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Edited News | UNHCR , UNICEF
“Unprecedented numbers” of children in Somalia are facing a “malnutrition crisis’ the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) warned on Tuesday. 1.5 million children, nearly half of the under-five population, are likely to have acute malnutrition. Of these 385,000 will need treatment for severe acute malnutrition, UNICEF Somalia Representative, Wafaa Saeed, told reporters in Geneva.
The alert comes after UN relief chief Martin Griffiths on Monday said that “famine is at the door,” in areas of the Bay Region of Somalia, which is “predicted to suffer a fifth consecutive failed rainy season”.
According to Ms. Saeed, the Bay is not the only region facing a humanitarian crisis: “74 districts across Somalia are affected, out of which we have prioritised 12 as needing urgent, urgent support” she said.
The UNICEF official highlighted that water and sanitation are just as important as food for children and families facing famine and food insecurity. “This is a water crisis,” she said. “4.5 million people need emergency water supply, and the figure is expected to rise as the drought worsens”.
According to Ms. Saeed, in some areas, water prices have climbed up by between 55 to 85 per cent since January 2022. “No matter how much food a malnourished child eats, he or she will not get better if the water they are drinking is not safe” she warned.
According to the UNICEF Somalia spokesperson, some 730 children are reported to have died in food and nutrition centres across the country between January and July this year. ”But the numbers could be more as many deaths go unreported, she warned.
Audrey Crawford, Country Director Somalia, Danish Refugee Council (DRC) highlighted the difficulties in knowing what the real picture is in terms of deaths. She explained that the organization has been “asked to monitor graveyards,” as the data is not there to collect the evidence. “We are going to be witnessing the death of children on an unimaginable scale in the last months of 2022 if we don't act fast,” she said.
“Over a million people have been displaced internally this year so far,” said the DRC spokesperson. Echoing the concerns of UNICEF, Ms. Crawford described how people had “walked for up to ten days in search of food and water, arriving with literally nothing, in a deteriorated state with malnourished children or children who have died”.
“Many of the mothers I talked to had buried children in the previous days, either from contracting diarrhoea or measles in the overly congested camps or along the way from malnutrition,” she continued.
Ms. Saeed warned that high levels of severe acute malnutrition in children combined with deadly outbreaks of disease will have “tragic consequences,” with child mortality rising dramatically. Disease outbreaks spiked between January and July, with at least 8,400 suspected acute watery diarrhoea (AWD), cholera cases and around 13,000 suspected measles cases (78 per cent of cases in children under 5).
According to UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) spokesperson, Shabia Mantoo, as the drought worsens, women and girls are being forced to trek “longer and longer distances to access water and shelter”. This is “heightening their exposure to gender-based violence… sexual exploitation and abuse,” she said, adding that “many children have also been forced to drop out of school to help their families earn a daily income and search for water and pasture, further increasing the risks are forced marriage or family separation.” Underscoring this concern, Ms. Saeed said “around 3 million children of school age have been impacted by the drought”. Of these “900,000 are at risk of dropping out, half of which are girls.. And from previous experience of 2017, 90 per cent of the children who drop out of school never go back,” she warned.
Ms. Mantoo also pointed out that there has been an increase in the number of children who are unaccompanied or separated from their families, “which puts them at protection risk”. Since January, their numbers have increased by 81 per cent compared to last year, according to UNICEF.
Somalia is now suffering its third drought in a decade. The first drought, in 2011, killed an estimated 260,000 people, many of them children. Ms. Saeed explained that the worst effects of the second drought in 2017 “were mitigated because early warning systems kicked in, donors channelled aid quickly, government institutions were more solid, and there were more operational organizations on the ground”.
But she warned that the response to the appeal this time has been slower. By July, “only 65 per cent of our total drought appeal of $112 million was funded and less than a third of the UN appeal of $1 billion”. As of July, 223,000 children with severe acute malnutrition had been treated (58 per cent of the 2022 target) and 1 million people have been reached with sustainable water (30 per cent of the 2022 target). Another 1.3 million people (25 per cent of the target) were reached with a temporary water supply and 1.2 million children had been vaccinated in response to the worsening measles outbreak.
In an urgent call for donors to step up and fully fund the UN’s Humanitarian Response Plan, the UNICEF spokesperson stressed that it is “possible to avert famine”. “If we scale up significantly we can stop a repeat 2011. We urgently need donors. We can save lives, but to prevent famine we need long-term investment to help families build resilience to the effects of climate change”.
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Edited News | UNRWA , OCHA , WHO
UN life-saving aid allowed to trickle into Gaza as civilian needs mount
Amid calls for more humanitarian trucks to enter the food and medicine-deprived Palestinian enclave of Gaza, UN humanitarians have received permission from Israel for “around 100” more aid trucks to cross into the Strip after only five were let in yesterday, But the scale of relief efforts allowed remains entirely insufficient to meet the urgent needs of people there, humanitarian workers say.
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Edited News
A war reporter from Lebanon who lost a limb in the line of duty is calling for an end to impunity for attacks against journalists.
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Edited News | ITU
The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) commemorated 160 years dedicated to connecting the world on Saturday, 17 May in Geneva, Switzerland, during the annual World Telecommunication and Information Society Day.
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Edited News | WHO , OCHA
Gazans ‘in terror’ after another night of deadly strikes and siege
Amid reports that Israeli strikes across Gaza into Friday killed at least 64 people, aid teams once again pushed back strongly at allegations that aid is being diverted to Hamas and pleaded for the blockade to end.
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Edited News | OHCHR , UNOG
Deportations over recent months of large numbers of non-nationals from the United States of America, especially to countries other than those of their origin, raise a number of human rights concerns, the UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk warned on Tuesday.
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Edited News | WHO
Gaza: Over 50 child malnutrition deaths amid aid blockade; entire generation will be ‘permanently affected’ - WHO
In the aid desert of Gaza, malnourished children are dying while survivors can expect a lifetime of dire health problems, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday.
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Edited News | WHO , UNICEF , UNRWA
Israel’s aid plan will force Gaza families to choose ‘between displacement and death’ – UN humanitarians
Israel’s plan to take control of relief assistance in Gaza risks increasing the suffering of families already exhausted by 18 months of war by putting their lives in danger and inciting more displacement, using aid as “bait”, UN humanitarians said on Friday.
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Edited News | OCHA , WHO
UN Humanitarians reject Israeli plan to take over aid delivery
The reported Israeli proposal to deliver humanitarian supplies through hubs controlled by the military would be a breach of the core principles of neutral, impartial and independent aid delivery, the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, said on Tuesday.
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Edited News , B-roll | OCHA
Gaza: ‘Worst-case scenario’ unfolds as two-month aid blockade deepens suffering - OCHA
Two months into a devastating aid blockade of Gaza food has run out and people are fighting over water amid relentless bombing, the UN’s humanitarian affairs coordination office (OCHA) said on Friday.
/Includes OCHA footage from Gaza City/
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Edited News | UNRWA
Children in Gaza are going to bed starving, says aid agency
The biggest UN aid agency in Gaza on Tuesday condemned the two-month Israeli blockade on Gaza that has left families sharing a single tin of food at mealtime and the sick and injured without lifesaving medical help, amid daily bombardment.
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Edited News | UNHCR
Ongoing Russian attacks in Ukraine force frontline areas to empty: UNHCR
With Ukrainian cities still reeling from this week’s deadly Russian missile and drone attacks, communities on the front line continue to be targeted too, the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, said on Friday. “We also see attacks on frontline regions increasing and it's, as always, civilians that are bearing the highest cost of the war,” said Karolina Lindholm Billing, UNHCR Representative in Ukraine.
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Edited News | WFP
Funding and supply shortfalls for the UN World Food Programme (WFP)'s work in Ethiopia will halt lifesaving treatment for 650,000 malnourished women and children at the end of the month. “We are at the breaking point,” it said on Tuesday.