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August 27, 2011

Imagine

I do not have the words to adequately convey the suffering and anguish of the people at Dadaab. Many have asked how they can help. In a prior blog I listed some of the great relief organizations working to sustain those famine victims who managed to reach the refugee camp. I have scarcely blogged over the past weeks because I feel that the famine here in the Horn of Africa must be the priority. The organizations I listed ARE heroes and deserving of our support. But at the time I didn't know that the World Food Program, sole supplier of food for the refugees, does not have the funding to cover this catastrophic humanitarian crisis. Without further delay governments MUST make good on their pledges, and each of us should do what we can, before millions of the world's most vulnerable people starve to death.

As I write this blog, a hurricane of unprecedented force will soon strike my own country, including my home state of Connecticut. I pray that my family, friends and everyone from North Carolina to New England will be safe.

It is more than evident that the weather around the world is changing. Vast areas here in Africa, where people have always farmed and raised their livestock, will need to find new methods of surviving. The long term solutions lie in helping poor farmers to plant crops that can withstand droughts, implement methods of irrigation to utilize the rainfall when it comes, and help to find more effective ways to store grains. But this is an emergency. Yesterday I saw too many children for whom help came to late.

So remember that just fifty cents can keep a person alive for a day. Imagine if everyone gave one dollar. if you are able to give anything at all- for now and over the next few months- please donate to the World Food Program

This is a defining moment for all of us.

 
 
August 25, 2011

World Food Program is running out of money. Millions at risk

Many thousands of people are starving to death here. In northern Kenya, 3-5 million are affected. Crops have failed for 4 planting seasons, livestock starved to death, food stocks at zero -and people here don't have cash so they have no way to sustain themselves. Check out: /www.wfp.org/ WFP needs crucial funding for the Horn of Africa-Somalia, Kenya and Ethiopia
 
 

Clooney's satellite project shows new evidence of mass burials in Sudan.

I am in Kenya about to leave, with UNICEF, for Dadaab-the largest refugee camp in the world. 400,000 people, mainly Somalis, are already in the camp (which was built for 90,000) and tens of thousands more have arrived since June, fleeing the famine.

I have been traveling in rural Kenya seeing the truly impressive projects founded by Free the Children. Thanks to FTC I witnessed whole communities rising out of poverty through schools, medical centers, education on planting drought sustainable crops,and an array of income generating projects.

I spent today in the Kibera slums on the outskirts of Nairobi. More on that later but I have to give a shout out to Carolina for Kibera.

With so much of my focus on the famine I cannot ignore the on-going atrocities in Sudan. There is fresh evidence of atrocities committed by Khartoum in South Kordofan where eight mass graves were identified by the Satellite Sentinel Project, which was set up by George Clooney to monitor events in Sudan. 'The only question now is what is the international community going to do about it?' said the Project director.

Analysis of the high altitude images confirms the many reports of mass murders of ethnic Nuba people in South Kordofan state. Witnesses say people have been rounded up by the Sudanese army and taken away in trucks.The trucks returned empty and the people have not been seen again. http://bit.ly/pffiUl

 
 
August 20, 2011
I am in Kenya to visit communities and schools built by Free the Children. With UNICEF I will be returning to Dadaab, the biggest refugee camp in the world - see my blog on Dadaab below. In search of food and water desperate families walk 50-90 miles-25 days- through sand storms and across parched land, from Mogadishu and beyond. Many, especially the children, die along the way. People are calling the route from Mogadishu to the camp, "the road of death'. Nearly half of the people in Somalia - 3.7 million - are now facing what aid workers call the 'worst food crisis since the 1980's famine in Ethiopia'- in which one million people starved to death.
 
 
August 13, 2011

death by hunger is agony


 
 
August 7, 2011

Follow me on twitter Mia_Farrow



 
 
August 2, 2011

famine 30,000 Somali children under 5 have died in the last 3 months

UNHCR,UNICEF,WFP, Oxfam,ICRC, IRC and Save the Children are among the outstanding aid organizations working in the field, saving lives. These organizations and the ones listed below need our help-the situation is dire. One dollar can keep a child alive for one day.
 
 
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