Famine Ravages Somalia in a World
Less Likely to Intervene
A feeding center in Dollow, near the Ethiopian border in southern central Somalia. |
By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
Published: September 15, 2011
DOLO, Somalia — Is the world about to watch 750,000 Somalis starve to death? The United Nations’ warnings could not be clearer. A drought-induced famine is steadily creeping across Somalia and tens of thousands of people have already died. The Islamist militant group the Shabab is blocking most aid agencies from accessing the areas it controls, and in the next few months three-quarters of a million people could run out of food, United Nations officials say.
Soon, the rains will start pounding down, but before any crops will grow, disease will bloom. Malaria, cholera, typhoid and measles will sweep through immune-suppressed populations, aid agencies say, killing countless malnourished people.
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Somalis flee famine along ‘roads of death’
Here is a video clip from a PBS NewsHour report about the crisis:
AUGUST 24 UPDATE: Ray Suarez of the PBS NewsHour has a thoughtful piece on the growing crisis in Somalia. Read his August 24th column here.
For more of the the PBS NewsHour report click here.
East Africa Famine: How to Help from the PBS NewsHour By: Talea Miller
For information on how to help click here.
AUGUST 24 UPDATE: Ray Suarez of the PBS NewsHour has a thoughtful piece on the growing crisis in Somalia. Read his August 24th column here.
East Africa Famine: How to Help from the PBS NewsHour
U.N. agencies are calling for $1.6 billion from donor countries to help speed food aid to malnourished and starving refugees in East Africa.
More than 11 million people are in need of aid in the region beset by the worst drought in 60 years, and 800,000 children could die from starvation, the U.N. says.
Somalis are particularly vulnerable because the country is without a functioning government and al-Qaida linked groups have denied access to aid agencies.
"They have lost their crops. They have lost their livestock. They have lost any other means of income," Jeremy Konyndyk, policy director for Mercy Corps told the NewsHour. "In the case of people in southern Somalia, [they have] no choice but to either find aid, which is scant in that part of the world, or to flee."
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Kathleen Ramseyer of English 1C wanted to pass along an article on NPR about the Somalia Crisis that she wanted to share.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.npr.org/2011/07/22/138598385/somali-refugees-stream-into-kenya-to-escape-famine
Thanks, Kathleen!
--Christopher McCabe
This unbelievable, but true, story just in from Laura Noonan of English 1C:
ReplyDeleteA New Yorker with a prestigious double life is Mohamed Mohamed, a state transportation bureaucrat, who recently returned to his cubicle in Buffalo, N.Y., after nine months as prime minister of Somalia. The Buffalo News reported that the Somali native, though shocked by the level of the country's dysfunction, at least got to stand up to "terrorists, pirates and warlords" and "address dignitaries from the United Nations." [Buffalo News, 8-6-2011]
Thanks, Laura!
--Christopher McCabe
Here's a link to the story that Laura mentioned:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.buffalonews.com/city/article514533.ece
--Christopher McCabe