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UN agency approves $ 22 mln loan for relief efforts in Somalia

Storyline:National News
Women milking goats on the outskirts of the village of Qardho, Somalia. Photo: FAO/Karel Prinsloo
Women milking goats on the outskirts of the village of Qardho, Somalia. Photo: FAO/Karel Prinsloo

The UN agricultural agency FAO has okayed a $22 million loan to bolster relief efforts in drought-hit regions of Somalia.

UN Emergency Relief Coordinator, Stephen O’Brien said millions of Somalia are facing the risk of death unless action is taken urgently.

“More than 2.9 million people are at risk of famine and many will predictably die from hunger if we do not act now,” said O’Brien in a statement Tuesday.

“CERF is one of the fastest ways to enable urgent response to people most in need,” he said, explaining that the loan will bridge a crucial gap and allow FAO to immediately save lives and livelihoods of farmers and herders until additional funds from donors are received.

This effort is part of the international response to prevent another famine in Somalia five years after the previous one devastated the country.

Across Somalia, 6.2 million people will face acute food insecurity through June 2017. Of these, nearly three million people are in Phases 3 (crisis) and 4 (emergency) of the five-phase International Phase Classification for Food Security (IPC), representing more than a two-fold increase from six months ago. Phase 5 is famine.

“Livelihoods are people’s best defence against famine and this $22 million loan is critical to FAO’s famine prevention and drought response in Somalia,” said FAO Deputy Director-General for Programmes, Daniel Gustafson.