Gulf Today

100,000 kids ‘could die of hunger in Tigray’

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WUKRO: The United Nations children’s agency said on Friday that more than 100,000 children in Ethiopia’s northern region of Tigray could suffer life-threatenin­g malnutriti­on in the next 12 months, a 10-fold increase to normal numbers.

Unicef spokespers­on Marixie Mercado said that one-in-two pregnant and breasfeedi­ng women screened in Tigray were acutely malnourish­ed.

“Our worst fears about the health and wellbeing of children... are being confirmed,” she told a briefing in Geneva.

Spokespeop­le for the prime minister and a government task force on Tigray — where fighting between rebellious regional and federal forces have continued since November — did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on Unicef’s statement.

Babies like 20-month-old Aammanuel Merhawi are suffering the most. He is a third below normal weight for his age. His feverish eyes glisten and his ribs are visible as he heaves, vomiting supplement­ary food fed through a nasal tube. All are signs of severe malnutriti­on.

“My milk dried up,” his mother, Brkti Gebrehiwot, told reporters at Wukro General Hospital in northern Tigray on July 11.

Aid agencies say they are about to run out of the formula used to treat 4,000 severely malnourish­ed children every month.

At least three children have died in Wukro hospital since February, nurse Tsehaynesh Gebrehiwot said.

She provided their medical records: four-monthold Awet Gebreslass­ie weighed 2.6 kilogramne­s, a third of normal weight; one-year-old Robel Gebrezgihe­r weighed 2kgs, less than a quarter of normal weight; and Kisanet Hogus, also a year old, weighed 5kgs — just over half of normal weight. All died within days of admission.

In Adigrat General Hospital further north, Reuters saw medical records confirming the death of three more malnourish­ed children.

Doctors in both hospitals said they saw between four to 10 severely malnourish­ed children monthly before the conflict erupted in November. Now numbers have more than doubled.

The UN says that around 400,000 people are living in famine conditions in Tigray, and more than 90% of the population needs emergency food aid.

In a statement on Thursday evening, the Ethiopian government blamed Tigray regional forces for blocking aid and said it had stockpiled reserve wheat in the region. It gave no details on the stockpile’s location or plans for distributi­on.

 ?? File / Reuters ?? ↑ Tsegy Kiday, a 34-year-old displaced single mother, is seen with her five children in Nebelet, Tigray region.
File / Reuters ↑ Tsegy Kiday, a 34-year-old displaced single mother, is seen with her five children in Nebelet, Tigray region.

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