Two Canadians Detained in Somaliland, Canadian Global Affairs says

Koodbuur Police Station, Hargeisa, Somaliland.

Two Canadians have been detained in Somaliland, the Department of Global Affairs of Canada says.

“Global Affairs Canada is aware that two Canadian citizens are detained in Somaliland,” spokesman John Babcock says.

“Consular officials in Nairobi are in contact with local authorities to gather additional information. Consular services are being provided to the individuals.”

The Canadian government will not release any information about the detained Canadians, citing privacy.

However, Jason Jeremias, a New York-based civil-rights activist with an organization called Price of Silence, who first contacted The Globe & Mail (Canada) about the matter, says the detained individuals are two women.

He says their names are Maymona Abdi and Karima Watts Omer. The Globe and Mail has not been able to independently verify the identities of the detained Canadians.

Mr. Jeremias, who said he knows Ms. Abdi through her work with persecuted women, said the two Canadians were arrested in January.

Ms. Abdi and Ms. Watts Omer were detained by police in the city of Hargeisa, Capital City of the Republic of Somaliland, he said.

He said they are being held at Koodbuur Police Station in Hargeisa, in the women’s unit.

Mr. Jeremias says Ms. Watts Omer is a former resident of Ottawa and Ms. Abdi most recently lived in Vancouver.

He said Ms. Abdi was engaged in grassroots organizing in Somaliland and Somalia with women facing gender-based persecution.

Mr. Jeremias says he first met Ms. Abdi through a non-governmental organization, the I Do! Project, which raises awareness about forced marriage in Canada and trains service providers to recognize and intervene in cases of forced marriage, both in Canada and abroad.

A third woman, who has U.K. citizenship, was also detained along with Ms. Abdi and Ms. Watts Omer, he said.

Somaliland.com has contacted officers in Somaliland Police and the Koodbuur Police Station, in particular, to confirm the detainees and their cases but the contacted officers declined, this time, to give information to the press.


The Globe & Mail is a Canadian award-winning national newspaper.

This is a developing Story and Somaliland.com will update the related information, soon.

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