The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Drought, hunger push thousands to flee amid fears of famine

Two seasons of poor rainfall causes crop failures, high levels of livestock deaths

- By Abdi Guled The Associated Press

MOGADISHU, SOMALIA >>

Her eyes glued to the feeble movements of her malnourish­ed baby with protruding ribs and sunken eyes, Fadumo Abdi Ibrahim struggled to hold back her tears in the stifling and crowded feeding center in Somalia’s capital. She waved a scrap of fabric over him to create a current of air.

She is one of thousands of desperate people streaming into Somalia’s capital seeking food as a result a prolonged drought, overwhelmi­ng local and internatio­nal aid agencies. The Somali government warns of a looming famine.

An estimated 5 million Somalis, out of population of 10 million, need humanitari­an assistance, according to the U.N. humanitari­an office. About 363,000 acutely malnourish­ed children “need urgent treatment and nutrition support, including 71,000 who are severely malnourish­ed,” said the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t’s Famine Early Warning Systems Network.

Ibrahim carried her 9-month-old boy, Ali Hassan, to Mogadishu 10 days ago. A mother of five, she is a proud farmer who grew maize (corn) on her family’s farm in Toratorow, an agricultur­al town in Somalia’s Lower Shabelle region, before rainy seasons failed three times over a two-year period.

“We were not able to get anything to eat, not even water — the entire environmen­t is so parched,” she said, cradling her son’s bony legs and waving away flies from his face. She said she left to seek food for her baby, leaving her four older children with their father on the farm. She said the kids would not have been able to survive the trek.

Ibrahim’s journey to Mogadishu wasn’t easy. She and other families hiked all day and night over 30 kilometers (nearly 20 miles) across the dry landscape. Hundreds of hungry families are making the trip to seek food distributi­on in Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu.

“We found several bodies of children on the road,” she said, describing how mothers were too weak to carry the little corpses.

Fears are rising of a full-blown famine in Somalia. Large-scale aid is needed to avert an imminent disaster, according to the Somali government.

“The dire situation calls for internatio­nal collaborat­ion and regional partnershi­p between government­s, civil society, aid organizati­ons, business and internatio­nal donors,” said the government this month encouragin­g regional cooperatio­n to combat the effects of the drought.

Somalia’s ongoing conflict against the Islamic extremist rebels of al-Shabab has compounded the problems of harvest failure. The widespread hunger “is taking a particular­ly heavy toll on children and women, and makes people vulnerable to exploitati­on, human rights abuses and to criminal and terrorist networks,” said the government statement.

Two consecutiv­e seasons of poor rainfall, more in some areas, have caused large-scale crop failures and high levels of livestock deaths, according to the United Nations Office for Humanitari­an Coordinati­on.

The U.N. humanitari­an appeal for 2017 for Somalia is $864 million to provide assistance to 3.9 million people. But additional funds are needed to cope with the worsening situation, and last month, the U.N. World Food Program requested an additional $26 million plan to respond to the drought.

Tales of misery are plenty in the crowded feeding center run by a local humanitari­an NGO and funded by the World Health Organizati­on.

Under the scorching sun, Habiba Mohamed Aden struggled to hold Mohamud Ahmed, her extremely malnourish­ed 6-month-old baby, as she waited in line to collect packs of food and nutritiona­l supplement­s.

“I had to walk for many kilometers despite hunger and lack of energy to come here,” said the emaciated woman who was barely able to concentrat­e on caring for her frail baby. “I almost died along the way. It was a terrible journey,” she said wiping her bloodshot eyes. Unable to stand any longer, she sat on the ground. The 30-year-old mother, clearly malnourish­ed herself, was quickly taken inside for assistance.

The daily influx of people seeking food aid is increasing pressure on Somalia’s capital which is struggling to cope with the demands. Refugee camps are already overcrowde­d, filling them beyond capacity. Over 7,000 internally displaced people checked into one feeding center recently. Because of a lack of clean water in many areas of Somalia, there is the threat of cholera and other diseases, say U.N. experts.

“They are so desperate,” said Abdullahi Mohamed Ibrahim, deputy director of Sorrdo, a Somali organizati­on which helps malnourish­ed children. “The ravaging drought forced them to flee from their homes.”

“We found several bodies of children on the road.” — Fadumo Abdi Ibrahim, describing how mothers were too weak to carry the little corpses

 ?? FARAH ABDI WARSAMEH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Displaced Somali girls who fled the drought in southern Somalia stand in a queue to receive food handouts at a feeding center in a camp in Mogadishu, Somalia.
FARAH ABDI WARSAMEH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Displaced Somali girls who fled the drought in southern Somalia stand in a queue to receive food handouts at a feeding center in a camp in Mogadishu, Somalia.

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