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Somalia

Somalia Humanitarian Needs Overview 2023 (February 2023)

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KEY HUMANITARIAN ISSUES

As Somalia enters 2023, the humanitarian situation continues to deteriorate. The severe drought, hunger, disease and violence merge to bring Somalia to the brink of famine.

An estimated 8.25 million people (1.5 million children under five, 1.8 million girls (five to 17 years), 1.8 million boys (five to 17 years), 1.3 million women, 1.4 million men and 412,000 elderly) require humanitarian assistance. Significant segments of the population are on the brink of famine. In the absence of sufficient funding and enhanced capacity, Famine is projected between April and June 2023 and beyond for three population groups in the following areas: Baidoa and Burhakaba Rural districts as well as IDPs in Baidoa and Mogadishu.

Humanitarian needs continue to grow disproportionately for marginalised and vulnerable groups. The increasing scale and severity of needs is alarming. Within one year, 1.5 million people have transitioned from facing severe and extreme food insecurity to catastrophic levels of food insecurity. Somalis are hungrier, sicker and more vulnerable than a year ago, pushing an ever greater number of people into reliance on humanitarian assistance for survival.

DROUGHT

Following the historic failure of four consecutive rainy seasons, Somalia is facing a climatic event not seen in at least four decades. The current drought is the longest and most severe in recent history and has surpassed the 2010/2011 and 2016/2017 droughts in terms of duration and severity.

With a poor start to the current Deyr rains and a high probability of below-average April- June 2023 rains, Somalia is facing an unprecedented sixth consecutive season of below-average rainfall. Water shortages are at critical levels exposing vulnerable people to additional risk. About eight million people lack access to safe water and sanitation facilities. Drought-induced displacement has increased fivefold since the beginning of 2022 with more than 1.3 million people displaced by the end of 2022.

Climate change and variability are increasingly understood as major drivers of conflict in Somalia as the struggle for dwindling resources exacerbate clan divisions and inter-clan conflict. Climate change disrupts rural livelihoods resulting in rapid urbanisation which in turn contributes to high rates of forced evictions. These evictions are among the most severe and prevalent protection threats in Somalia and represent both a cause and a multiplier of the internal displacement crisis.

FOOD INSECURITY

The prolonged drought, conflict, high food and water prices and displacement are driving the country to the brink of famine. One in two Somalis is facing food insecurity.

Over 8.3 million Somalis (49 per cent of the population) are expected to face high levels of acute food insecurity between April and June 2023, and about 1.8 million children under five are likely to face acute malnutrition through June including over 513,000 who are expected to be severely malnourished.

Even if no famine emerges, the situation is extremely alarming. Over 6.3 million Somalis are expected to face high levels of food insecurity between January and March 2023 including 322,000 in catastrophic levels of food insecurity. The cumulative levels of excess mortality could be as high as in 2011 when almost 260,000 people lost their lives, at least half of them children. In 2022 alone, 1,049 children died in nutrition centres and many more without even accessing the centres.

About 1.8 million children under five are likely to face acute malnutrition through mid-2023 including over 513,000 who are expected to be severely malnourished. Disease incidence, including an increase in measles cases, contributes to rising levels of acute malnutrition. Over 1.3 million children received treatment for malnutrition between January and November 2022. At the same time, 1,049 children have died in nutrition centres since January 2022 following related complications. Many more may have died without being able to receive treatment.

CONFLICT

Although the formation of a new Government and the peaceful transition of presidential power in May 2022 brought some level of political stability, the security situation in Somalia remains extremely volatile. In addition to ongoing political and inter-clan tensions, the recent escalation of the military offensive against Al-Shabaab has resulted in significant humanitarian impacts including increased displacement and reprisal attacks. Overall, it is expected that up to 450,000 additional civilians will be displaced due to conflict in 2023. Protection concerns include widespread forced family separation, indiscriminate attacks against civilians, freedom of movement restrictions, forced recruitment, abductions and destruction of civilian infrastructure.

The ongoing military operations offer both an opportunity for expanded access into areas previously under Al-Shabaab control as well as the increased likelihood of widespread insecurity and acute deterioration of humanitarian access. This uncertainty will require partners to exercise flexibility in programming to adopt to shifting insecurity, to assess and provide assistance in newly recovered areas as well as to engage in coordinated advocacy for the protection of civilians.

DISEASE

Mortality in famine is often driven by disease which overwhelms a weakened immune system.

Somalia is experiencing epidemic outbreaks with a measles outbreak that resulted in significant deaths as well as an uptick in cholera. The high epidemic risks are attributed to low vaccination coverage, poor WASH coverage, a shortage of functional health facilities, low capacity for surveillance and rapid response to alerts. Increasing food insecurity and declining water availability and quality have led to outbreaks of acute watery diarrhoea (AWD) and cholera in many parts of the country. As of December 2022, 13,430 cumulative suspected AWD cases and 73 deaths were reported. Similarly, more than 16,000 cumulative suspected cases of measles were reported, 77 per cent among children below five years of age.

Somalia’s overall health system remains fragmented, under-resourced and ill-equipped to provide lifesaving and preventative services. With only 19 per cent of health facilities fully functional, access to health care is severely limited. Famine-risk districts are particularly vulnerable as many children, mothers and people with illnesses or malnutrition in these areas may be unable to access health care. In areas where private-sector health services exist, they remain out of reach for millions of vulnerable people due to high prices.

ECONOMIC PRESSURE

The lives and livelihoods of the most vulnerable and marginalised people have been irreversibly harmed and last resort coping mechanisms have been exhausted.

According to the World Bank, overall inflation is projected at above nine per cent with food inflation reaching 17.5 per cent which increases the pressure on households. High food prices disproportionately affect poor households including internally displaced people (IDPs) and exacerbate inequality.

The drought has devastated the agriculture sector which accounts for up to 26 per cent of Somalia’s gross domestic product, 90 per cent of its informal employment and 90 per cent of its exports. One-third of all livestock in the worst-affected areas have died since mid-2021. Conditions for crop and livestock production are expected to remain extremely poor until at least the start of the next rainy season in April 2023, if not longer, leading to further loss of livelihoods.

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