UN: Somalia Is 'Worst Humanitarian Disaster'

  •  doha, qatar
  • Inter Press Service

The camp, located in the northeast and the largest in the world, is overflowing with tens of thousands of refugees from Somalia, Ethiopia and within Kenya.

Antonio Guterres, the head of the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), visited the camp on Sunday, appealing for 'massive support' from the international community for the more than 380,000 people estimated to be living in Dadaab.

'I have no doubt that in today's world, Somalia corresponds to the worst humanitarian disaster. I have never seen in a refugee camp people coming in such desperate conditions,' he told Al Jazeera. 'I saw a mother that had lost three of her children on the way here.'

Guterres said that those at the camp were 'the poorest of the poor and the most vulnerable of the vulnerable'. The UNHCR chief is on a tour of the region in order to highlight the plight of those affected by the drought.

The World Food Programme estimates that more than 10 million people are already in need of humanitarian aid, with the U.N. Children's Fund estimating at least two million children are suffering from malnourishment.

Those children are in need of lifesaving action, the U.N. says. On Thursday, Guterres visited the Ethiopian camp of Dollo Ado. 'The mortality rates we are witnessing are three times the level of emergency ceilings,' he said. 'The level of malnutrition of the children coming in is 50 percent. That is enough to explain why a very high level of mortality is inevitable.'

Hundreds of thousands of people continue to flee the drought, walking for days in search of food and water. According to doctors in Dadaab, most of the children have severe cases of acute malnutrition and related complications such as anaemia.

'The children are presenting with skin complications where their skin is peeling off mainly due to deficiency in micro- nutrients,' Dr Milhia Abdul Kader said. 'They are coming in a very bad shape.'

Most of the arrivals to the camps are women and very young children, many of whom are in very bad physical condition, Al Jazeera's Azad Essa, reporting from Dadaab, said.

'Every morning hundreds turn up at the registration sites, where they hope to get documented and receive some basic essentials,' he said. 'But the process is long and people are waiting for days to complete registration and access food, having already walked for days to get here.'

The epicentre of the drought lies on the three-way border shared by Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia, a nomadic region where families depend heavily on livestock. Uganda and Djibouti have also been hit by the crisis.

© Inter Press Service (2011) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service

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