San Francisco Chronicle

Horror of a hotter world on stark display in Somalia

- By Simon Marks

Vast tracts of countrysid­e transforme­d into barren wasteland, decimated crops and animal herds and children dying of starvation.

The grim reality confrontin­g drought-stricken east Africa is a frightenin­g portent of what could come elsewhere as the effects of climate change become increasing­ly pronounced. Across the world’s poorest continent, more than a fifth of its 1.3 billion people don’t have enough to eat, with water shortages and extreme weather events the main culprits.

Nowhere is this phenomenon more stark than in Somalia, one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries, which is in the grip of its worst drought in more than four decades while simultaneo­usly struggling to contain an Islamist insurgency. Almost half of its 17 million people are in urgent need of aid and more than 1 million have abandoned their homes in search of food and grazing. Rains have failed for five consecutiv­e seasons and water shortages are worse than in the early 1990s when a famine claimed about 260,000 lives.

Official data show that more than 900 other children under the age of five have died across Somalia since January. The true tally is unknown — and likely exponentia­lly higher — because vast areas are under the control of al-Shabaab insurine gents and inaccessib­le to officials and aid workers. In the area surroundin­g Galkayo, 341 miles northwest of the capital Mogadishu, more than half the children are already considered malnourish­ed. Countrywid­e, more than 350,000 Somalian children have been treated for the condition this year, and the United Nations anticipate­s that their number will swell to 1.5 million by the end of this month.

About $1.2 billion of aid, the bulk of it from the U.S., has flowed into Somalia but that’s $1 billion short of what’s needed for the 7.6 million people who need help, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs. The U.N. has said it expects a famto be declared soon in three isolated regions of the country. The classifica­tion is assigned to areas where at least a fifth of households face an extreme lack of food, at least 30% of children suffer from acute malnutriti­on and at least two out of every 10,000 people die daily from starvation or a combinatio­n of hunger and disease.

Even if more money were made available, distributi­ng aid to all those who need it would be impossible given ongoing the conflict with al-Shabaab. The group has been trying to topple the government since 2006 and impose its own version of Islamic law, and has taken full advantage of the drought to recruit fighters from desperate families.

 ?? Jerome Delay/Associated Press ?? A Somali woman and child wait to be given a spot at a camp for displaced people amid a drought near Dollow in September.
Jerome Delay/Associated Press A Somali woman and child wait to be given a spot at a camp for displaced people amid a drought near Dollow in September.

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