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Child malnutrition in Somalia at critical levels-UN
12 Sep 2007 08:13:53 GMT
Source: Reuters
NAIROBI, Sept 12 (Reuters) - Child malnutrition in Somalia is at critical levels due to violence and lack of access for aid workers, the U.N. children's agency said on Wednesday.

UNICEF said 83,000 children in central and southern parts of the Horn of Africa nation were suffering from malnutrition and 13,500 of those were severely malnourished and at risk of dying.

"Such critical levels in a region known as the country's breadbasket are alarming and point to a deteriorating humanitarian situation," the agency said in a statement.

"UNICEF is very concerned that their numbers might increase with continued civil strife, limited humanitarian access to these areas, food insecurity and a depressed economy."

Clashes between Islamist-led insurgents and government forces backed by Ethiopian troops have raged since January, when a sharia court group that had ruled most of the south for six months was ousted from the capital Mogadishu.
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A child pushes a bicycle through flood waters in northern Togo, October 7, 2007. The United Nations estimates 800,000 people in 13 countries across West Africa have been affected by flooding, with Ghana, Togo, Burkina Faso and Mali the hardest hit. Conservative estimates put the number killed across Africa at some 200.



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