Posted by: willem van cotthem | May 14, 2008

Drought and Kenya’s nomadic Turkana tribes (UNICEF)

Read at  : UNICEF

http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/kenya_31798.html

As drought lingers, Kenya’s nomadic Turkana tribes are among the worst affected

By Sabine Dolan

NEW YORK, USA, 21 March 2006 – The nomadic Turkana tribes of northeastern Kenya have been especially vulnerable to the severe year-long drought afflicting the Horn of Africa. Like most pastoral and farming communities in the region, the tribes’ livelihood depends on their herds, which have been dying off because of the drought. Recent rains have not reached some of the most badly hit communities. Across Central and East Africa, hundreds of people and tens of thousands of livestock have died from hunger and thirst. Drought has become a chronic emergency in this arid region of Africa. Nearly 3.5 million people, including at least half a million school children, are in need of emergency assistance.

Critical malnutrition rates

Against this backdrop, hospitals in Turkana are struggling to provide treatment to the huge number of undernourished children who stream through their doors every day. Routine immunization rates in many areas are alarmingly low, and the combination of malnutrition and measles poses a major threat. In fact, malnutrition and disease have increased markedly among those who are most at risk – especially pregnant and lactating mothers and young children.

A UNICEF survey indicates that acute malnutrition rates are dangerously elevated in all parts of Turkana. “The level of malnourished children in this district is quite high,” says UNICEF nutritionist Emily Teshome. “We have a global acute malnourished rate of 20 per cent. What that really means is that it is above the World Health Organization critical point, which is 15 percent.”

Increased vulnerability

UNICEF has been coordinating emergency actions, working with the Ministries of Health, Water and Education, and concentrating efforts on three fronts:

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