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    • News
    • Ethiopia

    Hundreds killed in health facility, school in Ethiopia's Afar region

    Over 200 people sheltering at a health facility and school in the Afar region of Ethiopia were reported to have been killed in attacks by armed forces. This included more than 100 children.

    By Sara Jerving // 09 August 2021
    UNICEF-provided supplies for refugees in Ethiopia. Photo by: © UNICEF / Leul Kinfu

    Over 200 people sheltering at a health facility and school in the Afar region of Ethiopia were reported to have been killed in attacks by armed forces. This includes more than 100 children, UNICEF said in a statement released on Monday.

    The conflict in Tigray, which erupted last November, continues to escalate, recently spilling over into the neighboring Afar and Amhara regions, adding more than 100,000 newly displaced people to the 2 million people already forced to flee their homes.

    Food, health services targeted: Throughout the conflict, health facilities have been deliberately and systematically targeted. A previous assessment by Médecins Sans Frontières in March found that of 106 health facilities visited, only 13% were functioning normally.

    The majority were damaged and looted. The government recently suspended MSF from providing health services in the country after a state agency reportedly accused the organization of disseminating “misinformation,” among other things. MSF has since denied these claims.

    Severe acute malnutrition cases rise fourfold among children in Tigray

    In areas that aid workers can’t reach, at least 33,000 children “are severely malnourished and face imminent death without immediate help," says UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore.

    The conflict has also led to massive food insecurity, with an estimated 400,000 people living in famine-like conditions. UNICEF expects the number of children suffering from life-threatening malnutrition will increase tenfold over the next year. The agency said that during the attacks in Afar, food supplies were also destroyed.

    “The food security and nutrition crisis is taking place amid extensive, systematic destruction of health and other services that children and communities rely on for survival,” UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore said in the statement.

    Dire situations for those that fled: Those that fled Ethiopia, living in refugee camps in eastern Sudan, are also experiencing “increasingly dire living conditions,” according to a press release issued on Monday from the International Committee of the Red Cross. The organization said that food, clean water, shelter, and sanitation are “desperately insufficient” with an increase in cases of malnutrition, malaria, and hepatitis E.

    • Global Health
    • Ethiopia
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    About the author

    • Sara Jerving

      Sara Jervingsarajerving

      Sara Jerving is a Senior Reporter at Devex, where she covers global health. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, The Wall Street Journal, VICE News, and Bloomberg News among others. Sara holds a master's degree from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism where she was a Lorana Sullivan fellow. She was a finalist for One World Media's Digital Media Award in 2021; a finalist for the Livingston Award for Young Journalists in 2018; and she was part of a VICE News Tonight on HBO team that received an Emmy nomination in 2018. She received the Philip Greer Memorial Award from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 2014.

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