The Peterborough Examiner

Aid group says kids at risk

- ABDI GULED

MOGADISHU, Somalia — Lifethreat­ening child malnutriti­on rates are rising to alarming levels in drought-hit Somalia, the internatio­nal aid group Save the Children said Thursday.

A new survey found “very critical” levels of severe malnutriti­on in two of six districts assessed in some of the worst affected parts of Somalia.

“We are on the brink of a massive catastroph­e in Somalia with the death of three quarters of the country’s livestock, a rapid increase of children suffering severe malnutriti­on and the depletion of water stores in dozens of communitie­s,” said Hassan Saadi Noor, Save the Children’s Somalia country director, who said he fears seeing “children dying in significan­t numbers.”

Less than 10 per cent of children in Somalia are currently registered in a nutrition program according to the study, which warns that children could start dying “in the near future” unless immediate action is taken such as a major and rapid scaling up of feeding schemes.

“Donors have stepped up in recent months, however such is the scale of this crisis that even more funding is needed to address malnutriti­on directly, including improving access to food and water,” Noor said.

“Children must be treated for malnutriti­on now ... Famine is a distinct possibilit­y for Somalia. It is an absolute travesty that this is even conceivabl­e when just six years ago this same region was hit by a famine that killed over 250,000 people.”

The drought has left 6.2 million people — more than half of the population of Somalia — in need of immediate lifesaving assistance and a further 8.3 million in Kenya and Ethiopia are also need of urgent help, he said.

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