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Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia facing devastating drought conditions: UN

The UN World Food Programme said on Tuesday that 13 million people across the Horn of Africa face severe hunger and called for immediate assistance to avoid a repeat of a famine a decade ago that killed hundreds of thousands of people.

World Food Programme says financial assistance needed to avoid deadly famine

People receive bags of relief grains at a camp for displaced persons in the Adadle district of the Somali region, Ethiopia, on Jan. 22. (Claire Nevill/World Food Programme/Reuters)

The UN World Food Programme said on Tuesday that 13 million people across the Horn of Africa face severe hunger and called for immediate assistance to avoid a repeat of a famine a decade ago that killed hundreds of thousands of people.

Three sub-par rainy seasons have created the driest conditions since the 1980s, with forecasts of below-average rainfall set to increase suffering in the coming months.

Drought conditions are affecting pastoral and farming communities across southern and southeastern Ethiopia, southeastern and northern Kenya and south-central Somalia. 

"Harvests are ruined, livestock are dying and hunger is growing as recurrent droughts affect the Horn of Africa," said Michael Dunford, regional director in the WFP Regional Bureau for Eastern Africa.

The conditions have decimated livestock, forcing thousands in a region where many are farmers into displacement camps.

"We never experienced this before, we only see dust storms now. We are afraid that they will cover us all and become our graveyard," said Mohamed Adem from the Somali region of Ethiopia in a WFP video.

'We need to act now'

Aerial footage taken nearby showed vast, dusty scrubland strewn with cattle carcasses. In Kebele village, people tied ropes beneath the torso of a thin cow to raise it to its feet.

"Though it is not out of control, there is a severe drought in areas in Somali and some parts of Oromia and southern regional states," Ethiopian government spokesperson Legesse Tulu told Reuters. "So the WFP warning is quite right."

Mohamed Fall with UNICEF warned at the same briefing that many children will die or suffer from lifelong cognitive or physical damage without quick action to avoid famine.

"We need to act now to prevent catastrophe," he said by phone from Nairobi, adding that 5.5 million children in the four countries are currently threatened with acute malnutrition.

WFP, which won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2020, is launching its regional response plan for the Horn of Africa this week and calling for $327 million US. UNICEF is seeking $123 million.

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