Home | Contact us | Links | Archives

UNHCR Mourns Death of Dr. Annalena Tonelli
ISSUE 90
Front Page
Index

Headlines

- Annalena’s Body To Be Buried In Wajeer In A Private Ceremony,

Public Places in Borama And Forli’ Named After Her
- Edna Takes Quest for Recognition To the Air waves In California

- Minister of Commerce and Industry Addresses African American Association

- Mohamed Hashi And Edna Aden Meet With Somalilanders In California

-International Crisis Group Report On Somaliland Democratization And Its Discontents, Part XI

- Somaliland Tries To Get Some Respect

Health

- Drug: The Double Edged Knife (Part 25)

- HIV/AIDS Becoming Young Person's Disease

International News

- Gunmen Won't Let Salad Use Airport
 
- US Town Blocks Resettlement Of Somali Refugees

- Thousands At Risk Of Malnutrition In Sool Area

- Iranian Lawyer Awarded Nobel Peace Prize

- Specter of Somalia Haunts U.N. Role in Iraq

- Campaign Launched to Regulate Arms Trade

-Top UN Official Condemns Aid Worker's Murder

-EU Parliament Chief Lauds Slain Aid Worker

- Bishop Recalls How Refugee Helper Died
- UNHCR Mourns Death of Dr. Annalena Tonelli

- TB Professionals Conference Pay Tribute To Annalena Tonelli

- Rookie School Leader Faces Hard Challenge

Peace Talks

- Bush Talks About Somalia And Terrorism

Arts & Entertainment


Editorial & Opinions

- The Devastating Loss Of Annalena

- A New Mother Teresa

- The Murder of Dr Annalena Tonelli: What Questions Should We Ask?

- Condolences

- Homage Ceremony For Annalena Held In Hargeisa


PRESS RELEASE

Geneva, October 6, 2003 (United Nations High Commission for Refugees) – UN High Commissioner for Refugees Ruud Lubbers today expressed grief at the murder Sunday night of Annalena Tonelli, a 60-year-old humanitarian worker who had dedicated the last 33 years of her life to helping Somalis.

"All of us at UNHCR are devastated by Dr. Tonelli's death," said Lubbers, who in June presented the Italian woman with the 2003 Nansen Refugee Award. "We were so proud to have been able to honor the wonderful work she did for the poorest of the poor, including many refugees, over the past three decades. She dedicated her life to helping others, carrying out her noble mission in remote, difficult places little noticed by the outside world. In doing so, she touched the lives of thousands of people, demonstrating that individuals can still make a huge difference. We mourn the loss of a truly great woman."

Dr. Tonelli was awarded the 2003 Nansen Refugee Award in Geneva on June 25 in recognition of her work among Somalis, many of them returned refugees and displaced people.

As UNHCR Representative for Somalia, Simone Wolken worked closely with Dr. Tonelli. "I am absolutely devastated to lose Annalena, whose work had done so much good for so many people," Ms. Wolken said today in Nairobi.

Dr. Tonelli was shot on the grounds of her hospital Borama, in western Somaliland, on Sunday night, but the exact circumstances of the shooting are not yet known.

Widely known simply as Annalena, Dr. Tonelli worked independently, raising from friends and family in her native Italy the $20,000 a month she needed to run her 200-bed tuberculosis hospital in Borama, in Somaliland.

Accepting the Nansen medal award in June, Dr. Tonelli said she hoped the award would help refocus world attention on the problems of Somalia that have long been overshadowed by trouble spots elsewhere in the world.

"For this reason, I am grateful for the decision of UNHCR that has brought attention to my beloved Somalia," she said then, "(so that) I may now be a stronger voice for a people who have no voice."

A lawyer by training, and a devout Roman Catholic, Dr. Tonelli said she had known since the age of five that she wanted to dedicate her life to helping others. At the age of 27, she went to teach in northeastern Kenya, an area populated by ethnic Somalis, many of whom were suffering from tuberculosis. She earned diplomas in tropical medicine, community medicine, control of tuberculosis and control of leprosy in order to better carry out what she saw as her true calling - treating TB patients. She moved to Somalia in 1986.

In Borama, she lived simply, owning no possessions and eating the same food as her patients. During her many years in Somalia, she had been in danger many times - kidnapped once and several times subjected to beatings, banditry and death threats. But she rejected any notion that her life was one of sacrifice.

"There’s no sacrifice. It’s pure happiness. Who else on earth has such a beautiful life?" she said earlier this year.

 

Home | Contact us | Links | Archives