Sunday, June 25, 2006

Starving season By Samuel Loewenberg

World hunger is by far the worst crisis humanity faces, and it's getting worse -- especially in Africa. Until the West overcomes its apathy and works toward long-term solutions, millions of people -- many of them children -- will continue to die unnecessarily.

In a dust-blown clinic on the southern edge of the Sahara desert, scores of women crowd into a bunkerlike structure, clutching children with emaciated limbs and listless eyes. They have come to have their babies weighed. It is a tradition known to every parent. Here, the tradition has become a nightmare.

The medical staff take an infant named Bintow from the arms of his mother and place him in a black harness attached to a hand-held scale. He shrieks at the sudden discomfort, thrashing his arms and legs. His stomach bulges, all of his ribs are visible. The child is 10 months old. He weighs 9 pounds.

Bintow is lucky, as far as it goes. He is so badly underweight that he will receive an emergency ration: two weeks' worth of enriched cornmeal and oil. Only a third of the estimated 200 children at the center that day will receive care. There is simply not enough to go around.more...

3 Comments:

Blogger R U S S said...

I recently posted on world hunger.

You might be interested.

b blessed
russ

1:52 PM  
Blogger R U S S said...

I recently posted on world hunger.

You might be interested.

b blessed
russ

1:53 PM  
Blogger kari said...

Thank you .. war has taken our collective eye off human degradation.. thank you for your post.

6:27 PM  

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