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Aid official describes starving Eritrean children too weak to walk
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Yonas Mehari  
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 More options Jul 14 2009, 9:46 pm
From: Yonas Mehari <ymeh...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 14 Jul 2009 21:46:19 -0400
Local: Tues, Jul 14 2009 9:46 pm
Subject: Aid official describes starving Eritrean children too weak to walk

ERITREA-FAMINE (CORRECTED) Jul-14-2009 (740 words) xxxi

*Aid official describes starving Eritrean children too weak to walk*

By Carmen Blanco
Catholic News Service <http://www.catholicnews.com/>

WASHINGTON (CNS) -- A Catholic aid official who just returned from Eritrea
described children too weak to walk and orphanage staffers overwhelmed by
the number of children being dropped off because their families cannot feed
them.

"Unless you've been there and seen it, you cannot understand the gravity of
the situation," Gabriel Delmonaco, U.S. national secretary for the Catholic
Near East Welfare Association, told Catholic News
Service<http://www.catholicnews.com/>in a phone interview in mid-July.
"We are trying to save one life at a
time."

The worsening famine in Eritrea is prompting the Catholic Near East Welfare
Association, a papal humanitarian agency, to launch an emergency appeal for
$100,000 to help feed 5,000 starving families for about six months.

Nearly half of Eritrea's population is undernourished and more than 85,000
children are malnourished as a result of widespread famine, reported Amnesty
International. Eritrea's 2002 drought resulted in severe water shortages and
an almost complete failure of that year's harvest. Since then, rainfall has
been inadequate, and last year's drought worsened conditions.

Delmonaco, who visited Eritrea in July, told CNS about the poor conditions
existing in villages, orphanages and schools. The famine is particularly
devastating to those living in remote villages where agriculture is the
primary source of survival, he said.

During a visit to one village, Delmonaco was invited into a mother's hut,
where he saw firsthand the extent to which children were suffering.

"The children were too weak to talk, too weak to walk and so weak they could
not even swat the flies flying around them," he said.

Delmonaco said several priests told him of their concern for the dramatic
increase in the number of funerals resulting from the famine.

"Women, children and the elderly have been the ones most affected by the
famine," he told CNS.

In one orphanage, Delmonaco noticed part of the roof was collapsing.

"Every time it rains, part of the roof comes down," he said. "And,
ironically, though they have a well, the water is salty so they cannot drink
it."

In the capital, Asmara, one orphanage is hosting 38 children, and in
Segeneyti large numbers of orphans are being dropped off by relatives who
cannot care for them.

"The sisters cannot do it; they don't know what to do," Delmonaco said,
referring to the nuns who run the orphanages.

Lack of food and water is taking a toll on one particular agricultural
school. Where fields were once cultivated and the vineyard produced
30,000-40,000 bottles of red and white wine, starving livestock has halted
the production of milk and yogurt and wine production has ceased.

"The rector of the school said the only thing they can do is wait,"
Delmonaco told CNS.

After Eritrea's 1993 independence from Ethiopia, humanitarian organizations
were eager to help the new country. After its 1998-2000 border war with
Ethiopia, the Eritrean government adopted an absolutist regime with strict
guidelines for foreigners. Some nonprofits have been expelled from the
country.

Although the famine is spreading, news about it is not. Delmonaco said he
noticed little representation of foreign media in the country, with those
present restricted to Asmara. He told CNS that internal movement within the
country is very difficult because of the numerous military checkpoints.

The money Catholic Near East raises will be distributed to Catholic networks
that will provide families with small grants to buy food. One hundred
dollars can buy 100 pounds of sorghum, a replacement for grain that is
resilient to the drought.

"It can provide energy and nutrition and allow a family to survive for three
months," Delmonaco said.

He said the agency's humanitarian effort is modest but, "at the moment,
about 1,000 families are in critical condition, and they will die if they
don't immediately receive help."

Founded in 1926 by Pope Pius XI, the Catholic Near East Welfare Association
is an agency of the Vatican providing support to the churches and peoples of
the Middle East, Northeast Africa, India and Eastern Europe. Its works
include care for needy children; religious formation sponsorship programs;
village redevelopment projects; health care and education; and public
awareness and interreligious dialogue activities.

- - -

Editor's Note: The Catholic Near East Welfare Association is accepting
donations for the Emergency Eritrea project through its Web site,
http://www.cnewa.org/generalpg-verus.aspx?pageID=445; or by mail to: 1011
First Ave., 15th Floor, New York, NY 10022-4195.

Canadians may donate online at:
http://www.cnewacanada.ca/generalpg-verca.aspx?pageID=446; or by mail to:
1247 Kilborn Place, Ottawa, Ontario, K1H 6K9, Canada.

END

--
Yonas Mehari
~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-~~~-
Join our Eritrean Human Rights at
http://eritreanhumanrights.org/memb.pdf

"The sun does not forget a village just because it is small”


 
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