Just two days old and little Suldhano’s life is blighted by starvation
BABY Suldhano is only two days old and will not officially be named for another five days in accordance with her parents’ customs.
Yet her young life is already blighted by the hunger crisis that has ravaged Somalia and forced more than a million people to flee lands left barren by drought.
Her mother, Orey Irshad, 36, is so malnourished that her fragile body cannot produce milk for her newborn.
She sits on a thin mattress in the family’s makeshift shelter, cradling tiny Suldhano and spooning sugary water into her parched mouth.
East Africa is in the grip of the worst drought in 40 years, which has left millions on the brink of starvation. The Daily Express joined Save the Children on a visit to Baidoa in south-west Somalia, which has become a hub for desperate families fighting for survival.
Orey and her husband, Nuurow Hassan Mursal, are painfully aware of the dangers of malnutrition after it killed their three-year-old daughter Maryama.
Nuurow, 40, says: “When we came here our child was sick, we took her to the hospital but she could not recover. We believe she died as a result of hunger. She was malnourished and we had no food to give her.”
The family live in a basic shelter in one of scores of camps that have sprung up for Internally Displaced Persons. More than half a million IDPs now account for half of Baidoa’s population.
Domed structures – each a patchwork of woven branches and plastic sheets – stretch as far as the eye can see under the baking sun.
Nuurow, Orey, and their five children arrived last August after an exhausting six-day journey in a donkey cart.
They once had a thriving herd of animals and fields of crops. Nuurow says: “We used to rear camels, cattle and goats. We lost everything during the seven-year drought. I don’t have money to support my family. My wife is suffering and I cannot feed my child.”
Unable to afford meat or vegetables, they survive on plain rice. At night they are bitten by bed bugs and mosquitos, bringing the threat of malaria.
Nuurow, whose face is pocked and scarred from an illness that left him unable to work, says they have little hope of returning home.
These devastating dry spells are intensifying and becoming more frequent due to climate change.The pandemic and rising commodity prices from the war in Ukraine have exacerbated the crisis, leaving half of Somalia’s 17 million population facing food insecurity.
Every family we meet tells a similar story of a gruelling trek from a home they did not want to leave. Some also fled violence in areas controlled by terrorist group al-Shabaab, an affiliate organisation of al-Qaeda.
Political instability, following the collapse of the Somali government in 1991, saw the country torn apart by clan-based conflict and left with poor infrastructure that is only now starting to be rebuilt. Issack Hassan Ali, 75, and Nuriye Abdirahman, 50, are caring for six grandchildren aged three to 13 after the orphans lost their father at home and their mother in childbirth shortly after they arrived at the camp.
Her baby boy also died after becoming severely malnourished.
Issack says: “We could not feed him.We gave him milk powder but his whole body swelled and he died. Before the drought, life was good. We used to rear animals and farm. This is one of the worst droughts I’ve ever seen.
“We looked for a place where we could find humanitarian support to save our lives because we were about to die.”
Eight million people in Somalia are thought to be facing food shortages, including 5.1 million children. More than half of youngsters under five are malnourished, including half a million who are perilously ill.
Estimates suggest as many as 43,000 excess deaths were caused by the drought last year.
Save the Children is providing aid in Baidoa, including medical care, malnutrition treatment, and cash and voucher assistance. But humanitarian support is struggling to keep pace with growing demand, and there is no end in sight.
Rain has recently fallen in parts of Somalia but drought has ruined the soil, leaving it unable to absorb water and causing flash flooding.
Hopeless
Said Mohamud Isse, the charity’s spokesman in Somalia, said: “It’s too little, too late. People will need at least three or four good rainy seasons to recover from what they’re now experiencing.”
The situation appears hopeless. There is no quick fix or easy path for those bearing the brunt to rebuild their lives.
Save the Children is calling on G7 leaders to step up the fight against global hunger. Said says the search for a solution is “the million dollar question” but one thing is certain – all countries responsible for climate change must help the worst-affected nations.
He adds: “Somalia is one of the smallest contributors to the crisis but we are the country paying the highest price. What is happening here is not just something for Somalis to worry about.
“It is our collective responsibility to respond because many of these people who are facing death have not contributed to climate change.”