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Part of Somalia at Risk of Famine for First Time Since 2022

NAIROBI, May 14 (Reuters) – A district in ⁠southern ⁠Somalia is at risk of ⁠famine, a U.N.-sponsored report said on Thursday, the first time that ​part of the country has reached such a critical level of hunger since 2022.

One of the world’s ‌most food-insecure nations due to ‌frequent drought, conflict and poverty, Somalia last experienced famine in 2011, when around 250,000 ⁠people died, ⁠and came close in 2017 and 2022.

This time, global cuts to ​foreign aid and the impacts of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran are complicating efforts to respond to food shortages caused by multiple failed rain seasons and ongoing insecurity.

More than one in three young ​children in the Burhakaba District of southern Somalia’s Bay Region, which is estimated to ⁠have ⁠a population of around 200,000, ⁠suffer from ​acute malnutrition, according to the report by Integrated Food Security Phase Classification.

“The IPC analysis ​found Burhakaba District to ⁠be at risk of Famine under a plausible worst-case scenario offailing Gu (season) rains, soaring food prices and below expected delivery of humanitarian food security assistance,” the report said.

Famine occurs when at least 20% of households in an area face an extreme lack of food, at ⁠least 30% of children suffer from acute malnutrition, and two out of every ⁠10,000 people are dying each day because of hunger.

The number of Somalis facing crisis levels of food insecurity or worse was about 6 million. That is lower than the 6.5 million reported in February but worse than the projected 5.5 million for this period due to worse-than-expected rains.

Global cuts to foreign aid, led by the United States, have substantially reduced support to Somalia.

The IPC report said humanitarian assistance for the April-June period had increased significantly, but still covered only ⁠12% of those facing crisis levels of food insecurity or worse.

“Somalia risks becoming one of the first major crises of the ‘post-aid era’: a place where needs are growing, survival is becoming more expensive, and the response is shrinking,” said ​Daud Jiran, the Somalia country director at Mercy Corps, an aid group.

(Reporting ​by Aaron Ross, editing by Gareth Jones )

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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