3) Mogadishu unrest (3) Somalia electoral crisis (3) PM Roble (3) Laas Aanood (3) Turkey Somalia relations (3) Diaspora (3) Madoobe (3) Oromo Liberation Front (3) OLF (3) Oromo (3) Awdheegle (3) UPDF (3) SNA (3) Operation Silent Storm (3) Horn of Africa drought (3) Economy (3) NCC (3) Ethiopia Somalia relations (3) UN (3) ISS (3) Hawiye (3) UAE (3) Oromia (3)
  • Published April 19, 2022

    The April 1 fire that destroyed Hargeisa’s Waaheen Market caused an estimated $2 billion in damage, devastating hundreds of businesses and wiping out the livelihoods of countless women street vendors. These women, many of whom migrated to Hargeisa due to drought, form the backbone of the city’s informal sector, selling food, milk, and second-hand clothes to feed their families. Despite generating significant revenue and paying daily taxes, they remain without legal protections, social benefits, or secure market space. The fire has exposed the deep vulnerabilities faced by women in Somaliland’s informal economy. Without business licenses, they are often treated as illegal traders, denied access to finance, and excluded from government support. Aid pledges from the diaspora and international community face political and logistical obstacles, as Somaliland’s unrecognised status limits direct access to funding.

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