Child Malnutrition Surges in Somalia |
The projected
number of children expected to suffer has skyrocketed, doubling since
January of this year. The country's combination of drought, dislocation,
and disease is proving fatal for children.
The UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF) announced in a statement on Tuesday that the number of
children projected to suffer from acute malnutrition in Somalia during
2017 increased by 50 percent since initial estimates at the beginning of
this year.
Of the 1.4 million
children now at risk, about 275,000 could face a life-threatening severe
acute form of malnutrition. These children are nine times more likely
to die of cholera, measles or diarrhea.
"The combination is deadly for children," Marixie Mercado, a UNICEF spokeswoman, said at a news conference.
According to
UNICEF, the agency has 837 nutritional centers in the east African
country where it provides aid to severely malnourished children.
"Together with our
partners, we have already treated over 56,000 severely malnourished
children this year," the UNICEF representative for Somalia Steven
Lauwerier said, an increase of 88 percent in comparison to 2016.
In acknowledgement
of the sharply increasing numbers, Lauwerier added, "We must do much
more and be faster in order to save lives."
UNICEF currently
has no figure for the total number of Somali children who have perished
from hunger and disease. However, during Somalia's famine in 2011, about
130,000 young children died.
Fleeing individuals
Since November
2016, around 615,000 Somali individuals, mostly women and children, have
been forced to flee their homes due to a severe drought. Many face
sexual assault and robbery while in flight, and some children are
recruited as child soldiers to flight for the terror group al-Shabab.
Additionally,
UNICEF reported that more than 40,000 children have been forced to
abandon their schooling to search for food and water in order to
survive.
For individuals who
end up in relief camps, the danger is far from over as the overcrowded
camps have experienced a rise in malaria and cholera outbreaks.
Rain brings both relief and danger
Gradual relief
could come from Somalia's rainy season, the "Gu," which typically begins
in April. However, the rains could also endanger displaced individuals
living in temporary structures.
Somalia has been
battling a two-year long drought, putting some six million individuals
in need of assistance, or nearly half the country's population of around
11 million. Government aid is limited due to al-Shabab's de facto
control of many of the country's rural areas.
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