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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Survival struggle against Somalia's drought
by Staff Writers
Mogadishu (AFP) July 15, 2011

Somalia drought 'catastrophe', aid agencies warn
Nairobi (AFP) July 15, 2011 - Drought-hit Somalia is stretching relief workers to their limits and is now facing a fully-fledged humanitarian catastrophe, aid agencies warned on Friday.

"We are no longer talking about a humanitarian crisis or a humanitarian emergency," said Jens Oppermann, the country director of Action Against Hunger (Action Contre La Faim, ACF).

"We are seeing this as a humanitarian catastrophe," he told AFP.

Thousands of Somalis have fled in recent months to neighbouring Ethiopia and Kenya in search of food and water, with many dying along the way, as the region suffers what the UN has described as the worst drought in decades.

Many too have risked conflict by fleeing into Somalia's capital Mogadishu in a desperate search for aid.

Food prices in Somalia have soared by 270 percent in a year, he said.

"We see people coming into Mogadishu in a state that we have not seen in this form before," Oppermann added, describing "unimaginable suffering beyond the scale of what is acceptable."

"We are not able to provide enough assistance to everyone," he said.

ACF has been working in Somalia since 1992.

Meanwhile Doctors without Borders (MSF) said they were boosting efforts to support refugees fleeing across the border into Kenya after assessments found "alarmingly high rates of malnutrition."

"I expected to find a difficult situation but not a catastrophic one," said Anita Sackl, who coordinates nutritional assessments for MSF.

"The majority of new arrivals actually fled because they had nothing to eat, not just because their country has been at war for decades," she added.

Refugees are waiting for 40 days before being registered, receiving only two days of rations for that period, MSF said in a statement.

In Kenya's Dadaab refugee camp, 37.7 percent of children under five checked by MSF teams were suffering from acute malnutrition, with 17.5 per cent of those facing a "high risk of death."

Dying children, hunger and overcrowded camps -- Somalis describe the extreme drought threatening famine and death on a massive scale in the Horn of Africa.

"My child is starving but I cannot feed him," said Kafia Ali, cradling her son at the Korane camp in the Somali capital Mogadishu, crowded with some 3,700 families seeking food and shelter.

"I fled from the Southern Gedo region in order to save my two children from the killer drought."

Thousands of Somalis have fled into neighbouring Kenya and Ethiopia seeking aid in recent weeks, in the wake of the Horn of Africa's worst drought in decades that has left millions of people facing starvation.

But many too have stayed behind in a desperate struggle for survival.

And, in a worrying sign of how serious the situation is, many Somalis have been forced to risk the dangers of travelling from rural areas into the war-torn capital in search of food.

A father of three spoke of the painful journey, saying he left home after his wife died of hunger.

"My wife was a very good person, who cared too much for our three children and me," said Mohamed Aden, a 62-year old man from the Dinsor area of Somalia.

"But when she become ill and hungry we could not help her, because the family has no food to offer."

Many of those arriving in Mogadishu are farmers, who said they had abandoned their homes after their crops withered in the drought, and then their livestock died.

"Once I was an owner of cows, goats and few camels," Aden added. "But today I am a beggar without a wife who is in a camp of displaced people."

Malnutrition rates for children under five in Somalia are the world's highest, the international Red Cross has warned, as the country struggles with persistent violence and failed rains.

Almost 500,000 children in Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya are suffering from life-threatening severe malnutrition, according to the UN children's fund (UNICEF).

But those fleeing into Mogadishu in the hope of support say they have found little respite, staying in makeshift shelters.

"The life in the camp is not any better that we have at home," Ali added.

Meanwhile rains in Mogadishu have added to the misery of those looking for help: too little and too late for much of their livestock, and weakening further those people living outside without shelter.

"When you are hungry, cold is a killer, and the people here are starving and helpless," said Batula Moalim Ahmed, an elderly mother, calling for plastic sheeting for shelter, as well as for food and medicine.

The flood of refugees has added pressure on camps with basic sanitation and a lack of toilets.

"We can't throw our waste openly in the camp, as that creates an unhealthy environment," said Abduilkadir Mohamed.

"Though we are poor, we are still human beings and deserve respect," he added.

Somalia's transitional government has provided some aid to people, and set up a committee to try to tackle the crisis.

"The hospital donated meat, so my children will have soup for tonight, and I will share," said a mother, carrying about half a kilo of goat's meat.

The UN World Food Programme feeds some 300,000 people each month in Mogadishu, with special food supplied for malnourished children and hospital patients.

But local aid workers said there is a need for more support on the ground, and for foreigners not to stay within the capital's airport alone, under the protection of African Union troops.

Islamist rebels who control southern Somalia expelled foreign aid groups two years ago but have recently relented, with the Al Qaeda-linked Shebab asking for assistance to combat the ravages caused by drought.

"The service of the foreign aid workers is vital to bring more aid to Somalia," a Somali aid worker said, who asked not to be named.

"Local humanitarians can simply sympathize -- we can do nothing."




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Horn of Africa drought to worsen: UNICEF
Lodwar, Kenya (AFP) July 16, 2011 - The plight of millions of people left hungry by a harsh drought across the Horn of Africa is set to worsen, with the next rains expected in October and harvests months away, a top UN official warned Saturday.

Scanty or failed rainfall in the region over the past two years has already forced thousands of Somalis to flee the country and ruined the livelihoods of millions in parts of Kenya, Ethiopia and Djibouti.

"We are possibly seeing a perfect storm in the coming months.... We are going to do everything we can to ameliorate it," UNICEF director Anthony Lake told AFP on his way to the drought-hit region of Turkana in north Kenya.

"We are scaling up in every way we can.... It is very bad now. There will be no major harvests until some time next year. The next six months are going to be very tough," added Lake.

Turkana is one of Kenya's badly affected regions where malnutrition rates have increased to 37 percent, compared with 15 percent in 2010, according to the aid organisation Oxfam.

A nurse in Lodwar, Turkana's main town, said the number of children admitted suffering malnutrition had doubled since last year.

"It (the drought) is the worst I have ever seen. We have admitted twice the number of children compared to last year," said Anne Lojao.

"Many children arrive already malnourished and weak and some are irritable, but they are the lucky ones who make it here."

Kenya is also home to the world's biggest refugee camp, where hundreds of thousands of Somalis have sought refuge from relentless conflict back home and thousands more are arriving daily due to the current drought.

Relief groups are struggling to cope with the influx and have urged the Kenyan government to ease camp congestion by opening a new camp that has already been constructed.

The camps that are currently operational host 380,000 people, more than four times the initial capacity.

Western countries and other donors have pledged millions of dollars in aid for the drought-stricken population but Lake said more still needed to be done.

Britain promised 52 million pounds (59 million euro, 73 million dollars) in emergency aid, in a statement Saturday from International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell.

"The situation is getting worse and is particularly devastating in Somalia, where families already have to cope with living in one of the most insecure countries in the world," Mitchell said.

He called for doing "more to help not only refugees but also those victims of the drought who remain in Somalia."

UNICEF said last week it needed 31.8 million dollars for the coming three months to assist millions of affected women and children.

The organisation estimates that more than two million children in the region are malnourished and need urgent help, while some 500,000 of them face imminent, life-threatening conditions.

Experts have called for long-term measures to deal with the effects of recurring drought, arguing that the resultant human suffering can be avoided.

"Although governments and their development partners cannot make the rains come, they can mitigate the impact of these recurring droughts in East Africa," Kevin Cleaver of the International Fund for Agricultural Development said this week.

He argued that governments and donors should invest more in agricultural research to develop drought resistant crops and fodder for livestock.

The regions in the Horn of Africa often affected by cyclical drought have also been neglected by governments, with no electricity, roads, water and other basic health and education facilities.

These arid regions, many of them far removed from capitals, have also seen frequent inter-clan clashes over scarce resources as well insurgencies.





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CLIMATE SCIENCE
E. Africa drought needs long-term solution: experts
Nairobi (AFP) July 14, 2011
A widespread drought in East Africa has left millions of facing starvation, but experts argue that while dry spells are cyclical the humanitarian catastrophes they are causing are avoidable. Seasons of failed rains in southern Ethiopia, northern Kenya, Somalia and parts of Djibouti have struck the region with its worst drought in decades, with around 10 million people in dire need of relief ... read more


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