Times of Suriname

UN says 3.5 mln people face acute food insecurity in Somalia

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MOGADISHU - At least 3.5 million people are projected to fall into crisis or emergency food insecurity in Somalia between June to September, the UN humanitari­an agency said on Monday. The UN Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs (OCHA) said some one million more children are projected to be malnourish­ed. “Some 2.6 million people will remain displaced and nearly one million school children out of class due to the COVID-19 related closure of schools,” said OCHA in its latest humanitari­an report. The UN said since March 16 after the first case of COVID19 was confirmed in Mogadishu, the triple threat of the virus, floods and desert locusts has aggravated Somalia’s complex, protracted humanitari­an crisis.

It said the crisis is largely driven by climatic shocks, years of armed conflict, widespread poverty and long-term vulnerabil­ity which have left 5.2 million people in need of humanitari­an assistance in 2020. According to OCHA, the Gu’ (AprilJune) rains have eased, but the impact of the recent flooding remains widespread. It said about 1.2 million people were affected by flooding in 32 districts across Somalia, with almost half a million displaced from their homes.

“While most of the displaced have returned home, they need assistance to rebuild their lives. Moreover, many of them are at risk of being affected again when the Deyr rains start in October,” said the UN agency. According to OCHA, humanitari­ans are also concerned that the coming rains may escalate the current outbreak of waterborne diseases, particular­ly acute watery diarrhea and cholera.

“From January to mid-June, more than 4,430 cases with 24 deaths have been confirmed in 23 districts; a three-fold increase compared to the same period in 2019,” said OCHA. The UN agency said since March 16, the COVID-19 caseload surged to nearly 3,000, exacerbati­ng pre-existing vulnerabil­ities, disrupting socio-economic gains and affecting livelihood­s especially of low-income earners and families that depend on remittance­s from relatives living abroad. It said the virus has also reduced the humanitari­an footprint in-country with staff working from home or in restricted environmen­ts.

(Xinhua)

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