
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation, FAO, says help is needed now. Aid organizations and the United Nations are calling for urgent famine relief in East Africa as the people of Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia confront their worst drought in 40 years.
Report
reveal that Oxfam says food shortages are likely to cause one death every 36
seconds until the end of the year.
“We should
not wait for a famine declaration to act, because then it will be too
late," says Etienne Peterschmitt, Representative in Somalia for the FAO.
"We
know from 2011, when we faced a famine situation and a famine declaration, that
by the time the famine was declared half of the 260,000 people who died had
actually already died.”
Four
successive seasons of poor rainfall have caused livestock to die and crops to
fail, with rural populations in hard-to-reach areas of Somalia the hardest hit.
“The
current drought is the worst that we have seen in the last four decades,"
says Peterschmitt.
"It
has affected about 7.8 million people. So just to put things in perspective,
this is about half of Somalia's population. 90% of the country is facing
extreme drought."
High food
prices caused by the war in Ukraine have exacerbated the situation, and the FAO
also warns food instability is often linked to an increase in gender-based
violence. The alert coincides with the UN's World Food Day.
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