Jump to navigation

Somalia

Drought and fall-out from Moscow's war may trigger catastrophic famine

New government in Mogadishu struggles to deal with deepening food and security crises

Just weeks after his election, President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud is confronted with a national and regional food supply crisis as his opponents in Al Shabaab try to capitalise on the ensuing instability.

The scale of the worst drought in decades in East Africa has left 230,000 Somalis living in catastrophic, famine-like conditions, with humanitarian aid agencies warning that without an immediate increase in financial support the country could be facing a repeat of the 2011 famine, when 250,000 people died, half of them children.

Conditions have been made tougher still by the local effects of Moscow's war on Ukraine, which include increases in the prices of food, fuel and fertiliser and fractured supply lines.

The International Rescue Committee (IRC) has reported a sharp rise in acute malnutrition admissions at its clinics across Somalia, with one recording a 265% increase in admissions from April to May. Mogadishu, Puntland, the south-west and central Somalia are seeing particularly high levels of hunger (AC Vol 63 No 12, Hassan Sheikh takes Mogadishu by storm).

Some 7 million of Somalia's 16m people are at risk of famine, according to the IRC.

The effects of the drought on food production, which caused food prices to increase by 100-200% in March, have been compounded by Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Somalia imported 92% of its grain from Russia and Ukraine prior to the conflict and high prices and supply disruption have caused a huge drop in imports.

The World Food Programme (WFP) has warned that the number of people facing hunger in the Horn of Africa due to the drought might rise from 14m to 20m by the end of the year. Last month, the G7 leaders responded to the WFP appeal for $21 billion in emergency funding this year by offering $4bn.

Those shortfalls are filtering down to country level. Aid organisations blame donor fatigue for the failure to fully fund the WFP's Somalia food security target.



Related Articles

Hassan Sheikh takes Mogadishu by storm

The new president sets a new agenda, with new foreign friends and ideas to tackle the Al Shabaab insurgents – all amid a devastating drought

President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud's presidency is off to an energetic start with a major reorientation of Somalia's regional alliances, a return to federalist and devolutionary policies, and a...


It rained on their invasion

The war in Somalia gives President Mwai Kibaki’s government a leading role for which it looks ill-prepared

Six weeks into the fighting, unintended consequences haunt Kenya’s invasion of Somalia: rising xenophobia, terrorist attacks in Nairobi and other local insecurity, and changes in East Africa’s security...


ISIS’s nemesis

Al Shabaab offers its Da’ish competitors a simple choice: recant or face execution

The early days of Da'ish in Somalia were not auspicious. The leader of Somalia's version of the pan-regional and Middle Eastern Islamist movement also known as 'Islamic State'...


Courts without authority

Clan rivalries still outweigh the hope of a national government, as the neighbours look on nervously

Somalia's domestic strife is nowhere near its end. The rival authorities, the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) in Baidoa and the Supreme Islamic Courts Council (SICC) - until 24...


Head rolls in bank row

The Bank of Somalia’s argument with the UN Monitoring Group has cost its boss his job as the President placates the donors at Brussels

The Governor of the Bank of Somalia, Abdusalam Omer, has lost his job in a row between the United Nations and the government over corruption at the BOS...