|
ISSUE 131
|
|
NAIROBI, 20 Jul 2004 (IRIN) - Deteriorating food security has resulted in
high malnutrition levels and child mortality rates in both southern and
northern Somalia, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).
Five rapid nutrition assessments carried out by various humanitarian
agencies in the southern Juba riverine zone since September 2002 had
revealed serious malnutrition, much of which manifested as oedema and high
mortality rates, FAO's Food Security Analysis Unit (FSAU) said in its
nutrition update for June and July.
It said a nutrition survey conducted in May this year among children aged
between six and 59 months in the Juba riverine livelihood area had shown
global acute malnutrition of 19.5 percent and severe acute malnutrition of
3.7 percent. About 79.8 percent of the malnourished children were members of
Bantu households, according to the survey.
Diarrhoeal diseases and malnutrion were
identified as the leading causes of death among children aged below five
years, with diarrhoea killing 30 percent of the children and malnutrition
blamed for 22 percent of the child-mortality rates in the Juba River valley.
"Vulnerability within the southern Juba riverine
livelihood group is increased by lack of livestock, subsistence farming and
a fragile social support network system with limited access to remittances,"
the FSAU report said. "This problem has been exacerbated by civil unrest in
the district," it added.
FAO said preliminary results of a nutrition survey carried out among
children aged between six and 59 months between 29 May and 8 June, 2004 in
the northeastern Sool plateau, an area comprising the regions of Sool,
Sanaag and Bari indicated a global acute malnutrition rate of 13.7 percent
compared to 12.5 percent in May 2003 and a severe acute malnutrition of 3.1
compared to 1.8 percent in 2003.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported
last month that widespread and severe food shortages had continued to affect
people in the northern pastoral and southern agricultural areas of Somalia
as a result of prolonged drought.
Many parts of the agricultural areas of southern Somalia had reported total
to near-total crop failure due to lack of adequate moisture to sustain the
crops, OCHA said in its June update on the humanitarian situation in the
country. FSAU predicted a cereal shortfall of about 70,000 mt.
According to OCHA, meagre rainfall in the northern and central regions had
led to haphazard migrations by some pastoralists, while others had either
been unable to move with their animals without becoming destitute.
It said field reports covering pastoral areas in the north continued to
indicate a deteriorating food- and livelihood-security situation,
particularly in the Hawd of Toghdeer, the Sool plateau, northern and
southern Nugal, southern Bari, Mudug and Galgadud, it added.
The drought had affected about 200,000 people in the north, of whom more
than 93,000 were in humanitarian crisis, following a total collapse of their
livelihoods. It had been hoped that the long rains this year would provide
relief to the pastoralists, who had undergone seven seasons of inadequate
rainfall, but the season ended early with poor precipitation in May and
June, OCHA said.
To respond to the crisis, aid agencies were appealing for US $119.1 million
to finance humanitarian operations in Somalia this year, saying funding
requirements had risen owing to the unforeseen drought in the north and
deteriorating food security in parts of the central regions.
The agencies had, in their Consolidated Inter-Agency Appeal earlier this
year, asked for US $110.6 million, of which donors have so far contributed
just $27,878,685 (about 24 percent of the total requirements).
|