Ethiopian drought is 'code red' for newborns and their mothers: NGO
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[January 25, 2016]
By Katy Migiro
NAIROBI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Some
350,000 babies are expected to be born by August into severe food
shortages in Ethiopia's worst drought in 50 years, the charity Save the
Children said, urging leaders to raise the alarm at the African Union
summit this week.
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One-tenth of Ethiopians - about 10.2 million people - cannot feed
themselves because their crops and animals have died despite strong
economic growth and development gains over the last decade.
"Giving birth in a desperate situation where there are already
serious food shortages, and where livestock have died en masse
taking away a vital source of nutrition for breastfeeding mothers,
is extremely dangerous for both newborns and their mothers," said
Save the Children's country director John Graham.
Pregnant and lactating mothers who are malnourished are less likely
to deliver safely and will struggle to feed their underweight
newborns, he said in a statement.
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"This is a code red emergency and it needs to be treated like one,
yet I have never seen such a small response to a drought of this
magnitude from the U.N. (United Nations) or the international
community."
About a quarter of the $1.4 billion needed to respond to the crisis
has been pledged, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs said, but most of these contributions have not
yet been paid.
Africa's second most populous nation has been hit by two consecutive
failed rains, most recently due to the El Nino weather phenomenon -
a warming of sea-surface temperatures in the Pacific that is causing
hunger around the globe.
"The scale of the drought in Ethiopia is like nothing I've seen
before in the 19 years that I've lived in this country," Graham
said.
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More than 2.5 million children are expected to drop out of school
due to the drought this year, the charity said.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is among world leaders expected
at the African Union summit, which opened last week and culminates
in a heads of state assembly on Saturday and Sunday.
(Reporting by Katy Migiro, editing by Alisa Tang. Please credit the
Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters,
that covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, corruption and
climate change. Visit www.trust.org.)
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