More than 700 children have died in Somalia nutrition centers, UN says

Around 730 children are reported to have died in nutrition centres across the country" warns UNICEF Somalia Representative Wafaa Saeed during a press conference in Geneva. (AFP)
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  • Parts of Somalia will be hit by famine between October and December as a drought worsens and global food prices surge, the United Nations said on Monday

GENEVA/MOGADISHU: Hundreds of children have died in nutrition centres across Somalia, the UN children’s agency (UNICEF) said on Tuesday, a day after the global body warned that parts of the country will be hit by famine in coming months.

An official in one Somali region described famished people walking long distances with children on their shoulders to escape from drought and violence inflicted by Al-Shabaab militants. Some children died along the way.

The Horn of Africa region is facing a fifth consecutive failed rainy season. A 2011 famine in Somalia claimed more than a quarter of a million lives, most of them children.

“Some 730 children have been 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,” UNICEF Somalia representative Wafaa Saeed told a Geneva news briefing.

The centres are for children with severe acute malnutrition as well as illnesses such as measles, cholera or malaria and offer a snapshot of the situation across the country.




Somali children who fled drought-stricken areas stand by their makeshift shelters at a camp for the displaced on the outskirts of Mogadishu on Sept. 3, 2022. (AP)

Parts of Somalia will be hit by famine between October and December as a drought worsens and global food prices surge, the United Nations said on Monday.

US national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the United States was “gravely concerned by this dire projection and the significant scale of need throughout the country and region.”

Sullivan urged for additional help for Somalia from the international community.

Ahmed Shire, information minister for the state of Glamudug, north of the capital Mogadishu, said 210 people had died from malnutrition in recent months.

“Al-Shabaab burnt five towns completely, burning even the wells to ashes,” he said. “These people were struggling with the drought that killed half of their animals. Al-Shabaab looted the remaining animals.”

Shire said roughly 1,000 families, each with at least seven children, had fled the area on foot and could not be rescued because of the threat of attacks.

Al-Shabaab, an Islamist group linked to Al-Qaeda, has been attacking military and civilian targets for more than a decade.

UNICEF said disease outbreaks were increasing among children, with around 13,000 suspected measles cases reported in recent months of which 78 percent were children under five.

Faduma Abdiqadir Warsame, who manages nine camps for displaced people on the outskirts of Mogadishu, said her team had buried 115 children and elderly people in the past three months.

“The thousands of families who remain are just skeletons. If not immediately helped they will follow suit,” she said, adding that most people were too poor to afford a proper burial.

“Children are buried like garbage in the alleys and along the walls,” she said.

Financial aid for Somalia has increased recently and the United Nations’ $1.46 billion appeal is now 67 percent funded. But aid officials warned that more was needed.

“We are going to be witnessing the death of children on an unimaginable scale if we don’t act fast,” said Audrey Crawford, Somalia’s country director at the Danish Refugee Council.