Food shortages and funding gap push extra 700,000 people to verge of starvation in Ethiopia

August 9, 2017

In response to the newly released Humanitarian Response Document by the Government of Ethiopia, Victoria Hopkins, Humanitarian Manager at Oxfam Canada said:

“The third poor rainy season in a row has plunged 700,000 more people into crippling hunger and on the verge of starvation in the Somali region of southern Ethiopia. Now in the midst of the lean season, people are fast running out of food as some areas have not had any food distributions since May. We need to act now to prevent this crisis from turning into a catastrophe.”

Oxfam’s Humanitarian Program Manager in Ethiopia, Manish Kumar added:

“A deadly mix of severe acute malnutrition coupled with acute watery diarrhea could put thousands of lives at risk, particularly the elderly and children. Families have been separated as men and boys travel for longer to look for water and pasture, leaving women and children often vulnerable and at risk of violence. Barely getting by now, people will have to wait until the next rains in October for any reprieve. Lives are literally on the line.

“The government made the final pay out of its social protection scheme in July, and in August emergency food aid could run dry. While the government has put in its own resources into the response, the scale of need is overwhelming and rising. Of the $1.25 billion U.S. needed to provide food, water and other life-saving assistance, 39% of the new response plan has yet to be funded. The international community needs to step up their efforts and fully fund the humanitarian appeal so that people can get the help they need. They must also support recovery and development programs that help communities to rebuild their livelihoods and resilience to future droughts.’’

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