Overlooked due to the ongoing war in Ukraine, the humanitarian crisis in Yemen and the conflict in Ethiopia, Somalia is dealing with one of its worst droughts in four decades.
Nearly a million people have left their homes searching for food, water and humanitarian assistance in towns and major cities.
Dolow, a border town in Somalia's southwestern region of Gedo, which has been hosting thousands of families displaced by the 2011 drought, is receiving hundreds of drought-affected people daily, some coming as far as 300 kilometers (186 miles) on foot or riding donkeys.
Farhiyo Ahmed and her seven children left the town of Ufurow and reached an internally displaced persons (IDPs) camp in Dolow, a journey that took 18 days.
She told Anadolu Agency that the drought has devastated her town, small farm and livestock.
"I came here because we lost everything we have and I couldn't find another way to feed my children. But coming here wasn't an easy task. I came here seven days ago and haven't received any humanitarian assistance so far," she said.
She said the people in the camp find themselves in a very difficult situation as they don't have shelter, food or water, not to mention access to education.
The vast number of people who reached Dolow as a result of the drought, which hit 90% of the country and has affected half its population, are women and children.
Muhibo Ali Hilowle, 57, a mother of nine, told Anadolu Agency at the IDP camp in Dolow that she hasn't seen a drought as bad as this one in her entire life.
She said her children are hungry and she's very concerned.
"As an adult, I am adapting by not eating but drinking a lot of water, but the children are starving. They haven't eaten in at least two days."
Saruuro Bishaar Abdi is a newcomer to the camp. She fled from Raahole, a town in the Baay region.
She said she walked for a week to reach the camp with her 10 children. "The drought has killed all my livestock, which was our only means to survive and feed my children. So when all of them died and I couldn't get a job, I made up my mind to come here to get a better life," Abdi said.
Ali Abdikarim, a father of four who fled from the town of Luuq, an eight-hour drive from Dolow, said a friend told him that humanitarian agencies are helping drought-affected people, but they haven't received any help so far.
Sacdiyo Yacqub, 27, a mother of five children aged between one and 10, told Anadolu Agency while crying that she and her children haven't had a meal for a week.
"We have nothing. There are no jobs. There is no food, running water, toilets or shelters, anything. I have been keeping my head high, but this is unbearable. We haven't eaten for eight days, except what our neighbors send us and leftovers," she said.
Visit
Somalia's special presidential envoy for the drought response and humanitarian issues, Abdirahman Abdishakur Warsame, and the United Nations humanitarian coordinator for Somalia, Adam Abdelmoula, recently visited the camp and raised the alarm saying this is the worst drought in Somalia's recent memory.
Warsame, who spoke to AA at an IDP camp in Dolow, said Somalia and the international community must work together to avert famine and help the families affected by the drought and called for urgent humanitarian intervention.
"I've been traveling to different places and towns to see the effect that the drought has had on people. A week ago, I visited Buloburde. Before that, Baidoa, and now I am in Dolow to see the situation of affected people here," he said.
Warsame said his responsibility is to organize and work with humanitarians to lift any restrictions.
He said what he has seen at IDP camps in Dolow is a humanitarian crisis at its worst and it is time to act to avoid famine.
Abdelmoula told AA that Somalia is witnessing its worst drought in recent memory.
"The people who are living here now came in recent days and weeks and have since been living without humanitarian assistance," he said.
Human loss
When AA asked about the human loss due to the prolonged devastating drought, Warsame said the authorities in Dolow told him that at least 60 people had died.
Abdelmoula said eight districts in Somalia are now facing famine-like conditions and 366,000 people in the country will die by September if humanitarian assistance is not scaled up as soon as possible.
He noted that 7.1 million Somalis – nearly half the country's population – are in need of humanitarian assistance and 1.5 million children are severely malnourished. "If we don't act now, thousands will die, and any delay is not an option to immediately save lives," he told AA.
Health impact
Dr. Mamunur Rahman Malik, head of mission and World Health Organization (WHO) Representative for Somalia, told AA that the health consequences of the drought are causing alarming pain and suffering to the people affected.
"If we do not prioritize health in terms of expanding access to emergency health care and life-saving support, people will eventually die of diseases," he said.
He said what they have seen in the drought and the famine-like situation in Somalia is that there is always a "disease between hunger and death and between malnutrition and diseases."
"We feel that people will die of diseases more than hunger if we do not protect their health," he said, adding that people owing to the food insecurity situation will be more vulnerable to diseases and malnutrition as their ability to prevent infections will be low.
"We need to protect the health of these vulnerable people to save their lives from causes that are largely preventable. We are seeing a high number of cholera, acute diarrheal disease, pneumonia and measles cases amongst these vulnerable people impacted by the drought," he added.