EU NAVFOR Somalia Operation ATALANTA Recognises World Refugee Day 2019

Jun 20, 2019 - 08:30


In Somalia, an estimated 2.6 million people have had to flee their homes because of insecurity.

World Vision, 2019




Today, EU NAVFOR Somalia Operation ATALANTA joins the United
Nations Refugee Agency in recognising World Refugee Day, a day on which we honour
the strength, courage and perseverance of millions of refugees. It is also a
day on which we remind ourselves of the significance of our commitment to
protecting food aid shipments to Somalia and the Horn of Africa at a time when
the severity of food insecurity in the region is increasing.





Operation ATALANTA crew passes cans of soda to local fisherman off the coast of Somalia.




Over 68 million people worldwide have been forced to flee their homes due to violence and conflict. The majority of those people come from the same six countries: Somalia, Myanmar, South Sudan, Afghanistan, Syria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (World Vision, 2019).





The United Nations (UN) announced this month that 2.2 million people in Somalia could face acute food insecurity by September, a 40 percent increase from just six months ago. The report also speculated that a further 3.2 million people could need assistance by the end of the year. In Somalia, an estimated 2.6 million people have had to flee their homes because of insecurity (World Vision, 2019). The need for humanitarian aid continues as a result of continual conflict and severe drought in Somalia.





Since 2008, Operation ATALANTA has allowed for World Food Programme to safely deliver over 1.8 million tonnes of aid shipments to refugees in Somalia and the Horn of Africa region.




“Communities that were already vulnerable due to past droughts are again facing severe hunger and water scarcity and are at risk from deadly communicable diseases,” said Mark Lowcock, the top humanitarian official at the United Nations, in a statement. He described aid agencies in Somalia as “overstretched and grappling with a severe lack of funding.”





Since the beginning of Operation ATALANTA in 2008, a key
task in the operation mandate has been the protection of UN World Food
Programme (WFP) vessels as they transit through high-threat areas around the
Horn of Africa and the Somali Basin. Operation ATALANTA’s protection of these
vessels has so far allowed for WFP to safely deliver over 1.8 million tonnes of
aid shipments to refugees in Somalia and the Horn of Africa.





Lithuania, Finland, Serbia, Croatia, Montenegro and the Netherlands have provided soldiers for Operation ATALANTA's Autonomous Vessel Protection Detachments in the past.




EU NAVFOR works in partnership with the Combined Maritime
Forces (CMF) and other regional maritime security agencies to protect
vulnerable vessels from the dangers of piracy and armed robbery at sea. EU
NAVFOR also embarks Military Armed Security Teams—known as Autonomous Vessel
Protection Detachments (AVPDs)—onto WFP vessels to act as a deterrent to
would-be pirates.





On World Refugee Day this year, EU NAVFOR Somalia Operation
Atalanta is proud to cooperate with these various organizations, EU member
states and regional actors to ensure that we do our part to provide necessary aid
to refugees in the Horn of Africa.