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Nearly 860,000 people remain acutely food insecure in Somalia with 51,000 children facing increased risk of death

Nearly 860,000 people remain acutely food insecure in Somalia with 51,000 children facing increased risk of death

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  • Summary
  • Situation
  • Acute Malnutrition
  • Areas of Concern
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    Summary
    Successive seasons of near to above average rainfall in most parts of Somalia, low food prices and continued humanitarian response have brought down the number of people requiring urgent, lifesaving humanitarian assistance from its peak of four million during the 2011 famine. However, the latest assessment findings indicate that the number of people requiring humanitarian assistance has shown no further improvement since August 2013, exacerbated by a below average harvest, conflict, floods, and a tropical cyclone. Acute malnutrition persists, with tens of thousands of children facing increased risk of death, especially in the country’s south.
    Situation

    An estimated 857,000 people will be in Crisis and Emergency (IPC Phases 3 and 4) requiring urgent humanitarian assistance between now and June according to a joint assessment by the Food Security and Nutrition Analysis Unit for Somalia (FSNAU), a project managed by UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET), a project funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and other partners. The recent figures represent an 18 percent decline since January 2013, but this is a mere 1.5 percent decline since August 2013. The positive impact of increased livestock prices, increasing livestock herd sizes, improved milk availability, low prices of both local and imported staple food commodities, higher purchasing power from labor income and livestock sales as well as sustained humanitarian interventions over the last six months was undermined by a Deyr 2013 cereal harvest in January/February estimated to be 20 percent below the long-term and five-year averages.

    The food security condition of over two million additional people remains fragile and is classified as Stressed (IPC Phase 2). This group of households may struggle to meet their own minimal food requirements through mid-2014, and they remain highly vulnerable to shocks that could push them back to food security crisis.

    Acute Malnutrition

    Levels of acute malnutrition remain Critical (Global Acute Malnutrition rates exceeding 15 percent) among rural populations in many parts of South-Central Somalia and among Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). Nutrition survey results indicate that an estimated 203,000 children under the age of 5 are acutely malnourished. This figure includes 51,000 children that are severely malnourished and consequently face a higher risk of death. A majority of the malnourished children are found among non-IDP populations of the South. Assessment results indicate that morbidity, poor child feeding and care practices are among the main casual factors of malnutrition in Somalia.

    The current number of acutely malnourished children is only slightly down (by 1.5 percent) from the 206,000 malnourished children under the age of five estimated for August 2013.  However, the number of children under the age of five that are severely malnourished has increased from 45,000 in August 2013 to 51,000 in January 2014 (an increase of 13 percent).

    Lifesaving humanitarian assistance and livelihood support remain vitally important between now and June 2014 to help food insecure populations meet their immediate food needs.  Additional interventions will be required to protect livelihoods and build the resilience of communities against future shocks.

    Areas of Concern

    Internally displaced persons (IDPs) continue to constitute a majority (74 percent) of the 857,000 people in Crisis and Emergency (IPC Phases 3 and 4). The challenge faced by IDPs includes reliance on marginal and often unreliable livelihood strategies and poor living and sanitary conditions. Populations experiencing acute food security crisis (IPC Phases 3 and 4) are also found in large numbers in rural and urban areas in Sanaag, Sool, Bari, Nugaal, North and South Mudug, Galgaduud, Hiran, and Middle Shabelle as well as Middle and Lower Juba regions. In South-Central Somalia primarily, other areas that have had repeated food security crises in recent year and that have persistently high levels of acute malnutrition remain of concern.

    For more information, please contact:

    Frank Nyakairu, Communications Officer, FSNAU/FAO/Somalia, Tel:+254 - 786 399311, Email: frank.nyakairu@fao.org

    Erin Martin, Strategic Communications Advisor,Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET), Tel: +1 646 552 9566, Emartin@fews.net

    Figures Somalia acute food insecurity situation overview rural and urban and IDP populations: February to June 2014 most likely scenario Somalia acute food insecurity situation overview rural and urban and IDP populations: February to June 2014 most likely scena

    Source : FSNAU

    FEWS NET will publish an Alert to highlight a current or anticipated shock expected to drive a sharp deterioration in food security, such that a humanitarian food assistance response is imminently needed.

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