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Cholera, hunger kills 83 more Somali kids

Somalians
Cholera and severe malnutrition have killed 83 more children in Somalia as the conflict-plagued nation struggles against drought and famine, Press TV reported.

Doctor Ali Hassan from Digfeer Hospital in Mogadishu told Press TV that the victims died on Wednesday across the war-ravaged Somali capital, Mogadishu.

Over 920 children, suffering from cholera and waterborne diseases, were also taken to hospitals in southern Mogadishu for medical treatment.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) warned on September 28 that the humanitarian situation remains “highly critical” in Somalia.

“The situation in Somalia remains highly critical. Hundreds of thousands of Somalis are still displaced from their homes in search of security and food,” the ICRC said in a statement.

The Geneva-based humanitarian institution added, “Although humanitarian aid has started to reach the drought- and conflict-affected people, many are still struggling to survive.”

“Much of the livestock has been decimated and there is no hope for an improvement in the situation until the next harvest in December,” it added.

Meanwhile, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has said that four million Somalis are in crisis, with some 750,000 at risk of dying in the next four months.

The UN body added it is also feared that the rains will also raise the risk of diseases.

“The onset of rains anticipated in October could fuel the spread of cholera, measles and malaria, thereby leading to more deaths in a population already weakened by conflict and famine,” OCHA noted.

The UN agency also pointed out that food deliveries have reached some 1.85 million people as of last week. The figure is almost half of those in need.

According to the United Nations, drought, high food prices and fighting in Somalia have increased the number of those in need of humanitarian assistance across the Horn of Africa to 13.3 million.

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