Flooding in Somalia affects over half mln people: UN

Source: Xinhua| 2019-11-30 05:31:03|Editor: Mu Xuequan
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UNITED NATIONS, Nov. 29 (Xinhua) -- Flooding in Somalia has affected 574,000 people, displacing 370,000 of them, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said Friday.

The October flooding, which was unusual for this time of year, has taken humanitarian agencies aback as there is less funding and flexibility in the humanitarian operation, said the OCHA.

Prior to the flooding, much of the country experienced drought conditions. As a result, harvest yields were up to 70 percent below average in the south.

In addition, many of the affected communities are the same ones that suffered severely during the 2016-17 drought crisis, which brought the country to the brink of famine. With little time to recover between shocks, communities are highly fragile and coping mechanisms have been eroded, said the OCHA.

Humanitarian agencies are racing to deliver desperately needed assistance, flying several helicopter and plane rotations every day, loaded with supplies, it said.

Although many humanitarian agencies are re-directing their assistance to flood-affected communities, there are not enough resources to cover everything. As a result, they have launched a flood response plan to raise 72.5 million U.S. dollars for a three-month swift response, said the OCHA.

Despite scaled-up assistance, significant gaps remain, particularly when it comes to emergency shelter and water, basic cooking equipment and solar lamps, safe drinking water and sanitation supplies, nutrition support for infants, medicines and health supplies, and services to protect women and children, it said.

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