Araweelo News Network

FILE – Children drink water delivered by a truck in the drought stricken Baligubadle village near Hargeisa, the capital city of Somaliland, in this handout picture provided by The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies on March 15, 2017


HARGEISA —Somaliland authorities say famine looms in the breakaway republic as the government suspends development programs due to a crippling drought that has killed dozens of people and most of the livestock in eastern regions.

Speaking to VOA in Hargeisa, Somaliland Vice President Abdirahman Abdullahi Seylici says drought conditions look set to deteriorate further with an increasing risk of famine.

Seylici says Somaliland has few resources to cope with the drought, which has severely affected the economy.

Getting ready for worse

He says officials decided to suspend the development programs in order to control their budget and be ready if the drought crisis worsens.

Seylici said, “We are close to famine, the assessment we made and the assessment from aid agencies show the famine is close to be declared in the eastern regions of Somaliland, because the current rainy season [from late March though May] has not started yet, there is water scarcity and people are losing livestock”

“When there is fear that a lot of people might die due to the worsening drought, we decided to suspend building developmental projects. Our budget is affected by the drought, as well as Saudi Arabia’s ban on our livestock export,” the Somaliland vice president said

“So we decided to divert money to emergency, live-saving and drought-response efforts,” he added.

In Somaliland, nomadic communities across the region say they have never experienced this kind of drought.

Seylici told VOA he can only confirm that more than 10 people died of starvation across Somaliland, a lower number than previously stated by other Somaliland officials.

The United Nations Children’s Fund said Friday more children are alarmingly at risk as Somalia faces severe drought and starvation.

Reports from eastern regions of Somaliland say cholera is spreading as people affected by drought have been forced to drink dirty water from dried-up wells.

The United Nations says more than 6 million Somalis need emergency food, including close to 1 million acutely malnourished children.