Save the Children is appealing for US$20 million to help around 900,000 people, including 325,000 children, who are bearing the brunt of the food crisis in Ethiopia.
Our emergency response includes providing nearly 50,000 children with life-saving high-energy foods through emergency feeding centres.
Children in some of the poorest areas of the country are already struggling to survive on wild nettles. Around 75,000 children are severely malnourished and could die if they do not receive emergency treatment.
A combination of drought and escalating food prices has left 4.6 million people urgently in need of food in Ethiopia. Around 759,000 of these are children under the age of five, a group which is particularly vulnerable to effects of malnutrition such as weight loss and disease.
With more than 800 people on the ground, Save the Children is launching a major emergency response in six of the worst-affected areas in Ethiopia to deliver life-saving health, nutrition, agricultural, sanitation and child protection assistance to suffering communities.
Our emergency work includes:
The problems the poorest households face in trying to grow food are being compounded by the dramatic increases in food prices in recent months. Many parents are both short of food and unable to afford to buy more to make up the shortfall to feed their families.
Save the Children has a wealth of emergency relief experience in all regions of Ethiopia and is active in providing emergency assistance in collaboration with government and communities, with programmes focusing on emergency nutrition, health, water and sanitation, agricultural and livelihoods, and animal health interventions in the areas most critically affected by the emergency.