VOA标准英语2009年-UK Aid Agency Calls for Emergency Relief i(在线收听) |
By Selah Hennessy An international aid group says East Africa is facing the worst humanitarian crisis in 10 years. The Britain-based agency, Oxfam, says climate change is leading to extreme drought, killing cattle and threatening lives throughout the region. The agency is appealing for millions of dollars for emergency relief. Speaking to VOA from Nairobi, Oxfam's East Africa Director Paul Smith Lomas says in some regions adequate rainfall has not come for three years. The worst affected countries, he says, are Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia, and Uganda. "There are very distressing levels of malnutrition," he said. "We know that in northern Kenya, for example, the level of malnutrition amongst children is beyond what is defined as an emergency level. In Somalia almost one in six children are seen to be acutely malnourished." Lomas says rains are expected this month.
Oxfam is calling on the public to donate around $15 million to bring emergency relief to the area. But Lomas says long-term plans are also needed. He says the weather in East Africa has become unpredictable and plans need to be made to prevent humanitarian crises in the future. "Droughts used to happen something like once every 10 years or so. Now we're in a position where droughts appear to be happening every year, every second year, every third year, so far more frequent," said Lomas. "So it's very clear that we can't rely on the predictability of the weather anything like as much as people use to be able to do." The United Nations World Food Program announced last week that its services in Kenya will be cut by half in October because of insufficient funds. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2009/9/83021.html |