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Starvation looms for 6 mln children in Horn of Africa, charity says

by Katy Migiro | @katymigiro | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 27 January 2017 11:33 GMT

Kadija Mohamed cooks food for her children in a camp set up for internally displaced people in Dinsoor in this archive picture from 2012. REUTERS/Feisal Omar

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500,000 children already have severe acute malnutrition and risk dying without emergency intervention

By Katy Migiro

NAIROBI, Jan 27 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Hunger, malnutrition and death threaten 6.5 million children in the impoverished drylands of Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya due to back-to-back droughts, a charity said on Friday, with spring rains also predicted to be poor.

Repeated rain failures have pushed 15 million people across the three countries into crisis, and in need of aid, as their animals are dying and water is in short supply, Save the Children said in a statement.

"The situation for already desperate children and families in Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya will only get worse - leaving millions at risk of hunger, and even death," the charity's Ethiopia country director, John Graham, said.

The next rainy season is likely to bring more below-average rainfall across the region, experts predict.

Almost 500,000 children already have severe acute malnutrition, Save the Children said, which means they risk dying without emergency intervention.

Donors, political leaders and the new United Nations Secretary António Guterres are meeting at the African Union (AU) summit which opens on Monday in Ethiopia.

Guterres was the U.N.'s refugee chief during Somalia's 2011 famine, in which 260,000 died due to drought, conflict and a ban on food aid in territory held by the Islamist militant group, al Shabaab.

The U.N. warned this month that Somalia, crippled by decades of war, risks slipping back into famine as five million people, or more than four out of 10 residents, do not have enough food.

Fighting between al Shabaab and Somalia's AU-backed government continues, with 28 killed on Wednesday in an attack in the capital, Mogadishu.

AU and Somali troops have driven al Shabaab from major urban strongholds and ports, but they have often struggled to defend smaller, more remote areas from attacks.

Thousands of Somalis are on the move in search of food and water, many crossing into Ethiopia for assistance, charities say.

Save the Children said there are high rates of malnutrition among children on arrival in Ethiopia's vast Dollo Ado camp.

Many Somalis have been living in exile for three decades, with almost one million in refugee camps in nearby Ethiopia, Kenya, Djibouti and Uganda, where food is also in short supply due to lack of funding.

In Ethiopia, hard hit by drought in 2016, almost six million people need aid. The Kenya Red Cross Society launched an appeal to the public on Friday for 1 billion Kenyan shillings ($9.6 million) to provide food vouchers and cash to thousands of hungry families in the north and along the coast.

As livestock deaths are increasing, weak animals will also be slaughtered and the meat donated to schools, orphans, the elderly and sick, it said.

It predicted the number of Kenyans without enough to eat would almost double by April to 2.4 million from 1.3 million.

"The effects of the drought are escalating," said Abbas Gullet, Kenya Red Cross Society's secretary general. "This should worry us all." ($1 = 103.9000 Kenyan shillings)

(Reporting by Katy Migiro @katymigiro; Editing by Ros Russell; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org to see more stories.)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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