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Somalia facing ‘unimaginable’ hunger crisis – Irish aid worker


Friday April 28, 2017

Carol Morgan, Concern Worldwide’s regional director for the Horn of Africa, spoke of children dying on roads as they travelled to the charity’s emergency feeding centres. Photograph: Liam Burke/Press 22


 A veteran Irish aid worker has described hunger conditions in Somalia as being the most devastating she has seen and worse than during the country’s 2011-2012 famine that killed 260,000 people.

Two weeks after her return from the area around the East African country’s capital of Mogadishu, Carol Morgan, Concern Worldwide’s regional director for the Horn of Africa, spoke of children dying on roads as they travelled to the charity’s emergency feeding centres.

“It is the scale of it that is vast,” said Ms Morgan. “I saw so many malnourished children. They had a famine in Somalia in 2011-2012. What they are saying is that this time even more people are affected. The scale is greater than what happened then. However, I think maybe we are reacting faster but we need to continue with that.”

Some 6.2 million people, more than half the country’s population, are in need of urgent food assistance due to conflict and the most severe drought in decades, according to the Irish charity.

Acutely malnourished children

“Overall, if you are looking at East Africa, you are talking about 20 million people at risk of starvation. It is just unimaginable,” said Ms Morgan.
Famine has already been declared in parts of war-torn South Sudan, while Kenya and Ethiopia are experiencing serious food shortages.
An estimated 363,000 children under the age of five are acutely malnourished. Some 133,000 children are estimated to have died in

Somalia’s last famine.

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During her brief visit Ms Morgan travelled the conflict-ridden country with an armed escort, visiting several camps and nutritional centres where Concern is providing food, water, shelter and sanitation along with cash transfers via mobile phones.

She described distressing scenes where many hungry and thirsty children with swollen stomachs were not reaching the charity’s feeding centres and were “dying in their villages and on the road”.

“I am quite used to seeing children under five who are malnourished but it is when you see older children who are quite thin and emaciated, that is quite hard. Normally older children are able to fend for themselves,” she said.

Health centres

She witnessed families travelling long distances to the outskirts of cities, seeking food, and setting up makeshift camps that are “on top of one another” and a “huge fire hazard”. At the first camp she visited, 100 families, each comprising on average four to five people, had arrived that day.

At one of the charity’s health centres, she met a mother who had just given birth after walking for five days with her other children, all malnourished, before being transported to the centre.

Concern has more than 1,200 staff in Somalia, South Sudan, Kenya and Ethiopia providing support to 1.8 million people.
Somalia’s drought is compounded by the conflict between Islamic extremist group al-Shabaab and the Somali government. Areas controlled by the group are among the worst affected.

“This is an exceptional crisis,” said Ms Morgan. “The Irish public have always been very generous and supportive at times like this in the past and I hope they can support us again to help these families who are in such desperate need.”
 



 





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