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Author Topic: Famine in East Africa  (Read 4663 times)

g_spot_stimulator1

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Famine in East Africa
« on: July 27, 2011, 08:44:52 pm »
Share ko lang, pakilipat nalang mga bro di ko mapost  sa Post A Picture Thread ;) toast::


With East Africa facing its worst drought in 60 years, affecting more than 11 million people, the United Nations has declared a famine in the region for the first time in a generation. Overcrowded refugee camps in Kenya and Ethiopia are receiving some 3,000 new refugees every day, as families flee from famine-stricken and war-torn areas. The meager food and water that used to support millions in the Horn of Africa is disappearing rapidly, and families strong enough to flee for survival must travel up to a hundred miles, often on foot, hoping to make it to a refugee center, seeking food and aid. Many do not survive the trip. Officials warn that 800,000 children could die of malnutrition across the East African nations of Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Kenya. Aid agencies are frustrated by many crippling situations: the slow response of Western governments, local governments and terrorist groups blocking access, terrorist and bandit attacks, and anti-terrorism laws that restrict who the aid groups can deal with -- not to mention the massive scale of the current crisis.

Mihag Gedi Farah, a malnourished seven-month-old child weighing only 7.5 pound (3.4kg), is held by his mother in a field hospital of the International Rescue Committee, IRC, in the town of Dadaab, Kenya, on July 26, 2011. The U.N. will airlift emergency rations this week to parts of drought-ravaged Somalia that militants banned it from more than two years ago, in a crisis intervention to keep hungry refugees from dying along what an official calls the "roads of death." Tens of thousands already have trekked to neighboring Kenya and Ethiopia, hoping to get aid in refugee camps.


Women and girls, caught in a small sandstorm, fetch water in Wajir in this photo released on July 21, 2011. A wide swath of east Africa, including Kenya and Ethiopia, has been hit by years of severe drought and the United Nations says two regions of southern Somalia are suffering the worst famine for 20 years.


Somali refugee Kadija Ibrahim Yousef, 67, sits in her makeshift hut on the edge of the Hagadera refugee camp, which makes up part of the giant Dadaab refugee settlement on July 24, 2011 in Dadaab, Kenya.


A Somali man accesses a water point at the Dadaab refugee camp on July 4, 2011. With a population of 370,000, Dadaab is the world's largest refugee camp even though it was built for just 90,000. According to Doctors Without Borders, the number of people seeking refugee keeps swelling and Dadaab will house 450,000 refugees by the end of the year, or twice the population of Geneva.


A mother is measured to see if she is malnourished at a nutritional center near Lodwar in Turkana, Kenya, on July 15, 2011.


Four-year-old Luli Nunow, suffering from severe acute malnutrition, sits in a ward of the Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) NGO in Dadaab, on July 22, 2011. MSF is currently treating over 7,000 children for malnutrition in this, one of three camps at Dadaab.


A Somalian refugee boy collects firewood on the outskirts of the Ifo refugee camp, which makes up part of the giant Dadaab refugee settlement on July 23, 2011 in Dadaab, Kenya.


Somali refugees who recently crossed the border from Somalia into southern Ethiopia cluster between two food tents as they wait to be called to collect food aid at the Kobe refugee camp, on July 19, 2011. Ethiopian authorities and non-governmental organizations have accommodated almost 25,000 refugees at the camp since it was set up less then three weeks ago.


A woman waits for food rations at a feeding center in Lolkuta, near Wajir, on July 21, 2011. The UN's World Programme Programme was preparing on July 26, 2011 to airlift food aid into the Somali capital Mogadishu, but efforts were hampered by last minute paperwork in Kenya. An estimated 3.7 million people in Somalia -- around a third of the population -- are on the brink of starvation and millions more in Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda have been struck by the worst drought in the region in 60 years.


An aid worker using an iPad photographs the rotting carcass of a cow in Wajir, near the Kenya-Somalia border, on July 23, 2011. Since drought gripped the Horn of Africa, and especially since famine was declared in parts of Somalia, the international aid industry has swept in and out of refugee camps and remote hamlets in branded planes and snaking lines of white 4x4s. This humanitarian, diplomatic and media circus is necessary every time people go hungry in Africa, analysts say, because governments - both African and foreign - rarely respond early enough to looming catastrophes. Combine that with an often simplistic explanation of the causes of famine, and a growing band of aid critics say parts of Africa are doomed to a never-ending cycle of ignored early warnings, media appeals and emergency U.N. feeding - rather than a transition to lasting self-sufficiency. Picture taken July 23, 2011.


An aerial view of the Dadaab Refugee camp in eastern Kenya, where the influx of Somali's displaced by a ravaging famine remains high, on July 23, 2011. The European Union Aid Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva has vowed to do all that is possible to help 12 million people struggling from extreme drought across the Horn of Africa, boosting aid by 27.8 million euros ($40 million). The funds come on top of almost 70 million euros ($100 million) the bloc has already contributed as assistance in the worst regional drought in decades, affecting parts of Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Djibouti and Uganda.


Newly arrived Somalian refugees settle on the edge of the Ifo refugee camp which makes up part of the giant Dadaab refugee settlement on July 22, 2011 in Dadaab, Kenya.


Nado Mahad Abdilli builds a makeshift shelter for her family in Ifo 2, an area earmarked for refugee camp expansion, but yet to be approved by the Kenyan government, outside Dadaab, Kenya, on Monday, July 11, 2011. U.N. refugee chief Antonio Guterres said Sunday that drought-ridden Somalia is the "worst humanitarian disaster" in the world, after meeting with refugees who endured unspeakable hardship to reach the world's largest refugee camp in Dadaab, Kenya.


Somali men carry a severely malnourished child, under the instruction of a African Union Mission in Somalia (Amisom) peacekeeper, from a camp for internally displaced people to the peacekeeping operations headquarters where the child was admitted for emergency medical treatment, in Mogadishu, on July 15, 2011.


Somalian refugees wait in the registration area of the Dagahaley refugee camp which makes up part of the giant Dadaab refugee settlement, on July 23, 2011 in Dadaab, Kenya.


Used food tins lie stacked near a field hospital of the International Rescue Committee, IRC, in the town of Dadaab, Kenya.


Mohammed Osman, a malnourished seventy-year-old man from southern Somalia, lies on a bed at the Benadir Hospital in Mogadishu.


Refugee children walk past emaciated cattle in the outskirts of the Dagahaley refugee camp, which makes up part of the giant Dadaab refugee settlement.


Sheik Yare Abdi washes the body of four-year-old Aden Ibrahim in preparation for burial in accordance with Somali tradition, inside the makeshift shelter where Aden's family lives among other newly-arrived Somali refugees on the outskirts of Ifo II Camp, outside Dadaab, Kenya, on Tuesday, July 12, 2011. Doctors were unable to save Aden, who died of diarrhea-related dehydration after four days of inpatient care.


A Somali refugee herds goats through the Ifo refugee camp, part of the giant Dadaab refugee settlement.


Abdirisak Mursal, 3, a malnourished child from southern Somalia, gets treatment in Banadir hospital in Mogadishu, on July 16, 2011. Thousands of people have arrived in Mogadishu over the past two weeks seeking assistance and the number is increasing by the day, due to lack of water and food. The worst drought in the Horn of Africa has sparked a severe food crisis and high malnutrition rates, with parts of Kenya and Somalia experiencing pre-famine conditions, the United Nations has said.


A boy from the family of Rage Mohamed is caught in wind-blown dust as his family builds a makeshift shelter around a thorny acacia tree, on the outskirts of Dagahaley Camp, outside Dadaab, Kenya, on July 10, 2011. It took the 15-person family five days to make the journey from their drought-stricken home in Somalia. They spent two nights sleeping in the open air under the tree prior to receiving tarps on Sunday.


A Somalian refugee digs a latrine on the outskirts of the Ifo refugee camp on July 23, 2011 in Dadaab, Kenya.


A Somali woman waits to be registered as a refugee at Dagahaley Camp, outside Dadaab, Kenya.


Somalis from southern Somalia receive food at a feeding center in Mogadishu.


Two-year-old, Aden Salaad, looks up toward his mother, unseen, as she bathes him in a tub at a Medecins Sans Frontieres hospital, where Aden is receiving treatment for malnutrition, in Dagahaley Camp.


Hassan Ali prays by the roadside as he walks from the Somali-Kenyan border, just 2km away, on July 23, 2011. Hassan left his home in Dinsour fifteen days ago, and is walking to join his family in the Kenyan refugee complex at Dadaab, having fled the drought that has ravaged the Horn of Africa.


A unidentified child awaits treatment in a field hospital of Medecins Sans Frontieres, in the town of Dadaab, Kenya.


A Somali man leads his drought-stricken camels to a water point near Harfo, 70 km from Galkayo northwest of Somalia's capital Mogadishu.


Internally displaced Somalis receive grain and cooking oil from the Organization of Islamic Co-Operation (OIC), south of Somalia's capital Mogadishu.


A newly arrived Somali refugee child awaits medical examinations at the Dadaab refugee camp, on July 23, 2011. Aid agencies are unable to reach more than two million Somalis facing starvation in the famine-struck Horn of Africa country where Islamist insurgents control much of the worst-hit areas, the U.N.'s food agency said on Saturday.


A Somali refugee woman holds a high-energy biscuit ration at the entrance to the registration area of the Ifo refugee camp on July 24, 2011 in Dadaab, Kenya.


A man sits in front of his makeshift shelter at a camp for internally displaced people in Somalia's capital Mogadishu.


An aid worker rests whilst giving out flour in a food distribution center in Dagahaley Refugee Camp.


Somalis fleeing hunger in their drought-stricken nation walk along the main road leading from the Somalian border to the refugee camps around Dadaab, Kenya.


Suldana Mohamed, 28, carries a child in Barmil on July 21, 2011. Suldana has six children and finds it harder and harder to provide them with water and food. Three of her children are not yet in school, where they would receive one meal a day.


A Somali doctor treats a malnourished child, as the child's mother looks on at Banadir hospital in Mogadishu, on July 21, 2011.


A Somali woman weeps for her dead child at Banadir hospital in Mogadishu, on July 21, 2011.






yamatoyukihiro

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #1 on: July 27, 2011, 09:26:27 pm »
nakakaawa talaga yung mga nasa ganyang kondisyon.

zedlareg

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #2 on: July 27, 2011, 10:05:54 pm »
so anyone must understand why does money go to full metal death equipment. ??? ???

SpyDrew

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #3 on: July 27, 2011, 10:16:07 pm »
Question: Bakit nasa Area 51 nakapost to?

its so depressing to see a situation like this, nakakaawa, wala bang ibang bansa na tutulong sa kanila..

mayaman na bansa nakapalibot sa kanila pero napakahelpless nila..  :(
There isnt a day that goes by where I dont at some point think of you.. 😙💋💚 #missingyou

g_spot_stimulator1

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #4 on: July 27, 2011, 10:29:49 pm »
Question: Bakit nasa Area 51 nakapost to?

sensya na mam di ko mapost kanina sa isang thread  ;) toast::

smoketour

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #5 on: July 27, 2011, 10:40:42 pm »
haizt... sobrang swerte papala tlaga natin.. lets pray nalang na maging maayos na ang lahat samundo.... may god help those people.. kung sobrang yaman ko lang tlagahndi ko ppabayaan yung mga mahihirap na tao...

Pall-Eren-Mnr

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #6 on: July 27, 2011, 10:44:54 pm »
its so depressing to see a situation like this, nakakaawa, wala bang ibang bansa na tutulong sa kanila..

mayaman na bansa nakapalibot sa kanila pero napakahelpless nila..  :(
nobody can really do that much with such massive scale of famine. all the other countries can do is send relief and save as many as they can
pick an evil and live with it till the end.

gemican_2000

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #7 on: July 27, 2011, 10:57:47 pm »
Marami naman gustong tumulong sa mga taga-Somalia at naka standby lang yung mga relief goods. Ang problema ay ayaw papasukin ng Somali govt ang mga aid. Lalo pa pinahirapan ng mga clashes due to civil war.

The Dark Knight

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #8 on: July 27, 2011, 11:19:45 pm »
There comes a time
When we heed a certain call

When the world must come together as one.
There are people dying
Ooohhh and it's time to lend a hand
To life, the greatest gift of all.






sum1

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #9 on: July 28, 2011, 01:27:57 am »
grabe naman...ung iba tao dito sa manila grabe ang reklamo sa MAYNILAD pag nawalan ng tubig....

-=Kurabo=-

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #10 on: July 28, 2011, 03:10:31 am »
grabe sobrang hirap talaga sa africa pero pansin ko lang parang hindi na natapos ang famine sa africa, simula pa noong bata pa ako at napapanood ko sa TV parang normal na ang famine sa kanila at sa lagay na yan mataas pa ang rape sa lugar nila

it ain't over. . .till its over

padre_damazo

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #11 on: July 28, 2011, 03:21:17 am »
grabe kaka-awa nmn cla :o

popeye1981

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #12 on: July 28, 2011, 03:27:19 am »
Nakapagtataka lang po na wala  bang programa sa South Africa ang magtanim ng crops na aakma sa lupa at klima nila?  Meron po akong kapitbahay na nagtatrabaho sa West Africa na sinabi na talaga daw hong sinasadyang di tuturuan ang mga taong magtanim ng mga crops para sa kanila due of colonialism na din daw ho para ang mga tao magiging dependent sa mga rasyon at mag tulong sa makakapangyarihang bansa.

BlueAlphaZero

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #13 on: July 28, 2011, 04:31:54 am »
Nakapagtataka lang po na wala  bang programa sa South Africa ang magtanim ng crops na aakma sa lupa at klima nila?  Meron po akong kapitbahay na nagtatrabaho sa West Africa na sinabi na talaga daw hong sinasadyang di tuturuan ang mga taong magtanim ng mga crops para sa kanila due of colonialism na din daw ho para ang mga tao magiging dependent sa mga rasyon at mag tulong sa makakapangyarihang bansa.


That might be one reason, although I doubt it because of the huge costs involved in sending aid to Africa. Setting aside the possibility that some of the relief goods might be market rejects, it still requires airplanes, ships, and trucks to transport the goods to the camps and that, in turn, requires fuel. And fuel doesn't come cheap in Africa.

There have been programs that were supposed to teach impoverished African nations what crops are best suited for their area but those programs often die strangled in red tape and corruption. Those nations that succeed in growing a reasonably adequate harvest become targets of paramilitary units sent by their neighbors to raid the fields or even overt invasions that turn into prolonged wars or outright genocide.

Custodite fideliter quod quae credita est fideliter ad vos.

popeye1981

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #14 on: July 28, 2011, 05:03:39 am »
That might be one reason, although I doubt it because of the huge costs involved in sending aid to Africa. Setting aside the possibility that some of the relief goods might be market rejects, it still requires airplanes, ships, and trucks to transport the goods to the camps and that, in turn, requires fuel. And fuel doesn't come cheap in Africa.

There have been programs that were supposed to teach impoverished African nations what crops are best suited for their area but those programs often die strangled in red tape and corruption. Those nations that succeed in growing a reasonably adequate harvest become targets of paramilitary units sent by their neighbors to raid the fields or even overt invasions that turn into prolonged wars or outright genocide.



Thank you.  Truly said.

fckthepolice

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #15 on: August 05, 2011, 07:50:47 am »
very sad.. habang tayo nggalit pag d masarap ulam nten ung mga tao sa africa ganito kalagayan.. Rip to those who died coz of the famine.. learn to be contented, everyone of us...

kimmakim

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #16 on: September 04, 2011, 07:48:36 pm »
 :( pag mga oficial ntn d mag sawa sa coruption, demn, balang araw matutulad din tayu jan. Pero sana wag nmn

BlueAlphaZero

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Re: Famine in East Africa
« Reply #17 on: September 04, 2011, 09:43:42 pm »
:( pag mga oficial ntn d mag sawa sa coruption, demn, balang araw matutulad din tayu jan. Pero sana wag nmn

Well put, Citoyen Kimmakim. Personally, I'd her have more farms and forests than more subdivisions and golf courses.
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