Royal Oak Tribune

In war-torn states hurt by climate, scant hope for new funds

- By Samy Magdy

SHARM EL-SHEIKH, EGYPT

In conflict-ravaged nations like Yemen and Somalia, devastatin­g floods and droughts kill hundreds of people and uproot tens of thousands from their homes.

These countries and many others in the Middle East and Africa have been plunged into turmoil and wars for several years. Now climate change is an added disaster for those already struggling for survival.

The United Nations’ climate conference, which wrapped up last weekend in Egypt, establishe­d a new fund to help poor, vulnerable countries hit hard by climate change. Countries like Yemen and Somalia are among the world’s poorest and more vulnerable to climate change impacts as they are less able to adapt to weather extremes.

But they have little or no access to climate financing.

Conflict-hit countries are unlikely to receive funds because they lack stable government­s, said Nisreen el-Saim, chair of the U.N. Secretary-General Youth Advisory Group.

“They don’t have institutio­ns in order to have climate finance,” she said. “You have to have strong institutio­ns, which don’t exist in many countries.”

Robert Mardini, the director general of the Internatio­nal Committee for the Red Cross, said that “close to zero amount of climate finance” is reaching conflictaf­fected nations “because decision makers who decide to allocate those funds consider that it is too risky to invest” there.

He warned that the worst is yet to come for Yemenis and Somalis amid worsening food shortages.

Those decision makers “need to reconsider the risk appetite because there are also big risks in not investing in these countries and huge (human) costs that should be avoided,” he said.

In Yemen, a third of the population — 19 million people — are not able to find sufficient food in 2022, up from 15 million last year. Those include 161,000 living in famine-like conditions, according to the U.N. food agency.

Children and women are the most affected, with 1.3 million pregnant and breastfeed­ing women and 2.2 million children under 5 years acutely malnourish­ed. Of those, 538,000 children suffer from severe acute malnutriti­on, said the U.N. Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs.

Yemen has endured a brutal civil war since 2014, when the Iranian-backed Houthi rebels seized the capital, Sanaa, forcing the government into exile. A Saudiled coalition entered the war in early 2015 to try restore the internatio­nally recognized government to power.

The conflict devastated the country, created one of the world’s worst humanitari­an crises and over the years, turned into a regional proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran. More than 150,000 people have been killed, including over 14,500 civilians.

The country has also suffered from droughts, soil erosion and yet worsening floods every year. According to the U.N. agricultur­e agency, this year’s rainfall was 45% higher compared to 2021.

At least 72 people were killed in flooding this year, and some 74,000 families in 19 of the country’s 22 provinces were affected, with those living in displaceme­nt camps bearing the brunt of the deluge. There are 4.3 million people displaced, most made homelss by the raging conflict, according to U.N. figures.

To meet the increasing humanitari­an needs, the World Food Program says it needs more than $1 billion until March 2023.

The situation is worse in Somalia. The country is inching towards famine, the U.N. says. Prolonged drought has brought hunger and death to hundreds of thousands.

The country experience­d its fifth consecutiv­e failed rainy season this year, forcing at least 700,000 people from their homes, said Mohamed Osman, an economic advisor to the Somali president.

He said Somalia needs $55.5 billion in investment and assistance in the next 10 years to be able to recover from climatic shocks.

“Somalia is paying the price already,” he said. “We have received so far nothing and in total, Africa has received less.”

In the past two months alone, more than 55,000 Somalis fled drought and conflict to neighborin­g Kenya, and the number is expected to reach 120,000 in the next few months, according to the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee.

“Hundreds of thousands of Somali refugees will struggle to find life-saving assistance by fleeing to Kenya this year unless urgent steps are taken,” said IRC’s director in Kenya, Mohamed El Montassir Hussein.

Somalia descended into chaos following the 1991 ousting of longtime dictator Siad Barre by warlords who then turned on each other. The al-Shabab militants, who are affiliated with alQaida, are also active in the country which occupied a strategica­lly important position in the Horn of Africa.

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