BBC Homepage
  • Skip to content
  • Accessibility Help
  • Your account
  • Notifications
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • More menu
More menu
Search BBC
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
Close menu
BBC News
Menu
  • Home
  • InDepth
  • Israel-Gaza war
  • War in Ukraine
  • Climate
  • UK
  • World
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Culture
More
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Health
  • Family & Education
  • In Pictures
  • Newsbeat
  • BBC Verify
  • Disability
  • BBC Trending

'Pray for Mogadishu' is not trending, but Somalis are mobilising

  • Published
    17 October 2017
Share page
About sharing
Pray 4 Somalia placardImage source, UCL BME network/Union UCL
Rozina Sini
BBC UGC and Social News

What usually happens on social media after a terrorist attack? A hashtag circulates beginning with "Pray for..." or "I am...". Users share images of the carnage, and people express an equal measure of sadness and defiance.

But after deadly attacks on Saturday in Mogadishu, which claimed at least 281 lives, some social media users have been asking where the solidarity for Somalia is, and why there are no trending hashtags like those which have emerged after attacks in the US and Europe.

  • Somalia truck bomb: American survives but loses relatives

  • Mogadishu: Somalis protest against al-Shabab

  • Somalia: At least 230 dead in Mogadishu blast

This X post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on X
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Skip X post by India R. McGee

Allow X content?

This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
End of X post by India R. McGee
This X post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on X
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Skip X post 2 by Ta Lungaz

Allow X content?

This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
End of X post 2 by Ta Lungaz

Saturday's truck bomb was the deadliest terror attack in Somalia since the Islamist al-Shabab group launched its insurgency in 2007. Some bodies were burnt beyond recognition.

Of those who were identified, one of the victims was Maryam Abdullahi, a medical student who was due to graduate the next day.

Her father had flown to Mogadishu to attend her graduation but instead witnessed her burial.

Heartbreaking stories like this are not dissimilar to those shared after violent attacks and natural disasters around the world when people lose their lives.

Maryam AbdullahiImage source, Anfa'a Abdullahi
Image caption,

Maryam Abdullahi has been identified as one of the 267 people killed

Khaled Beydoun a professor of Law in Detroit, criticised the depth of media coverage in a social media post which has been shared hundreds of times on Facebook and more than 6,000 times on Twitter.

"I hate comparing human tragedies, but the mainstream media makes you do it," he posted on Facebook, external. "There are no slogans claiming 'we are Mogadishu' and no catchy images floating around social media demonstrating solidarity."

He is not alone in having this view. Between Saturday, when the attack took place, and the early hours of Monday morning the hashtag #IAmMogadishu had generated little over 200 tweets, but by Tuesday there were more than 13,000 tweets as social media users expressed their frustration over the lack of media attention the attacks were given.

This X post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on X
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Skip X post 3 by Farah 💫

Allow X content?

This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
End of X post 3 by Farah 💫
This X post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on X
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Skip X post 4 by Abdul Fathah

Allow X content?

This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
End of X post 4 by Abdul Fathah

A number of vigils have been organised by Somali communities across the UK and US, including one on Tuesday organised by Kings College London's Somali society and assisted by UCL's Somali Society.

Abdulkadir Elmi the President of the UCL Somali society said: "The main purpose of tonight is to show unity among young British Somalis.

"Due to the lack of global solidarity we just want to show that there are people who do stand with Somalia."

Aamin AmbulanceImage source, Aamin Ambulance/GoFundMe
Image caption,

The Aamin Ambulance appeal raised 100,000 Swedish krona in 24 hours

Despite the perceived lack of Western solidarity with Mogadishu on social platforms, Somalis themselves have been using the power of social media to mobilize support for charity efforts.

Gurmad252, external - it's name is a reference to "support" or "back up" - is a website established with the backing of the Somali authorities by volunteers, and the families of the victims to track and identify the missing on social media.

A GoFundMe page, external was also set up by a Swedish Somali for funds to pay for a free ambulance service, external to help the affected. It has already reached its initial target of 100,000 Swedish krona (£9,351, $12,334).

People use computers at an internet cafe in the Hodan area of Mogadishu, 9 October 2013Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

Internet cafes are a popular way to get online in the Somali capital, Mogadishu

Many have also used the hashtags #weareone and #gurmadqaran to share details of charitable efforts, but the task of raising awareness on the internet is not easy in a country which was one of the last in the world to go online and where internet usage is still relatively low.

More on this story

  • Somalia internet loss 'major disaster'

    • Published
      10 July 2017
    Workers haul a fibre-optic cable, which will serve East Africa, to shore at the Kenyan port town of Mombasa in 2009
  • Somalia's internet 'culture shock'

    • Published
      10 April 2014
    People use computers at an internet cafe in the Hodan area of Mogadishu, 9 October 2013
  • Do 'Pray for...' messages make disaster relief harder?

    • Published
      14 September 2017
    A woman is carried through flood waters on a man's back in Houston

Top stories

  • Live. 

    Putin says Alaska summit 'very useful' as Trump pivots on Ukraine ceasefire

    • 14353 viewing14k viewing
  • 'The world is behaving irrationally' - Putin's warm welcome gets cold reaction in Ukraine

    • Published
      4 hours ago
  • Bring sick and injured children to UK from Gaza immediately, MPs say

    • Published
      8 hours ago

More to explore

  • The 104-year-old WW2 veteran who moved the Queen to tears

    Yavar Abbas, 104, with glasses and Panama hat saluting
  • They got the grades they need to get into uni - but will they go?

    Sam Scoble (left) and Halima Surakat (right), are studying and looking at the camera. They are in a designed image that is red on one side and purple on the other. 
  • Blackpink: K-pop band make 'epic Wembley dream' come true

    Blackpink pose during a concert on their Deadline world tour
  • Are mangoes good for diabetes? Indian studies challenge conventional wisdom

    Indian mango
  • 'Bus fares have cut my food budget': Under-22s on what free travel would mean to them

    Maisy Moazzenkivi with her short red hair tied up smiling at the camera and wearing a pink t-shirt
  • An artist on the run, an exhibition censored: How China tried to silence a Thai art show

    Two large and colourful street art murals on walls. One shows a man dressed in a white hoodie making a gang sign. The other shows a black and white stencil of Donald Trump opening his mouth and screaming as red paint explodes from his mouth.
  • How a second bungled plot was hitwoman's downfall

    A selfie of a woman with blonde hair and blue eyes. She is looking at the camera.
  • Topshop returns to the High Street, but can it get its cool back?

    A woman dressed in a black dress waves the back of the dress behind her on a catwalk in Trafalgar Square, with crowds either side of her watching on.
  • 'Putin is a master of persuasion' - BBC correspondents discuss summit strategy

    Anthony Zurcher on the left and Steve Rosenberg on the right.
loading elsewhere stories

Most read

  1. 1

    'A fresh start': William and Kate to move to new Windsor home

  2. 2

    Erin rapidly intensifies to category five hurricane

  3. 3

    Man arrested after Semenyo reports racist abuse

  4. 4

    Topshop returns to the High Street, but can it get its cool back?

  5. 5

    Police seize £180k of Andrew Tate supercar deposit

  6. 6

    Trump's ceasefire pivot will have caused dismay in Kyiv and Europe

  7. 7

    'The world is behaving irrationally' - Putin's warm welcome gets cold reaction in Ukraine

  8. 8

    Bring sick and injured children to UK from Gaza immediately, MPs say

  9. 9

    End of Ukraine war 'closer than ever' thanks to Trump, says Starmer

  10. 10

    Are mangoes good for diabetes? Indian studies challenge conventional wisdom

BBC News Services

  • On your mobile
  • On smart speakers
  • Get news alerts
  • Contact BBC News

Best of the BBC

  • The inside story of Rupert Murdoch’s empire

    • Attribution
      iPlayer
    The Rise of the Murdoch Dynasty
  • A galactic concert of planets and lightsabers

    • Attribution
      Sounds
    Proms 2025
  • New drama from writer Jimmy McGovern

    • Attribution
      iPlayer
    Unforgivable
  • A vigilante matriarch with her own dark secrets

    • Attribution
      Sounds
    Crime Next Door: The Ballad of Big Mags
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • Terms of Use
  • About the BBC
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Accessibility Help
  • Parental Guidance
  • Contact the BBC
  • Make an editorial complaint
  • BBC emails for you

Copyright © 2025 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.