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Horn of Africa 2011 A 21 st century Famine. Presentation to the Church Federation of Greater Indianapolis, Interchurch centre By Nigussu Legesse World Council of Churches Elgin 18 October 2011. What is a Famine ?. FAO 2008 definition
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Horn of Africa 2011A 21st century Famine Presentation to the Church Federation of Greater Indianapolis, Interchurch centre By NigussuLegesse World Council of Churches Elgin 18 October 2011
What is a Famine ? • FAO 2008 definition • 20% of the population have less than 2,100 Kcal per day • More than 30% of children are acutely malnourished • More than 2 deaths per 10,000 per day • Access to less than 4 litres of water per day
Somalia key facts • Somalis live in Somalia, Ethiopia, Djibouti, and Kenya. • The 2 most Northern states (Puntland and Somaliland) are semi-autonomous. • Population –about 10 million • 6 major clans (Darod (Puntland),Hawiye (Mogadishu), Isaaq (Somaliland), Dir-Mirifle), Rahaweyn, Minority clans • Religion : 99.8% Sunni Muslims • A common language, Somali –written in Roman script since 1972 • Size -637,657 sq.km. 2 major rivers (Juba and Shabelle). 10-13% of land available for arable farming (between the rivers). The majority of Somalis are pastoralists • Rainfall : 300-500 mm/year • Large % of the population are pastoralists • Widespread use of the addictive stimulant, q’at, especially among men • 3 years running, the world’s “most failed state”
Pastoralism as a way of life. • A lifestyle based on free-range rearing of livestock. • Suited for “marginalised” land with low rainfall. • Mobile (but not aimless wandering), particularly between Rainy Season and Dry Season pastures. • Highly dependent on pasture and water availability, and this is dependent on a complicated network of inter-clan relations. • People divided into “clans”, under the authority of “clan elders” (non-centralised authority). • Animals are “assets”; big animals (cattle and camels) seen as the “Savings Account”, and small animals (goats and sheep) seen as the “Current Account” Animals are exchanged for grain • Pastoralism is under threat from : Dry season grazing land used for investment/arable farming. • Policy direction in favour of “settlement” & “change of lifestyle”. • Increase in lethal weapons, commercialisation of rustling,escalation of conflicts over land and water..
Somalia – a quick recent history • 1892. Italy leases Southern Somalia from Zanzibar • 1960. Independence of Somalia from Britain • 1969. Muhammed Siyad Barre overthrows the civilian government • 1974. Severe hunger • 1977-78. War with Ethiopia over Ogaden (Somali area in SE Ethiopia) • 1978 -91. Inter-clan fighting • 1991. Barre overthrown. Mohamed Farah Aydid becomes President. Somaliland declares unilateral independence. • 1992. American led Operation “Restore Hope” to prevent fighting between Northern Islamists and other fighters. • 2000. Djibouti Conference. 245 member Transitional National Assembly formed • 2002. Eldoret Conference. 275 member Transitional National Government formed. • 2006. Union of Islamic Courts, led by Sheik Sharif Ahmed defeat warlords and take over most of South & Central Somalia. Ethiopian troops oust UIC.One of UIC youth wings form Al-Shabaab .Heavy fighting. • 2007. Internally displaced number one million. AMISOM start peacekeeping. • 2009. Last Ethiopian troops withdraw. Transitional National Government and UIC form a power sharing deal, with 550 member Parliament, and Sheik Sharif as President. Al-Shabaab and Hizbula Islam try to overthrow new Government. 170,000 people displaced from Mogadishu. • Jan.2010. WFP forced to withdraw from Al-Shabaab held areas. • Oct.- Dec. 2010.Driest Rainy Season on record. • July 2011. UN declares famine in 2 areas of Somalia (at present famine declared in 6 areas)
CONFLICT + DISPLACEMENT + DROUGHT +LOSS OF ASSETS + HIGH GRAIN PRICES + LOW LIVESTOCK VALUE =FAMINE
Situation as of 5th September 2011 • 4 million people in Somalia in crisis (around 40%) • 3.3 million need immediate life saving assistance • 750,000 people famine affected • 226 Internally Displaced concentrations in and around Mogadishu • 75% of people in crisis are located in South Somalia where access due to security is challenging. WFP has partial access to Central Somalia & Mogadishu. • Cases of cholera and measles are on the rise. • UNICEF/Somalia Red Crescent allowed access to all areas to assist malnourished children. • In Southern Somalia, malnutrition rates of fives and under are as high as 58% (15% is emergency,30% is famine). Number of malnourished children is 450,000, with 42% or one third of all children have severe acute malnutrition (a rise from 390,000 on 3rd August) • Death rate is as high as 15 deaths per 10,000 per day (famine is 2/day/10,000) • At least 20% of the population receive less than 2,100 calories/day. • Grain prices have increased by 100 – 250% from July 2010 to July 2011.
What needs to be done ? (Some examples –personal views) • Immediate emergency needs met, within and outside Somalia, (emergency will continue until pasture has regenerated (end of the year) • Urgent solution to restore peace to Somalia (otherwise people can not return home). A civilian government needs to be in place which embraces all clan interests. Development of a civil service. • Many livestock assets have been depleted, so even if pasture and water resources are good, people do not have enough animals to live from. People will need help with restocking. • Disarmament and rehabilitation of youths. Youth employment measures. • Investment in rapid development (health, education, livestock, etc. etc.). Mobilisation of the Somali Diaspora. • PR work among the International Community that Somalia is not a “basket case” or a “terrorist nest”. Somaliland is a positive example. • Sound Islamic teaching.