Forwarded with Compliments of Government of the USA in Exile (GUSAE): Free Americans Resisting the Fourth Reich on Behalf of All Species.
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<x-tad-smaller>Last Updated: </x-tad-smaller><x-tad-smaller>Wednesday, 15 February 2006, 00:25 GMT</x-tad-smaller><x-tad-bigger> </x-tad-bigger>

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<x-tad-bigger> </x-tad-bigger><x-tad-bigger>Food Crisis Looms in African Horn
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<x-tad-smaller>By Imogen Foulkes,
BBC News, Geneva
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<x-tad-bigger> International aid agencies are warning of a growing humanitarian crisis caused by the drought in the Horn of Africa.</x-tad-bigger><x-tad-bigger>

The UN estimates that more than 11m people in Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya, Eritrea, Tanzania and Burundi need food assistance for the next six months.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has begun emergency relief to 500,000 people in southern Somalia.

It says the drought is making an already appalling humanitarian situation much worse there.

Somalia has had no functioning government for 15 years - it is riven by civil conflict and has, the International Red Cross estimates, the highest number of weapons-wounded casualties in the whole of Africa.

Now drought has arrived to add to the suffering.

The ICRC believes it is the worst in a decade - grazing land and cereal production have been decimated, food and water shortages are acute.

Pascal Hunt, the ICRC's head of operations in Somalia, says the international community must act.

"The consequences of the drought have to be addressed now and it needs an emergency response," said Mr Hunt.

"In some places more than 80% of the cattle are going to die.

"Somalis were used to sell the cattle in order to get cereals, so in some places they don't have the means to buy the food and in some places there is simply no food any more."

</x-tad-bigger><x-tad-bigger>Fight for Water</x-tad-bigger><x-tad-bigger>

The Red Cross says thousands of people are moving towards the Juba River in search of what little water is left.

In the parched villages, children trying to collect water from wells have been attacked by wild animals also desperate with thirst.

The ICRC has now launched an emergency relief operation in Somalia, delivering water and food and buying livestock for families who have lost their cattle.

The hope is that the drought will end soon, but the latest forecast from the World Meteorological Organization suggests it will continue until April.

If the rains fail again and there is no proper harvest this summer, aid agencies fear a humanitarian catastrophe across the Horn of Africa.

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A PERMANENT PROBLEM?

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<x-tad-smaller> Africa's hunger - a systemic crisis</x-tad-smaller><x-tad-bigger>

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