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Starvation Looms In African Horn
ISSUE 207
Front Page
Index

Headlines

Saying A Totalitarian Government Was Preferable ‎To Anarchy, Yemen’s President Saleh Pays Tribute ‎To Siyad Barre For Safeguarding Somali Unity

Eviction Order By Hargeysa’s Mayor Puts ‎Hundreds Of Vegetables Sellers Out Of Business

A Flashpoint For Violence Plans To Relocate ‎Hargeysa’s Slaughterhouse‎

BACK TO AFRICA‎

Somalia’s Islamists‎

The Surud Mountain Forests In Somaliland

Somaliland FilajTEL: Leading Tele Provider Reduces International ‎Rates‎‎

Three British Hostages Freed In Gaza

Local & Regional Affairs

Noted Somali Writer ‘Sangub’ Charged With Molesting Girl 10 Years Ago

Somaliland Phone Firms Reject US Company Bids‎

Starvation Looms In African Horn

Gentleman Pirates Cause Mass Starvation

US Renews Terror Warning Against Travel To Kenya‎‎

Norway Mulls Camel Farming For Refugees‎‎‎‎‎

Ethiopia: Concerns About Political Trials Of Opposition ‎Activists, Human Rights Defenders And Journalists

Somali Piracy Is Worst In World‎

Editorial
Somali Poetry

International News

Al-Qaida: Iraq Withdrawal Victory For Islam

Mecca Death Toll Rises To 76

Yemen Crude oil exports, Somali Pirates and Sana'a Summit Links

Teachers Learn As They Teach Somalis

Attacks Against UN Personnel Continued Unabated ‎Throughout 2005, UN Staff Union Says‎

Favorable Weather Improves Food Security Situations

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

The Dusty Foot Philosopher

RP Among Most Dangerous For Journalists In 2005‎‎

Africa Will Progress, The Devil Is In The Type Of Leaders It Gets

The UK To Announce Within Days Whether To Ban Khat

Notice Board

BOOK REVIEW

Opinions

Much To Our Surprise, Hargeysa’s Water Situation Has Improved Under Ali Asad’s Stewardship‎

The Beauty Of Our Time‎

The AU: Time To Remove Obstacles To Somaliland ‎Recognition‎‎‎

When A Dubious Business Deal Is Masqueraded As Government Policy‎

Borrowed Thinking; Flawed Analysis: A Reply To Tani!‎‎

THE FINAL DISMEMBERMENT


Friday, 6 January 2006 (BBC News)

Woman in northern Kenya

The drought does not respect international borders

Millions of people could face starvation in the Horn of Africa, the United Nations food agency has warned.

The FAO says Somalia has been worst hit by a drought in the region, where 2m need urgent food aid. The harvest there could be the lowest in a decade.

There are also food shortages in parts of Ethiopia, Kenya and Djibouti. Some 11 million need food aid, the FAO says.

A BBC correspondent in northern Kenya says corpses of cattle and donkeys are lying everywhere.

The BBC's Adam Mynott says six children have died in the past three weeks in Wajir hospital from hunger-related diseases and 15 of the 20 beds are occupied by malnourished children in varying states of health.

While trees with deep roots are still managing to push up a few scant leaves, everything else is brittle, brown and dry as tinder, he says.

BBC Africa analyst Martin Plaut says the UN agencies do not used words like "starvation" and "drought" lightly.

The FAO's Shukri Ahmed told the BBC News website that he was particularly worried because people are harvesting their crops at the moment and yet there is still not enough food.

"There should be a lull in the period of hunger," he said.

But food prices are still rising in both Somalia and Kenya, he said.

He also warned that long-term weather forecasts predicted that the next rains in April and March could be lower than normal.

'Wiped out'

In Ethiopia, some one million people in the south-eastern Somali region could face severe food shortages, while another seven million need food aid, the FAO says.

On Thursday, international aid agencies stepped up their appeal for the estimated 2.5m people needing food aid in northern Kenya.

Nearly 150,000 people - 20% of the population - face food shortages in Djibouti.

The FAO says it is conducting an urgent assessment to find out what is required to meet these people's needs.

"Communities may soon be wiped out since they depend entirely on livestock," said the Red Cross on Thursday.

Children, weakened by months of hunger, are starting to die of diarrhea, malaria and other diseases, and the existing centers for feeding malnourished children are overflowing, aid workers say.

FACING STARVATION

Kenya: 2.5m people

Somalia: 2m

Ethiopia: 1m

Djibouti: 150,000

 


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