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UN Warns It Lacks Access To 500,000 Hungry Somalis

Issue 393

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News Headlines

Tensions Rising In Somaliland Ahead Of Vote

Bridge Runs Out Of Funds Before Completion

Maki Haji Banadir Praises Somaliland, Warns Against Inflation

UDUB Kicks Off Election Campaign

Buhoodle And Sool Students Ready For The Academic Year

Former Somaliland Resistance Fighter: Arm Us, To Beat Islamists

US Believes Somaliland Deviated From The Path To Democracy

Clinton Offers Assurances To Somalis

Local and Regional Affairs

US To Double Munitions To Somalia

Somali President Calls For Help To Combat Militants

Eritrea Denies Sending Weapons To Somali Militants

Al-Shabaab Attracts Fighters From The US To The Netherlands

President, Clinton In Handshake Diplomacy

Somaliland: Rayale Impeachment Gains Traction In Parliament

Former Puntland Police Commander Shoots Himself

African Police To Mentor Somalian Officers

Somali Extremists Deny Link To Alleged Terror Plot

U.S. Views Possible War On Terror Changes

Somali Students Plan For Malaysia

UN Warns It Lacks Access To 500,000 Hungry Somalis

Ottawa Presses Ethiopia Over Makhtal

The Methodical Jailings And Spurious Charges Against Journalist In Somaliland

Condolences From SIRAG For Muj. Ali Marshal

Sympathy Letter To Fallen Hero Ali Gulaid’s Family And Somalilanders At Large

Editorial

Election Should Be Held On Schedule With Or Without Voter Registration

Features & Commentary

Freelance Diplomats Lend A Hand To Would-Be States

War Is Boring: Somaliland Advocate Vies For World Focus

Egypt And Global Islam: The Battle For A Religion's Heart

Obama's Battle Against Terrorism To Go Beyond Bombs And Bullets

Eritrea Wants Peaceful Somalia, Denies Meddling

Irish Tiger Lost In Namaland

Canada: Somali-Born Travelers Pay A Price

Desperate Water Shortage In Somaliland

Secretary Clinton's Trip To Sub-Saharan Africa Coincides With Democratic Downturn

White House Aides Talk On Economy, Terrorism

Will There Be New US Actions In The Horn?

Consequences Of The Kosovo “Exception”

Hillary Clinton's Trip To Somalia Signals New U.S. Commitment

International News

 

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US 'Partner, Not Patron' Of Africa, Says Clinton

AFRICA: Press Freedom Required For Good Governance Sought By US Secretary Of State

Despite Financial Crisis: Qatar To Set To Build New City

African Journalists Reject EU-Sponsored Observatory

Clinton Urges South Africa To Take Leadership Role In Africa

Opinion

Interpeace & Somaliland’s Presidential Election

The Best Way To Hold Free And Fair Election In Somaliland Is To Employ The Obtained Result Cards

Is Somaliland Suddenly Sliding Into An Abyss?

A Small Victory For The Somali People!

New Technology Undermines Somaliland Election

Somaliland – Democracy Vs Lack of Political Maturity

Somaliland: Riyale, Interpeace And The Server

Nairobi, August 8, 2009– Lack of access has prevented the United Nations from delivering food to 500,000 of its planned 3.3 million beneficiaries in Somalia over the past month, principally in Mogadishu and the south of the battle-scarred country.

At the same time, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) will face critical shortfalls as of October and urgently requires 209,000 metric tons of food worth $208 million to cover the current aid pipeline until the end of March 2010, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported on Friday.

As of the end of July, the Somalia consolidated appeal was 52 per cent funded at $438 million. In July, WFP delivered about 33,725 metric tons of food, 83 per cent of the planned tonnage, to 2.8 million beneficiaries in south-central Somalia and Puntland and Somaliland in the north. Lack of access and minor pipeline shortfalls cut off delivery from the full target of 3.3 million, OCHA said.

Mogadishu and the south have been shattered by an upsurge of attacks from Al-Shabaab and other militant Islamic groups against the provisional Government in a country that has had no functioning central authority and has been riven by factional fighting for nearly two decades.

WFP this week completed nutrition screening of vulnerable groups in Afmadow district in the Lower Juba region in southern Somalia, identifying 4,500 people, most of them children under the age of five, pregnant and lactating women in need of supplementary feeding. The agency will distribute 190 metric tons of food to them. Further screening is ongoing in the nearby Dobley district. In August, WFP will assist some 70,000 people with supplementary feeding in Somalia.

The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), meanwhile, has completed the construction of a two-kilometer network of pipes, tanks and kiosks to provide safe drinking water for nearly 17,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) and host communities in Kaa Shiqal camp in Banadir district, near Mogadishu.

More than 10,500 people, mainly newly arrived IDPs, will benefit from 200 newly constructed latrines in IDP camps to the north and south of Mogadishu, OCHA reported.

Source: UN News Service




 


 


 






 

 


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