Somalia famine killed close to 260,000 people, report says

May 2, 2013AFRICA Between 2010 and 2012, more than a quarter of a million people died in the famine in Somalia — in part because the world was too slow to react, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Somalia said Thursday. Half of the 258,000 Somalis who died in the famine were children younger than 5, Philippe Lazzarini said in a statement. The report, jointly commissioned by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and the USAID-funded Famine Early Warning Systems Network, is the first scientific study on deaths in the crisis. It “confirms that we should have done more before famine was declared on 20 July 2011,” Lazzarini said. The world did not do enough after warnings in 2010 that starvation loomed following severe drought. And the people who needed help the most were extremely inaccessible, he said. “The suffering played out like a drama without witnesses.” A massive mobilization of the humanitarian community followed the official U.N. declaration of famine, said Lazzarini, which “helped mitigate the worst effects of the crisis.” The study, which covered the period from October 2010 to April 2012, suggests that an estimated 4.6% of the total population and 10% of children younger than 5 died in southern and central Somalia. In the worst-affected area, Lower Shabelle, close to one in five children younger than 5 died. At the peak of the crisis, between May and August 2011, famine and severe food insecurity claimed some 30,000 lives a month, the report said. The United Nations has been working with its humanitarian partners to change the way they operate, Lazzarini said. Some 2.7 million people in Somalia are still in need of life-saving assistance. “Our aim is to ensure that Somalia never goes through another famine again,” he said. “The world was too slow to respond to stark warnings of drought, exacerbated by conflict in Somalia, and people paid with their lives. These deaths could and should have been prevented, and such a shocking death toll must never be allowed to happen again.” World leaders meeting in London next week to discuss the situation in Somalia “must take steps to ensure that this was Somalia’s last famine,” Oxfam said. This means investing in long-term development, creating jobs, supporting farmers and pastoralists, and ensuring properly trained security forces to help achieve the “just and sustainable peace” the country so badly needs, it said. –CNN
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6 Responses to Somalia famine killed close to 260,000 people, report says

  1. Brandon says:

    I’d encourage everyone to think real hard about this article before scrapping your plate off in the trash can after your meal… That little bit left over someone else would love to have. Count your blessings.

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  2. Janice says:

    If memory serves me, the Somalians have been starving since the 1980s.  
    Is this news anymore & does anyone truly care? What is the total estimate on decades & decdes of death & displacement?

    I may be wrong but, taking a cold approach…sounds like a systemic, ongoing depopulation plan.  Don’t know the politics of the conflicts but usually there are valuable natural resources at stake  in much of Africa’s ancestral homelands.  Once  sufficient numbers of indigenous Somalians are eliminated, ancestral land  rights aren’t an issue & the resources can be divvied up/ exploited.     Who stands to benefit?  Follow the big money financing  each side of the conflicts, corrupt African leaders & misguided religious zealots. The world watches as the plagues of war, starvation, displacement & death rages on in this modern day neocolonial conquest.  Just a bunch of Africans squabbling.  Yeah right. 

    Remember the Jan Ja Weed, Rwanda refugees and Chad (can you say oil, World Bank/IMF contracts?)  Religious conflicts…yeah right.  Follow the money.  Remember the British investor group funding a plane load of 99 Africans & missiles “to guard a diamond/gold mine”.  What ever happen to the distant royal relative captured along with those ” guards”?  Yeah right.  So London’s taking the lead on this?   More like the fox guarding the chicken coop. So sad…and we see it repeated throughout the continent.  
    In another part of the world, Chavez rescued Venezuela & many Latin American countries from the WB/IMF clutches.  Haiti was not so lucky. Dare we follow the money trail in any of these “global ” conflicts?

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  3. Rose says:

    With few resources to extract, Somalia gets to suffer, it’s the way of UN. With 21st century technology, there is no other excuse for allowing these peoples to starve.

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  4. john C says:

    The story began long ago. From infoplease.com: Drought, Civil War and Anarchy
    Africa’s worst drought of the century occurred in 1992, and, coupled with the devastation of civil war, Somalia was plunged into a severe famine that killed 300,000. U.S. troops were sent in to protect the delivery of food in Dec. 1992, and in May 1993 the UN took control of the relief efforts from the U.S. The warlord Mohamed Farah Aidid ambushed UN troops and dragged American bodies through the streets, causing an about-face in U.S. willingness to involve itself in the fate of this lawless country. The last of the U.S. troops departed in late March, leaving 19,000 UN troops behind.

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  5. christine says:

    What is wrong with this world ? So much excess and wealth all around us and this absolutely unnecessary tragedy happened. Sin, greed and corruption distorts our hearts and minds. Lord, please have mercy on us all. Please pray the Rosary for peace in the world and Divine Mercy Chaplet for love throughout the world. Love and prayers to all ❤ ❤ ❤

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  6. bob biehl! says:

    The food was there and many people from different lands helped to get it there but the corruption of the UN and the THUGS in control in Somalia let people starve to death while they made a profit on that relief food or fed it to their personal marauding gangs. Let’s be honest folks ………Most informed people know this ! Why don’t you?

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