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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World

Appeal to fight hunger in east Africa, and the US cuts that pose a threat to women

A malnourished child at a regional hospital in south-western Somalia
A malnourished child at a regional hospital in south-western Somalia. There is little sign of aid arriving for the country’s 6 million people in urgent need of food assistance. Photograph: Tony Karumba/AFP/Getty Images

The Disasters Emergency Committee has launched a major appeal to help the 16 million people facing hunger across east Africa. Ben Quinn visited the self-declared state of Somaliland, reporting on the 6 million people in urgent need of food assistance in Somalia: in the towns and villages he visited there was little sign of help arriving. In South Sudan, where famine has been declared, Simona Foltyn found aid delivery under threat from armed fighters.

At the Commission on the Status of Women in New York, Liz Ford reported that President Trump’s reintroduction of the global gag rule places the US side-by-side with some of the world’s worst women’s rights abusers. Activists warn that the gag rule will harm tens of thousands of vulnerable women.

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Opinion

Kevin Watkins: Famine warning signs were clear so why are 20 million lives now at risk?

Multimedia

International Women’s Day: how can you support the global strike? – video

Drought brings savage halt to nomadic way of life in Somalia – in pictures

What you said:

On Kevin Watkins’ opinion piece about famine, Marjallche wrote:

Maybe it would be necessary to switch from short-time activism to the underlying problems. For one, it is an arid region with limited agricultural options. Yet the population soars thanks to medical aid. It appears to me that without education and women’s rights to family planning, the overcrowding will lead to a situation where none but the best harvests will feed the people, and the fights for land and influence will perpetuate.

Top tweet

Highlight from the blogosphere

Clare Cummings writes for the Overseas Development Institute on how best to tackle the root causes of migration, based on research with Eritrean refugees in Ethiopia.

And finally

Poverty matters will return in two weeks with another roundup of the latest news and comment. In the meantime, keep up to date on the Global development website. On Twitter, follow @gdndevelopment and the team – @LizFordGuardian, @BenQuinn75 and @karenmcveigh1 – and join Global development on Facebook.

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