NGOer advarer om underernæring hos hundredtusinder af slumboer i Østafrika efter fødevareprisernes himmelflugt – forude lurer den store sult også her
NAIROBI, 22 August 2011 (IRIN): The food crisis that is devastating lives and killing children throughout the Horn of Africa is not restricted to the arid lands where media attention and donor dollars are now focused.
In informal urban settlements (slumbyer), malnutrition affects thousands of children but remains largely overlooked.
Over the past five months, “Concern Worldwide” has recorded a 62 percent increase in cases of severe acute malnutrition (SAM) at clinics it supports in Nairobi slum areas.
– Since we are only reaching 33 percent of the slum population we know there are likely to be lots more people not getting help, said communications manager Elizabeth Wright.
– Everything is sort of combining for a perfect storm. We are going to be seeing a full-scale nutritional emergency in the urban context. It will be too late, Wright told IRIN.
Peter Hailey from the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) concurred (samtykkede): – The food crisis, the fuel crisis, and so on are probably affecting people in urban areas more than in the north.
While the 2,3 percent global acute malnutrition (GAM) rate Concern found in many of Nairobi’s slums falls well below the emergency threshold of 15 percent, more than 8.600 children under five are acutely malnourished in these areas.
By contrast, because of its sparser population, northern Isiolo district’s 15,7 percent GAM rate equates to fewer than 3.000 children under five who are acutely malnourished.
– This is not as visible as cattle and goats dying, but the crisis is as severe, said Amina Abdulla, programme manager for urban livelihoods and social protection at Concern.
In Korogocho, a Nairobi slum, Rabaha Mohammad is responsible for feeding herself and 10 other people who share her rented room.
– There are days when we do not have anything to eat, but we might borrow some money or buy food on credit to have something for that day, she said. Mohammad owes her creditors 5.000 Kenya Shillings – more than 50 US dollar (godt 260 DKR).
She and her children subsist on one meal a day – some rice with cabbage and tomatoes, and sometimes tea and bread.
– They do not complain of hunger much. They only cry about it once in a while, she said of her children.
Largely ignored
Læs videre på http://www.IRINnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=93551
Se også rapporten fra Zimbabwe på
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=93595