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Somalia

Somali women breadwinners

Small business grants are turning Somali women’s lives around in Mogadishu, as they become entrepreneurs and start their own businesses.

Somalia’s conflict forced 50-year-old Hawa and her family from their home in Baidoa in 2005. A family of farmers, they were badly affected when criminals robbed all their animals during the insecurity. Hawa fled to the capital, Mogadishu, with her seven children, as their farmland was no long productive and the area was no longer safe.

City of dreams

Mogadishu hosts close to half a million displaced people. Many fled their homelands in search of a better life, during the famine that struck Somalia in 2011. Others like Hawa fled insecurity, which has plagued the country for decades.

The impact of such a long-drawn conflict means that 73 per cent of the population lives below the poverty line, on about US$1.25 per day. Over a million people across the country are internally displaced; another million are refugees in neighbouring countries.

Starting up

After bouncing from one displacement camp to another, the family finally settled and Hawa found a casual job. With her husband missing, Hawa became the main breadwinner for the family of nine. The job paid very little, and providing for the family was never easy.

The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) provided humanitarian assistance to families in the displacement camp Hawa lived in. One programme provided small cash grants to help women start small businesses and support themselves.

Hawa was chosen, and was given a small grant which she used to construct a kiosk. Today, she sells vegetables, fruit and other food at her shop.