Somali National News Agency
So
Ar
Search
  • Home
  • Local News
    Local NewsShow More
    Deputy Land Forces Commander Visits Hiiraan, Urges Intensified Operations Against Al-Shabaab
    March 17, 2026
    King Salman Relief Center Launches Zakat al-Fitr Distribution Project in Somalia
    March 17, 2026
    Banadir Governor Distributes Eid Support to People with Special Needs in Mogadishu
    March 17, 2026
    Karaan District Secures Third Place in National Ramadan Quiz Competition
    March 17, 2026
    Justice Minister Receives Warm Welcome from Diaspora During Visit to London
    March 17, 2026
  • World News
    World NewsShow More
    Eight bodies recovered in Libya, Greece as Mediterranean death toll rises
    February 22, 2026
    Turkish President Erdoğan Visits Ethiopia to Strengthen Africa Ties, Reaffirms Support for Somalia
    February 17, 2026
    55 Years of Win-Win: Nigeria and China’s Growing Partnership
    February 5, 2026
    Saudi Arabia Ranks Second Globally in Humanitarian Aid in 2025
    January 19, 2026
    High-speed trains collide after one derails in southern Spain, killing at least 21
    January 19, 2026
  • Articles
    ArticlesShow More
    The Green Code: How China’s New Environmental Blueprint Offers Strategic Lessons for the Horn of Africa
    March 12, 2026
    Completion of Somalia’s Constitution Marks Historic Milestone in State-Building
    March 8, 2026
    Opinion : At midnight in Mogadishu, I Saw the same future I once observed elsewhere
    March 3, 2026
    Nationwide Labour Rights Education Initiative Rolled Out by Somali Trade Unions with UN Backing
    March 3, 2026
    Premium Cargo: The Dignity Deficit and Exploitation on the Mogadishu-Nairobi Route
    February 20, 2026
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    America’s Tariff Weaponization: An Economic Analysis of 500% Tariffs and the Inevitable Bipolar Bifurcation
    October 19, 2025
    Somalia Unveils the Blueprint for a Modern and Sustainable Mogadishu
    December 21, 2024
    Djibouti Launches $57.4 Million Youth Entrepreneurship Project to Combat Climate Change
    November 25, 2024
    FM meets Minister of Investment of Saudi Arabia
    October 28, 2024
    President Hassan Sheikh Inaugurates New LPG Storage Center in Mogadishu
    May 12, 2024
  • Sports
    SportsShow More
    Somalia Falls to Oman in Penalty Shootout After Strong Performance in Arab Cup Qualifier
    November 26, 2025
    Somalia’s U-17 National Team Concludes CECAFA Campaign with a Strong Victory
    November 24, 2025
    Somalia, Sudan, Djibouti, South Sudan set eyes on FIFA Arab Cup
    November 24, 2025
    Somali Ambassador to Kenya Congratulates Dekadaha FC on Historic CAF Confederation Cup Victory
    September 28, 2025
    Somalia’s Dekadaha FC faces Sudan’s Alzamala Sports Club in Nairobi
    September 20, 2025
  • Tenders
    TendersShow More
Reading: Ethiopia’s Tigray region is now peaceful, but extreme hunger afflicts its children
Share
Font ResizerAa
Somali National News AgencySomali National News Agency
  • SOMALI
  • ARABIC
Search
  • Home
  • Local News
  • World News
  • Articles
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Tenders
Follow US
©2023 || All rights reserved SONNA
Somali National News Agency > Blog > World News > Ethiopia’s Tigray region is now peaceful, but extreme hunger afflicts its children
World News

Ethiopia’s Tigray region is now peaceful, but extreme hunger afflicts its children

By Khadarow
Last updated: March 10, 2024
5 Min Read
Share

NEBAR HADNET, Ethiopia (AP) — The cruel realities of war and drought seem to have merged for Tinseu Hiluf, a widow living in the arid depths of Ethiopia’s Tigray region who is raising four children left behind by her sister’s recent death in childbirth.

A two-year war between federal troops and regional forces killed one of her own sons, the rest of whom are already adults. And now, a lack of food stemming from the region’s drought has left the youngest of the children she is raising malnourished.

She tries to forage seeds among the scarce greenery of the desert’s yellow, rocky landscape. But she recently resorted to traveling to the nearby Finarwa health center in southeastern Tigray to try to keep the 1-year-old baby alive.

“When hungry, we eat anything from the desert,” she said. “Otherwise, nothing.”

She joined several other mothers seeking help at the center in the remote administrative area of Nebar Hadnet. A mother of five complained that she had no breastmilk for her eight-month-old baby. Another with 1-year-old twins said she needed sachets of baby food to keep “my babies alive.”

Tigray is now peaceful but war’s effects linger, compounded by drought and a level of aid mismanagement that caused the U.N. and the U.S. to temporarily suspend deliveries last year.

Once-lush fields lie barren. Mothers, faces etched with worry, watch helplessly as their children weaken from malnutrition. Nearly 400 people died of starvation in Tigray and the neighboring Amhara region in the six months leading to January, the national ombudsman revealed in January, a rare admission of hunger-related deaths by a federal government.

Most of those deaths were recorded in Tigray, home to 5.5 million people.

Until the signing of a peace agreement in November 2022, the region was the scene of a deadly war between federal troops and forces loyal to the region’s now-ousted ruling party. But months after the end of the conflict, the U.N. and the U.S. halted food aid for Tigray because of a massive scheme by Ethiopian officials to steal humanitarian grain.

An inadequate growing season followed.

Persistent insecurity meant only 49% of Tigray’s farmland was planted during the main planting season last year, according to an assessment by U.N. agencies, NGOs and the regional authorities, and seen by the AP. Crop production in these areas was only 37% of the expected total because of drought. In some areas the proportion was as low as 2%, that assessment said.

The poor harvest prompted Tigray’s authorities to warn of an “unfolding famine” that could match the famine of 1984-5, which killed hundreds of thousands of people across northern Ethiopia, unless the aid response was scaled up. Food deliveries to Tigray in the second half of last year, but only a small fraction of needy people in Tigray are receiving food aid, humanitarian workers say.

Finarwa, a farming community of about 13,000 people, is among the worst-hit places.

The town’s health center still has war-damaged equipment and some of its rooms appear abandoned. Tadesse Mehari, the officer in charge of the clinic, said the lack of food at homes in the community has forced children to flee and beg in nearby towns.

“Nothing here to eat. So, for the sake of getting food and to save their lives, they are displaced anywhere, far from here,” he said. “So, in this area, a lot of people are suffering. They are starved. They are dying due to the absence of food.”

Some local leaders, feeling helpless, have been turning their own people away

Hayale Gebrekedian, a Nebar Hadnet district leader for five years, listened to the pleas of villagers who streamed into his office one recent afternoon. A widow named Serawit Wolde with 10 children was in tears as she recounted that five of them were falling ill from hunger.

“Please, any help,” she told Hayale.

Hayale told the woman he had nothing to give. “There simply isn’t any (food),” he said.

Hayale later told the AP, “This place used to be a source of hope, even for those displaced by the war. We had enough for everyone, but now we can’t even feed ourselves.”

Source: AP

Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp Email Copy Link Print

MORE NEWS

A Challenge to Somali Men and a Wake-Up Call for Women

ArticlesCulture
December 8, 2025

Deputy Land Forces Commander Visits Hiiraan, Urges Intensified Operations Against Al-Shabaab

The Deputy Commander of the Somali National Army Land Forces, General Cabdullahi Cirro, accompanied by…

March 17, 2026

Nasra Bashir Ali: Women can do like men, just try as I do

Mogadishu{SONNA}-:The prominent Somali journalist Nasra Bashir Ali, urged girls to depend on their selves and…

May 31, 2020

Weekly News Buletin Ministry of information, Culture and Tourism 1 August 2019

Weekly News Buletin Ministry of information, Culture and Tourism 1 August 2019 Bulletin Vol 10

September 2, 2019

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

At least 2 killed in an open pit mine, more than 50 missing

BEIJING (SONNA) — An open pit mine collapsed in China’s northern Inner Mongolia region on Wednesday, killing at least two…

World News
February 23, 2023

Saudi Arabia, UAE discuss regional developments, bilateral ties

ABU DHABI (SONNA):Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Tuesday discussed regional developments and bilateral relations with Abu Dhabi Crown…

NewsWorld News
December 8, 2021

Qatar strongly condemns bombing of a bus carrying soccer team in Somalia

The State of Qatar has expressed its strong condemnation and denunciation of the bombing that targeted a bus carrying a…

Local NewsWorld News
July 31, 2021

Floods in Somalia affect nearly 214,000 people: UN

Mogadishu (SONNA)-Somalia’s ongoing seasonal rains have affected nearly 214,000 people, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)…

NewsWorld News
November 17, 2020

Somali National News Agency established in 1964. It is one of the main pillars of the Ministry of Information, Culture, and Tourism.

  • Home
  • Local News
  • World News
  • Articles
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Tenders
  • SNTV
  • RADIO MOGADISHU
  • DALKA JOURNAL
  • TOURISM DEPARTMENT

Follow US: 

  • MoICT
  • VILLA SOMALIA
  • OPM SOMALIA

All rights reserved SONNA

©2023

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?