Africa

More Than Half A Million Somali Children Face Hunger In World’s Worst Famine-UN

Parts of Africa face famine conditions not seen in the last 40 years.

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More than 500,000 Somali children under five are expected to suffer severe acute malnutrition and risk death from famine this year, a number is unseen in any country this century, the U.N. children’s agency said on Tuesday.

The number of Somalia’s youngest children those aged under five expected to suffer severe acute malnutrition has leapt from nearly 500,000 to more than half a million.

James Elder, a Unicef spokesperson, said at a UN news conference in Geneva on Tuesday that the number of children aged between six and 59 months at risk had increased by a third since June, from 386,000 to 513,000.

” Said one more way, it means 127,000 more children are at risk of death,” he added.

According to him, Parts of Africa face famine conditions not seen in the last 40 years. UNICEF, the World Food Programme (WFP) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) have made a call for immediate funding to help vulnerable communities hit by successive droughts, high food prices and conflict.

They have stressed that the emergency shows no signs of letting up.

Mr Elder said children are already dying, and Unicef‘s partners report that some stabilization centres are full, with critically-ill children are receiving treatment on floors.

During the famine of 2011, 340,000 children required treatment for severe acute malnutrition, Elder told journalists in Geneva. With more than half a million “now facing preventable death. it’s a pending nightmare we have not seen this century.”

He explained that severely malnourished children are up to 11 times more likely to die of causes such as diarrheas’ and measles than well-nourished boys and girls.

According to the FAO, some 6.7 million people across Somalia will likely endure high levels of acute food insecurity between October and December this year. The number includes more than 300,000 who have been left “empty-handed” by what it categorizes as a “triple emergency”.

In pastoral communities where herders have been desperately searching for pasture, “they are now watching their livestock drop dead like flies.” said Etienne Peterschmitt, FAO representative in Somalia.

The perilous situation for families in Baidoa and Burhakaba districts and those forced from their homes by hunger in Baidoa town in the Bay region of southern Somalia is especially concerning, Peterschmitt said.

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