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Paul Anticoni

ByPaul Anticoni, Paul Anticoni

Opinion

Here is the news: Africa hurts

August 1, 2011 10:09
3 min read

Summer is generally a quiet time for the media. Parliament is in recess, many journalists (and readers) are on holiday, and the frivolous stories deemed to be newsworthy have led to the summer being known as "silly season".

Not this year, though. There is almost too much news. The scandal at News International has held sway for weeks now, and the tragedy in Norway has shocked us all. They are both big stories and clearly merit the attention of the media.

But, meanwhile, one big story has been practically ignored by the world's media though it deserves our attention however we define the term "newsworthy". I am referring to the food crisis in East Africa, now officially designated a famine by the United Nations.

Rains in Somalia, Kenya and Ethiopia have failed for two successive seasons, causing the region's worst drought for 60 years. Grain prices have skyrocketed and livestock is dying. The scale of the disaster is staggering: 10 million people are directly at risk. People are flooding across the borders of Somalia into Kenya and Ethiopia; thousands are arriving daily at the world's biggest refugee camp. Infant mortality rates are appallingly high. Mothers arrive at the camps reporting that they have had to leave weaker children behind, letting them die in order to save the rest of their family. The famine is compounded by seemingly endless civil war in Somalia. This is a region where the problems are many and the issues deep-rooted.