Tens of Thousands Face Death in Drought-Hit Somalia
KENYA: March 9, 2006


NAIROBI - Drought-stricken Somalia is facing a new famine on the scale of the catastrophe that killed tens of thousands of people in the early 1990s, a food security analyst told Reuters on Wednesday.

 


If the rains do not come, more than 10,000 people could die each month, said Nicholas Haan, chief technical advisor for the Food Security Analysis Unit, a project of the European Union and the US government.

"The southern part of Somalia would be at high risk of famine conditions, high risk meaning we estimate an over 50 percent probability it's going to happen," Haan said.

"If our high risk prediction is correct, it would be comparable to what we saw in '93 to '94 in Somalia."

Tens of thousands of Somalis perished in a famine that decimated the country in the early 1990s.

Since the ousting of strongman Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991 hundreds of thousands have died from famine, disease and conflict as the country plunged into anarchy.

There are at least 1.7 million Somalis affected by drought of a population of 10 million.

Haan said using the technical definition of famine as four deaths per 10,000 people per day, Somalia could see 12,000 deaths per month in those devastated areas.

"This is manifesting itself as what could be a major humanitarian catastrophe of historic nature," Haan said.

Hundreds of people and tens of thousands of livestock have died from hunger and thirst across a vast region encompassing some of Africa's poorest and most arid zones.

Experts have said recent heavy rains in central and east Africa were not the start of the rainy season and drought conditions would persist.

The United Nations estimates that at least 6.25 million people are in need of immediate food aid across east and central Africa because of drought.

Haan said that by mid-May it should be known for certain where the situation is heading, but conflict could exacerbate the problem and create famine conditions.

The Somali interim government, formed in 2004, would be hard pressed to cope with a disaster on such proportions.

 


Story by Jack Kimball

 


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE