Somalia (September 1995)
- Issue 4 Accountability and Regulation
- 1 Échange Humanitaire No. 4 : Bulletin d’information
- 2 Feedback (September 1995)
- 3 Southern Africa: Drought Relief, Drought Rehabilitation… What about Drought Mitigation?
- 4 The Impact of Refugees on the Environment and Appropriate Responses
- 5 Women Killers in Rwanda
- 6 Women, War and Humanitarian Intervention: Resources for NGOs
- 7 European Union 1996 EU Draft Budget
- 8 Cannes Summit, June 1995
- 9 EuronAid General Assembly Adopts Code of Conduct on Food Aid and Food Security
- 10 One Year On Update on the Code of Conduct for the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and VFOs in Disaster Relief
- 11 Commonwealth Foundation Endorses New Guidelines for Good Policy and Practice for NGOs
- 12 Burundi/Zaire/Tanzania/Rwanda (September 1995)
- 13 Southern Africa (September 1995)
- 14 Mozambique (September 1995)
- 15 Somalia (September 1995)
- 16 Angola (September 1995)
- 17 Sudan (September 1995)
- 18 Liberia/Sierra Leone Region (September 1995)
- 19 Former Yugoslavia (September 1995)
- 20 Croatia (September 1995)
- 21 Bosnia (September 1995)
- 22 Serbia (September 1995)
- 23 Chechnya (September 1995)
- 24 Georgia/Abkhazia (September 1995)
- 25 Sri Lanka (September 1995)
- 26 Bangladesh (September 1995)
Security problems in the port areas of Mogadishu and Kismayo persist, making access to food difficult for both resident and displaced populations. Continuing inter-clan hostilities mean that imports and distribution of food aid stocks in-country are hampering emergency aid responses. Despite recent claims of severe malnutrition and near starvation in the Kismayo area and displaced camps, a July nutritional survey carried out by MSF Belgium, in collaboration with UNICEF, World Concern, Muslim Aid UK and the Somali Red Crescent Society, found that the situation had not deteriorated since the last survey in September 1994. The main problems identified by the survey were: lack of employment opportunities, low purchasing power and a diminished Gu season harvest. A WFP-FEWS survey in May found that in the Bay Region and along the middle and lower Shabelle river, only half the area was cultivated in comparison to the previous Gu season. The patchy rainfall could mean that this years sorghum harvest is only 50% of 1994 levels. The populations most at risk from food shortages are in rural areas where inter-clan rivalries prevent the free movement of people, and lack of health care facilities compound the problem. Due to the particularly high levels of insecurity and inaccessibility in Mogadishu, international relief workers have not been able to work in the city. Supplementary feeding programmes are planned to reduce short-term nutrition problems but this depends on no interference from the militia.
However, a serious lack of food is not currently being felt at present. This period, prior to the main harvest is traditionally a hungry time when prices have a tendency to rise and the most immediate effect of this low harvest is more likely to be felt in urban areas in the form of higher prices.
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