Monday, August 1, 2011

Somali refugees: No food to break Ramadan fast

A man feeds his child at a field hospital run by the International Rescue Committee (IRC) in Dadaab, Kenya, Monday, Aug 1, 2011. Dadaab, a camp designed for 90,000 people now houses around 440,000 refugees. Almost all are from war-ravaged Somalia, with some having been here for more than 20 years, when the country first collapsed into anarchy. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

A man feeds his child at a field hospital run by the International Rescue Committee (IRC) in Dadaab, Kenya, Monday, Aug 1, 2011. Dadaab, a camp designed for 90,000 people now houses around 440,000 refugees. Almost all are from war-ravaged Somalia, with some having been here for more than 20 years, when the country first collapsed into anarchy. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

An elderly woman waits inside a food distribution center after being registered as a refugee in Dadaab, Kenya, Monday, Aug 1, 2011. Dadaab, a camp designed for 90,000 people now houses around 440,000 refugees. Almost all are from war-ravaged Somalia, with some having been here for more than 20 years, when the country first collapsed into anarchy. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

People wait outside a food distribution center to be registered as refugees in Dadaab, Kenya, Monday, Aug 1, 2011. Dadaab, a camp designed for 90,000 people now houses around 440,000 refugees. Almost all are from war-ravaged Somalia, with some having been here for more than 20 years, when the country first collapsed into anarchy. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

A child eats a peace of bread at a food distribution center as she and others wait to be registered as refugees in Dadaab, Kenya, Monday, Aug 1, 2011. Dadaab, a camp designed for 90,000 people now houses around 440,000 refugees. Almost all are from war-ravaged Somalia, with some having been here for more than 20 years, when the country first collapsed into anarchy. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

A child cries out as his brother pulls him after they were handed food at a World Food Programme, WFP, compound in a displacement camp in Dadaab, Kenya, Sunday, July 31, 2011. Dadaab, a camp designed for 90,000 people now houses around 440,000 refugees. Almost all are from war-ravaged Somalia. Some have been here for more than 20 years, when the country first collapsed into anarchy. But now more than 1,000 are arriving daily, fleeing fighting or hunger.(AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

(AP) ? As the Islamic holy month of Ramadan begins, Faduma Aden is fasting during the day even though she doesn't have enough food to celebrate with a sundown feast. The Somali mother of three, who fled starvation in her homeland and now lives at a Kenyan refugee camp, says she will fast because she fears God.

Muslims around the world mark sundown during the holy month of Ramadan that began Monday with extravagant dinners after not eating from sunrise to sundown. That kind of nighttime celebration is unthinkable this year for most Somalis, who already are suffering empty stomachs during the worst famine in a generation.

Despite the lack of food, for Somalis like Aden it's a matter of faith to participate in Ramadan's fast, even though Islam allows the ailing to eat. Others, though, are ashamed they don't have enough food for the sundown dinner.

"How I will fast when I don't have something to break it?" said Mohamed Mohamud Abdulle. "Today is the worst day I ever faced. All my family are hungry and I have nothing to feed them. "I feel the hunger that forced me from my home has doubled here."

Tens of thousands of Somalis already have fled starvation to the world's largest refugee camp in neighboring Kenya, where Abdulle said people can't fast without food "to console the soul" at sundown.

For most of the Muslim world, Ramadan this year falls at a time of rising food prices and political upheaval. Food prices typically spike during the Muslim religious month, and the elaborate dinners many in the Middle East put on to break the daily fast drive a deep hole in household budgets.

Somalis fleeing famine say they have been unintentionally fasting for weeks or months, but without the end-of-day meal to regain their strength.

"I cannot fast because I cannot get food to break it and eat before the morning," said Nur Ahmed, a father of six at a camp for internally displaced people in Mogadishu called Badbado. Ahmed's wife died last year during childbirth, he said.

Sheik Ali Sheik Hussein, a mosque leader in Mogadishu, called it "worrying" that many Somalis cannot fast because they don't have the food to break it with.

"We have asked all Muslims to donate to help those dying from hunger," he said. "Muslims should not be silent on this situation, so we shall help if Allah wills."

President Barack Obama, in a Ramadan statement Monday, said that fasting can be used to "increase spirituality, discipline, and consciousness of God's mercy." Obama said now is a time for the world to come together to offer support to famine relief efforts.

"The heartbreaking accounts of lost lives and the images of families and children in Somalia and the Horn of Africa struggling to survive remind us of our common humanity and compel us to act," Obama said.

Some in the communities around the Dadaab refugee already have followed that advice by helping hungry refugees moving into the region. At the Dagahaley refugee camp, part of the larger Dadaab camps, three distributing centers run by local elders provide food and money each day to more than a 1,000 families and individuals.

"The hunger and sufferings faced by the new arrivals have moved us into action," said Hussein Sheik Mohamed, who is a part of a team of volunteers that receives donations from former refugees and other Somalis in Kenya and around the world and then distributes them.

Moved by tragic scenes of haggard mothers and emaciated children, Somalis in the diaspora are wiring hundreds of dollars to community leaders so they buy food and clothes for the new arrivals.

The Dadaab initiative started with people at nearby mosques who wanted to respond to the needs of refugees pouring into this camp. They called former refugees to help new arrivals with whatever they can find: Food, money, clothing and mattresses were donated.

The U.N. says more than 11 million people in the Horn of Africa need food aid, but that 2.2 million need aid in a region of south-central Somalia controlled by the al-Qaida-linked militant group al-Shabab, which has not let many aid agencies operate in its territory, including the U.N. World Food Program.

In a bit of good news, though, the International Committee of the Red Cross said Monday it is distributing food to 162,000 people in south-central Somalia affected by drought and armed violence. The food distributions in south-central are the first large-scale distributions in that regions since the beginning of the year, it said.

"This operation demonstrates the ICRC's ability to deliver emergency aid directly to the people affected in southern Somalia," said Andrea Heath. "But this distribution assists only a small percentage of those in need. More aid will be required to help the population bridge the gap until the next harvest in December."

Salad Salah is one of those still in need. He fled to a refugee camp in Mogadishu, and said that participating in Ramadan this year would be a form of "suicide."

"We wouldn't like to miss Ramadan but the conditions here say we must," he said.

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Associated Press writer Abdi Guled contributed from Mogadishu, Somalia.

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How to help: http://www.interaction.org/crisis-list/interaction-members-respond-drought-crisis-horn-africa

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-08-01-AF-East-Africa-Famine/id-96e248caa9c4482197c9144a23770a3b

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