Tuesday, July 26, 2011


UN set to airlift food to African famine zone
WFP to deliver aid to areas in Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya where more than 12 million people are at risk of starvation.
Last Modified: 26 Jul 2011 10:55
The UN has received $1bn since November but needs a billion more to stave off widespread starvation [Reuters]

The UN World Food Programme is set to start airlifting food to the drought-stricken Horn of Africa where more than 12 million people are at risk of starvation.
Airlifts will begin on Tuesday to the Somali capital of Mogadishu, Dolo in Ethiopia and Wajir in Kenya, Josette Sheeran, the WFP chief, said.
He described the drought's effect on children as "the worst I have ever seen".
An emergency meeting of UN aid agencies and charities was held in Rome on Monday, where the decision to airlift food had been made.
At the meeting, Jacques Diouf, head of the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), urged world leaders to act fast.
"The catastrophic situation demands massive and urgent international aid," he said.
UN officials say the drought has killed tens of thousands of people over the past few months, and has forced desperate survivors to walk for weeks in search of food and water.
It has caused havoc in war-torn Somalia and parts of Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan and Uganda.
The UN has received $1bn since launching an appeal for the region in November 2010, but needs a billion more by the end of the year to stave off widespread starvation.
Al Jazeera's Alan Fisher, reporting from Rome, said: "The UN wants firm commitments from anyone who is saying, 'yes we will pledge money'."
Despite recent EU fund pledges, aid agencies say more money needs to be raised quickly. Donor countries are set to meet in Nairobi later this week to discuss the matter.
The situation in southern Somalia has deteriorated so badly that the UN has declared it a famine zone.
'A road of death'
The International Red Cross has delivered 400 tonnes of food to drought affected areas of southern Somalia, controlled by al-Shabab fighters. But the WFP says it is still being blocked from areas controlled by the opposition group.
Many famine victims have been forced to travel between Somalia and Kenya to seek food and shelter - walking along a road that Bruno Le Maire, the French food minister, has described as "a road of hope, but also a road of death".
Sheeran, who witnessed the devestation first-hand, said: "What we saw is children who are arriving so weak that many of them are in stage four malnutrition and have little chance - less than 40 per cent chance - of making it.
"We also heard from women who had to leave babies along the road and make the horrifying choice of saving the stronger for the weaker or those who had children die in their arms."
Speaking to the Reuters news agency, Iradho Bara Ali, an internally displaced Somali resident who received aid on Sunday, said: "Today we are happy because we have received the food from the aid organisations. We hope to get more from other organisations, we are happy that the aid organisations came here to help."
Touring the region, Kristalina Georgieva, the EU humanitarian aid chief, told the Associated Press news agency that it was time the international community realised the scale of the disaster and what must be done to avoid it happening again in the future.
"What we are facing is a world where disasters are more frequent and more intense and with climate change and population growth it's going to be even more painful in the future," she said.
Relief-effort hurdles
Bringing relief to southern Somalia has proven challenging: al-Shabab, which controls large swathes of land in the region, has banned many aid organisations.
The group denies a famine is taking place and said the UN's famine declaration is politically motivated.
Threats from al-Shabab mean only a handful of agencies will be able to respond to the hunger crisis in the area under its control. According to AP, 14 WFP employees have been killed in Somalia since 2008.
Nevertheless, Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, has called on donor countries to come up with $1.6bn in aid for the two regions of southern Somalia designated by the UN as famine zones.
For its part, the World Bank pledged on Monday more than $500m for the region, with the bulk of the money going towards long-term projects to aid farmers.
However, $12m will be immediately released for relief projects for those worst hit by the drought.
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english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2011/07/201172674541266309.html

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