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This composite image shows baby Minhaj Gedi Farah at various dates of his recovery at the International Rescue Committee (IRC) hospital in Dadaab, Kenya. Left, shows Minhaj as he arrived at the hospital on Tuesday July 26, 2011. Right shows Minhaj on Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2011.
AP/International Rescue Committee
By KATHARINE HOURELD, Associated Press
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — As Minhaj Gedi Farah lay silently on a
hospital bed three months ago, even his mother had given up hope
that the skeletal Somali baby would live. Weeks of intensive
feeding, though, have transformed him into a chubby-cheeked boy who
crawls.
The is one of several stories highlighted Wednesday in an annual
New York fundraising event held by the aid group International
Rescue Committee, which helped nurse Minhaj back to health.
Famine has claimed the lives of tens of thousands of Somali
children this year, but the U.N. said despite restrictions by
Islamist insurgents, heavy rains and fighting, aid agencies are
expanding their reach. Food aid is now getting to 2.2 million of
the 4 million Somalis who need it, the U.N. said.
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"His mother never thought he would recover. Every member of his
family is happy," said Sirat Amin, a nurse-nutritionist with the
International Rescue Committee who has been monitoring Minhaj's
progress. "He can sit without being supported, he can have
(nutritional supplement) Plumpynut on his own. He's crawling."
In July, the month that the U.N. declared parts of Somalia
famine zones, Minhaj was one of dozens of limp babies lying under
mosquito net shrouds in the sweltering wards of the IRC hospital in
Dadaab, the world's largest refugee camp. Seven-month-old Minhaj
weighed only 3.2 kilograms (7.05 pounds), less than some newborns.
Pictures of his gaunt cheeks and bulging eyes made him the face
of the famine. But after weeks of intensive feeding with Plumpynut
- a kind of sweetened peanut butter packed with nutrients - he is
nearly 8 kilograms (17.64 pounds), almost normal for a boy his age.
Since the beginning of the year, hundreds of thousands of Somali
families have poured over the border, fleeing war and hunger. Domes
made from dirty tarpaulins and scraps of cloth mushroomed on the
scrublands of northern Kenya and the U.N.'s famine announcement
brought planeloads of television crews to capture images of their
suffering.
Now the torrent of refugees fleeing into Kenya has slowed to a
trickle and the camera crews have gone home. But that doesn't mean
the emergency is over.
Nearly 2 million Somalis still don't have access to food aid.
Rain has turned tracks through the bush to slush and there's been
fighting along the border after hundreds of Kenyan soldiers crossed
into Somalia. Last month's incursion followed a string of
kidnappings on Kenyan soil by Somali gunmen.
Families wanting to flee may fear being caught up in the
fighting or be stuck in the mud. Only the strongest are getting
through. When they arrive, they are not only starving but sick and
exhausted, Amin said. So although less are coming, when they arrive
in the refugee camps in Kenya many are in a more severe state of
starvation.
The ward where Amin works has been expanded by two tents, but
even so, 78 children are sharing 56 beds. That's about twice as
many as when Minhaj was admitted. Some children are in even worse
condition than he was.
Many of the new arrivals come in with diarrhea, cases of
cholera, or secondary infections. Amin and other aid agencies say
that deaths from illness are likely to rocket as weakened immune
systems contend with the cold rains and diseases spread by puddles
of dirty water.
The U.N. Children's Fund said around 168,0000 acutely
malnourished children under the age of 5 could die within weeks.
They are concerned about infectious diseases like measles, cholera
and malaria, particularly in the dirty and overcrowded camps in the
capital of Mogadishu.
"The famine is not over ... Children are dying on a daily
basis," said Hannan Sulieman, UNICEF's deputy representative for
the Somalia mission. "Malnutrition has been way above emergency
levels for over 10 years."
She said that her organization was planning to maintain current
levels of aid until August or September next year, when Somalia
would have had a long and a short rain harvest.
The famine is the worst emergency to hit Somalia for a
generation. The U.N. has appealed for $1 billion and has got $779
million so far.
But aid still doesn't reach many of the starving. Islamist
militias battling the weak U.N.-backed government have forbidden
many aid agencies to operate in their territory, exacerbating the
effects of a severe drought.
So even after their parents have struggled through the mud, have
made it past the militias and have staggered into the hospital, it
is still too late for many, said Amin.
"I'm coping with it but sometimes it's heartbreaking. People
are suffering. Sometimes they die in front of you," he said.
"Sometimes you want to help but the numbers are just so high.
There are just so many."
But seeing children like Minhaj recover gives him the strength
to go on.
(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Gallery
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This composite image shows baby Minhaj Gedi Farah at various dates of his recovery at the International Rescue Committee (IRC) hospital in Dadaab, Kenya. Left, shows Minhaj as he arrived at the hospital on Tuesday July 26, 2011. Right shows Minhaj on Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2011.
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