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World Wide
Jun 06, 2026
Analyzed by Llama- 4 Scout 17B 16E Instruct

Drought and floods drive Somalis to Mogadishu camp, where hunger and poverty persist

AI Summary
Severe drought and floods have displaced over a million Somalis, who now face hunger and poverty in informal settlements. The crisis has pushed 6.5 million people to the brink of severe hunger, with children bearing the brunt of acute malnutrition.

The Plight of Somalia's Displaced

For three years, Zeynab Ibrahim watched as her little town shrivelled up and died. The rains never came, the reservoirs were depleted and the farms gradually turned to dust. Hunger and sickness swept through the village, claiming the lives of many, including four of Ibrahim’s 10 children.

Displacement and Desperation

They joined more than a million displaced people who now live in abysmal conditions in informal settlements across the city. “Our livelihoods depended on what we could grow on the ground, including maize, beans, sesame and vegetables. But the ground dried because there was no rain,” says Ibrahim.

The Humanitarian Crisis

More than 6.5 million Somalis have been pushed to the brink of severe hunger – nearly a third of the population. Internally displaced people are the worst affected, living on overcrowded sites with limited access to water, sanitation, health and hygiene facilities.

The Impact on Children

Children are bearing the brunt of the crisis, with nearly 1.9 million under-fives facing acute malnutrition, according to the latest integrated food security phase classification (IPC) report. Nearly 500 nutrition clinics have now closed because of a lack of funding, leaving children such as Ibrahim’s youngest, who is two, without care.

The Way Forward

The situation is aggravated by the significant international humanitarian aid cuts and President Donald Trump’s war on Iran, with the closure of the strait of Hormuz driving up the cost of fuel, food and transport.