UN: Somalia is world’s
worst humanitarian disaster.
(Dabaab, Kenya July 10, 2011
Ceegaag Online)
The head of
the UN refugee agency said Sunday that drought-ridden
Somalia is the "worst humanitarian disaster" in the world
after meeting with refugees who endured unspeakable hardship
to reach the world's largest refugee camp.
The Kenyan
camp, Dadaab, is overflowing with tens of thousands of newly
arrived refugees forced into the camp by the parched
landscape in the region where Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya
meet. The World Food Program estimates that 10 million
people already need humanitarian aid. The UN Children's Fund
estimates that more than 2 million children are malnourished
and in need of lifesaving action.
Antonio
Guterres, the head of UNHCR who visited Dadaab on Sunday,
appealed to the world to supply the "massive support" needed
by thousands of refugees showing up at this camp every week.
More than 380,000 refugees now live there.
In Dadaab,
Guterres spoke with a Somalia mother who lost three of her
children during a 35-day walk to reach the camp. Guterres
said Dadaab holds "the poorest of the poor and the most
vulnerable of the vulnerable."
"I became a
bit insane after I lost them," said the mother, Muslima
Aden. "I lost them in different times on my way."
Guterres is
on a tour of the region to highlight the dire need. On
Thursday he was in the Ethiopian camp of Dollo Ado, a camp
that is also overflowing.
"The
mortality rates we are witnessing are three times the level
of emergency ceilings," he said. "The level of malnutrition
of the children coming in is 50 per cent. That is enough to
explain why a very high level of mortality is inevitable,"
he said.
Dr. Dejene
Kebede, a health officer for UNHCR, said there were 58
deaths in camps in one week alone in June.
Most of the
deaths take place at the registration office and transition
facilities of the refugee camps in the southeastern Dollo
region of Ethiopia, the health officer said.
Up to 2,000
Somali refugees are crossing the border into Ethiopia every
day, UNHCR said. Thousands of families arrive in poor
conditions often after walking for days in search of food.
Guterres said
the influx is overwhelming for UNHCR and other international
and local aid organizations: "Nothing can compare to what we
have seen this month."
"I believe
Somalia
represents the worst humanitarian disaster in the world," he
said.
The camps are
full and lack capacity to provide the Somali people with
food and shelter.
This makes
effective health treatment almost impossible, said Jerome
Souquet, head of Doctors Without Borders at the Dollo Ado
camps.
"We can treat
the severely malnourished children, but they will definitely
come back to us underfed because there is not enough food
and almost all of them suffer from diarrhea," he told The
Associated Press.
Habiba Osman
Ibrahim, a 76-year old Somali refugee from the al-Shabab-controlled
Luk region of
Somalia,
said she walked for three days with her two underfed
grandchildren. Al-Shabab is Somalia's dangerous militant
group. It had forced out all international aid groups, but
earlier this month said they could return considering the
desperate conditions.
"We were
dependent on food aid," she said. "But because al-Shabab
forced out all relief operations and there was no food we
had no choice but to flee."
Aden Dayow,
32, said he was a sorghum-growing farmer in Ufurow in
Somalia, but fled to Ethiopia because his harvest failed
because of a lack of rains.
The epicenter
of the drought lies on the three-way border shared by Kenya,
Ethiopia and Somalia, a nomadic region where families
heavily depend on the health of their livestock. Uganda and
Djibouti have also been hit.
The World
Food Program said it expects 10 million people in the Horn
of Africa to require food assistance. WFP currently provides
food aid to 6 million people in East Africa.
The group
said it is facing a shortfall of 40 per cent on the $477
million needed to address hunger needs in the region.
Somalis
desperate for food are also overrunning Dadaab, the world's
largest refugee camp in neighbouring Kenya, which is seeing
some 10,000 new arrivals each week, six times the average at
this time last year.
The U.N.'s
refugee agency says Dadaab's three camps now host more than
382,000 people, while thousands more are waiting at
reception centres outside the camp.
Source: AP
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