Three-quarters of a million people are facing death by starvation in Somalia, the UN said Monday as it reported that famine had spread to a sixth southern region of the beleaguered Horn of Africa state.
"Tens of thousands of people have already died, over half of whom are children," according to a statement from the United Nation's food security analysis team for Somalia, which said the Bay region was now declared a famine zone.
"In total, four million people are in crisis in Somalia, with 750,000 people at risk of death in the coming four months in the absence of adequate response."
The Bay area, which includes the major town of Baidoa, is a stronghold of hardline Islamist Shebab insurgents who have imposed severe restrictions on aid into the areas they control.
Malnutrition rates in Bay area are 58 percent, nearly four times the World Health Organization's emergency threshold.
"Assuming current levels of response continue, famine is expected to spread further over the coming four months," the statement from UN Somalia Food Security Nutrition Analysis Unit (FSNAU) said.
The 750,000 people in famine-affected areas at risk of death is a 66 percent increase from when famine was first declared in July in the southern Bakool and Lower Shabelle regions of southern Somalia, when 450,000 were at risk.
Famine later spread to three further areas, including into the Somali capital Mogadishu and the Afgoye corridor, the world's largest camp for displaced people.
Al-Qaeda affiliated Shebab fighters pulled out of positions in Mogadishu last month, but still control much of southern Somalia, the worst-hit region by famine and the extreme drought.
Famine implies that at least 20 percent of households face extreme food shortages, acute malnutrition in over 30 percent of people, and two deaths per 10,000 people every day, according to UN definition.
Several areas are at severe risk of tipping over into famine conditions, the UN said.
"An additional 50,000 people in cropping areas of Gedo and Juba and pastoral areas of Bakool face famine-level food deficits," the statement read.
"Emergency conditions will persist well into the first quarter of 2012," it added, warning of potential cholera, malaria and measles outbreaks "leading to more deaths in the coming rainy season" due to start next month.
Some 12.4 million people in the Horn of Africa, including parts of Ethiopia, Djibouti, Kenya and Uganda, are affected by the worst drought in decades in the region and are in need of humanitarian assistance, according to the UN.
But war-torn Somalia is the hardest hit, with severely limited access especially in Shebab-controlled areas.
"The reality of providing aid in Somalia today is about as grim as it gets," Unni Karunakara, international president of the medical aid agency Doctors Without Borders (MSF), said in a statement.
"Our staff run a constant risk of being shot or abducted while they provide lifesaving medical assistance."
The UN said some 1.2 million people across Somalia received emergency food aid in August, and hope to boost delivery to reach 4 million people by the end of September.
International funding appeals have raised 59 percent of the more than $1billion the UN says is needed to support those affected in Somalia.
But MSF warns that the crisis requires more than raising cash alone, noting that drought is exacerbated by Somalia's "failed political landscape" where warring forces block aid to weaken opponents.
"It is amid this hostile climate that slogans like the 'Famine in the Horn of Africa' are being used to raise impressive amounts of money for food and other supplies being sent to the region," Karunakara said.
"But I am concerned with the last mile: getting assistance and supplies from the ports of Mogadishu to the people who need it urgently."
Meanwhile in Mogadishu, Somali leaders are holding a rare three-day conference that began Sunday in an effort to set up plans for a new government.
The current government is one of the more than a dozen attempts to form a central authority in Somalia since it plunged into war with the 1991 ouster of president Mohamed Siad Barre.
The Somali government was formed in neighbouring Kenya in 2004 with a five-year mandate to reconcile the conflict-shattered country, write a new constitution and hold elections.
But constant political bickering and a near-endless civil war have thwarted progress and the government's mandate has been renewed twice since. It has also seen two presidents and five prime ministers.
Source: AFP
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