A young girl holding her baby brother in a displacement camp in Somalia

As hunger rates soar, new forecast warns Horn of Africa faces potential sixth failed rainy season

Sixth failed rainy season predicted for the Horn of Africa, prolonging worst drought in 40 years. Meanwhile, Action Against Hunger research indicates an increase in acute levels of malnutrition in Somalia  

MOGADISHU, SOMALIA – February 4, 2023 – Action Against Hunger is raising the alarm about rising hunger rates as a new Climate Hazards Centerforecast predicts a sixth consecutive failed rainy season in the Horn of Africa. Below-normal rains between March and May could further stress limited food and water supplies as, across the Horn of Africa, an estimated 46 million people  urgently need food assistance. 

The preliminary results of an Action Against Hunger survey compiled in January 2023 indicate a significant increase in the level of acute malnutrition in one of the regions hardest hit by the drought. The early results suggest that in Somalia’s Elbarde district, the overall rate of acute malnutrition has risen to 29.5%, up from 24% in 2021.  The research also showed that in the week prior to the survey, 29.4% of children in the district were sick with either acute respiratory infection/cough (56.8%), diarrhoea (56.8%), and malaria/fever (50.0%).
 

Ahmed Khalif, Country Director for Action Against Hunger in Somalia, said: “This is the worst drought the Horn of Africa has seen in 40 years. In Somalia alone, 8.3 million people are facing food insecurity and 1.8 million children are likely to be acutely malnourished by the spring. Many are on the brink of famine.  

“In Action Against Hunger’s 30 years in Somalia, we’ve never seen more people streaming into our hunger treatment centres. We are grateful that donors are responding, but needs are growing even faster than contributions.” 

“The climate crisis is a hunger crisis, and a sixth failed rainy season would bring devastation beyond words.  The key to preventing famine is a faster, more flexible response that directly supports non-profits on the ground in the Horn of Africa. That approach has succeeded before and it can again – if the world acts in time.”

Ahmed Khalif, Country Director for Somalia at Action Against Hunger

Already-high hunger levels are predicted to increase further as a result of the ongoing drought. In response, Action Against Hunger’s ongoing efforts in the Horn Africa include:
 

  • Access to clean water: Helping communities to better manage wells and communal water supplies and trucking in water as a short-term emergency measure that can help prevent further displacement. 
  • Sanitation and hygiene: Expanding access to safe sanitation and providing hygiene kits to promote health in areas where clean water is in short supply.  
  • Nutrition support: Improving food security through cash assistance that helps people access what little food is available locally. 
  • Mobile health services: Screening children for dangerous levels of malnutrition and providing home-based treatment or referrals to medical centres. Outreach teams have also been deployed to detect and care for children suffering from acute malnutrition and other illnesses, including cholera and measles, which are also on the rise. 
  • Advocacy: Working to mobilize funding from the global community and ensuring local groups on the front lines receive flexible funding in a timely way.
     

Millions of people are suffering from life-threatening hunger across the Horn of Africa due to the changing climate. Action Against Hunger works in Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia and South Sudan to providing lifesaving health and nutrition services as well as climate adaptation strategies. 

 

ENDS 

  • For more information or commentary please contact David or Jo [email protected] or 0208293 6130 to arrange 
  • Award-winning photographer, Peter Caton, and international charity, Action Against Hunger, present ‘Unyielding floods; Restoring Hope’, an exhibition. The arresting display of photos highlights the devastation caused by years of extreme flooding in South Sudan and how local communities are adapting in the face of the climate crisis. More information here 
  • Find out about Action Against Hunger East Africa appeal here  
  • Action Against Hunger is the world’s leading charity stopping life-threatening hunger in its tracks. By training parents and healthcare workers to spot the signs, we get life-saving care to people who need it. Action Against Hunger’s research drives forward understanding of how to predict, prevent and treat life-threatening hunger. With unbeatable knowledge and unstoppable determination, the charity supported more than 26 million people across 51 countries in 2021 

 

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