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Al-Shabab prevents food aid from reaching 2.2 million Somalis, famine zone soon

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http://ca.news.yahoo.com/wfp-chief-says-famine-somalia-soon-expand-more-15382636\

9.html

Al-Shabab prevents food aid from reaching 2.2 million Somalis, famine zone soon

to expand

By Straziuso, The Associated Press | The Canadian Press – 1 hour 27

minutes ago

DADAAB, Kenya - The World Food Program can't reach 2.2 million Somalis in

desperate need of aid in militant-controlled areas of Somalia, WFP's director

said Saturday, meaning refugee camps in nearby Kenya and Ethiopia are likely to

continue seeing thousands of new refugees each week.

The needs of those in Somalia's expanding famine zone are extraordinary,

prompting parents to sweep up their small children and start a dangerous walk

that can last days or weeks — one that many die on. Livestock have perished, and

crops no longer grow after consecutive rains failed to fall in south-central

Somalia.

The journey is so long and so perilous that few Somalis are eager to return to

their war-torn homeland, a facet of the dual crisis of the Somalia conflict and

Horn of Africa famine that has Kenyan officials — who are only reluctantly

accepting more refugees — in a bind.

tte Sheeran, the executive director of WFP, travelled to eastern Kenya on

Saturday to visit the drought-stricken town of Garissa and the world's largest

refugee camp, Dadaab. Sheeran talked with refugees who just completed the

perilous trek from Somalia, and asked if they would consider returning if

conditions improve.

" I walked 25 days to get here. I have no money, " a translator quoted a refugee

as telling Sheeran. He said he had passed many others on the sandy route to

Dadaab who dropped off the pace and never made it here. " He said he can't go

back anytime soon. "

So many people are in need in Somalia because the militant group al-Shabab won't

let aid in. The group, in fact, denies a famine is taking place, disputing the

U.N.'s view that tens of thousands of people have already died.

WFP can't operate without the militant's permission; 14 WFP employees have been

killed there since 2008. Sheeran called Somalia " the riskiest environment we

operate in the world today. "

Al-Shabab signalled in early July that it would accept aid groups it had

previously banned, but changed course on Thursday, saying groups like WFP are

not welcome. The group's refusal to accept aid from Western and " Christian " aid

groups means millions could starve — or be forced to begin the hike to help to

Kenya, Ethiopia or Mogadishu, the Somali capital, which is also being

overwhelmed with refugees.

" We know that the epicenter of this famine and drought are in Somalia. We are

able to reach about 1.5 million people in Somalia. But there's about 2.2 million

people that are not able to be reached, " Sheeran told The Associated Press. " We

welcome the opening to look to ways to reach people. We'll talk with local

authorities and we'll act where we can go. "

Steering clear of the sensitive politics, Sheeran did not use the word

al-Shabab. But it was clear that's what " local authorities " meant.

She said that famine will likely expand to more areas as insecurity persists and

aid is prevented. The U.N. fears tens of thousands of people already have died

in the famine. WFP estimates more than 11.3 million people need aid across

drought-hit regions in East Africa.

" For the World Food Program, we've been involved in every situation of refugees

and difficulty over the past 30 to 40 years, and we do what we have to do even

in conflict zones to try to find a way to reach those hungry women and

children, " she said.

It is people like Roni Mohamed who need help. She was breast-feeding her

7-month-old inside a hospital wing for malnourished children on Saturday. Her

child, despite its age, weighs just 9.7 pounds (4.4 kilograms).

And Roni's child was relatively healthy, at least in this hospital wing of

skinny arms and exposed ribs. Other infants are being force fed by a tube

inserted through the nose that snakes down into the stomach.

" We fled the drought and were chased away by al-Shabab. We have nothing to go

back to. Everything is lost, " said Mohammed, who travelled by foot and car

during a 10-day journey to reach Dadaab.

The drought has created a triangle of hunger where the borders of Ethiopia,

Kenya and Somalia meet.

The majority of those affected live in pastoral communities whose herds have

been wiped out because of a lack of water.

Abdi Kadir Mohammed, 33, a teacher in the town of Garissa, where WFP has set up

a food distribution site, said that most of the nomadic community there had lost

many animals which are their source of livelihood.

" The people around here depend on the animals. They don't have a bank account.

They don't even know what one is, " he said.

Meanwhile, local officials told Sheeran to do her best to prevent more Somali

refugees from flowing into Kenya. The region's representative to parliament told

her his region will be " swamped " by refugees if they keep coming, taking

Kenyans' food and land. He wants camps to be opened on the Somalia side of the

border.

Kenya's minister for special projects, Esther Mirugi, had a similar message.

" They will bring insecurities and they will bring conflicts, " she told Sheeran.

" Let us feed them inside their boundaries. "

The U.N. refugee agency said in a report Saturday that some 13,000 tents need to

be shipped to the Ethiopian refugee camp of Dollo Ado to provide emergency

shelter for up to 65,000 people due to the high influx of Somali refugees. The

camp has nearly 114,500 Somali refugees.

Somalia has been mired by violence since 1991. Militants attempting to topple

Somalia's weak U.N. backed government control most of southern and central

Somalia.

The Somali Prime Minister said Saturday that getting aid to those in need is a

priority. He spoke after the Somali parliament overwhelmingly approved a new

Cabinet.

" We shall first prioritize the humanitarian issue and how we would be able to

receive aid for our people to save them, " said Abdiweli Mohamed Ali.

___

Associated Press writer Khaled Kazziha in Dadaab and Abdi Guled in Mogadishu,

Somalia contributed to this report.

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