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WAR IDAD, SOMALIA - JUNE 19: Somali families displaced by severe drought create a makeshift camp as the Horn of Africa faces severe drought on the outskirts of the village of War Idad, 150 miles east of the capital Hargeisa, Somalia, on June 19, 2017. The UN and aid agencies have sought to raise resilience in pastoralist communities that have seen their lifeblood herds of camels, goats and sheep decimated by up to 80 percent, leaving 6.7 million people in need of assistance to avoid famine in Somalia and Somaliland. (Photo by Scott Peterson/Getty Images)

Somalia seeks global help against deadly drought

MOGADISHU —  The Somali government Wednesday made an urgent humanitarian appeal to the international community, seeking help to battle a severe drought in most parts of the Horn of Africa country.

The call came after the government held a humanitarian conference in the capital Mogadishu on Wednesday that was opened by Prime Minister Mohamed Hussein Roble and attended by international partners representatives.

The humanitarian forum urged the UN agencies, international and local non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to respond urgently to the humanitarian crisis and food insecurity in various parts of the country, government spokesman Mohamed Ibrahim Moalimuu said on Twitter.

In a statement issued by the office of the prime minister, the premier called on the Somali people, the international community, and aid agencies to provide immediate assistance to those affected by the drought, in order to prevent a similar famine that hit the country in 2011.

Somalia suffered a deadly famine in 2011 that killed nearly 260,000 people, half of them children, and displaced millions of families.

On Tuesday, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Somalia said that widespread drought has devastated communities in the southern state of Jubaland, especially in Kismayo and Afmadow.

Communities in the area lost 80% of livestock due to widespread drought and extreme weather conditions.

According to the UN, 7.7 million Somalians require humanitarian assistance in 2022.

Source: Anadolu Agency      Origin: View original

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