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WFP Appeals for Urgent Funding to Sustain Somalia Aid

World Food Programme warned Friday that food and nutrition aid in Somalia may halt by April without new funding. 4.4 million face crisis-level food insecurity and nearly one million in severe hunger. WFP seeks $95 million for March to August operations.

February 21, 2026Clash Report

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The U.N. World Food Programme (WFP), the largest humanitarian agency operating in Somalia, said on Friday that its food and nutrition assistance could “grind to a halt by April” unless fresh funding is secured. The agency is seeking $95 million to sustain operations between March and August.

Ross Smith, WFP director of emergency preparedness and response, said: “The situation is deteriorating at an alarming rate.” He added that “families have lost everything” and warned that without immediate emergency support, “conditions will worsen quickly.”

Scale Of Hunger Pressures

An estimated 4.4 million people in Somalia face crisis-level food insecurity, according to WFP assessments. Nearly one million are experiencing severe hunger. The drivers cited include failed rainy seasons, protracted conflict, and declining humanitarian funding.

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Somalia declared a national drought emergency in November following recurrent seasons of poor rainfall. The cumulative impact of climate shocks has eroded household resilience, disrupted agricultural cycles, and intensified displacement patterns.

Aid Reductions Already Underway

WFP said it has already scaled back assistance sharply due to funding shortages. Earlier this year, the agency supported approximately 2.2 million people. That figure has now dropped to just over 600,000 - a reduction of more than 70 percent.

Nutrition programs targeting pregnant and breastfeeding women, as well as young children, have also been “sharply reduced,” the agency said. Such programs are typically prioritized in drought responses due to elevated malnutrition risks among vulnerable groups.

Smith warned that if “already reduced assistance ends,” the humanitarian, security, and economic consequences would be “devastating,” with effects extending “far beyond Somalia’s borders.”

Reuters

Echoes Of The 2022 Crisis

The agency drew parallels to 2022, when Somalia came close to famine conditions before large-scale international funding mobilization helped avert catastrophe. WFP officials cautioned that the current trajectory reflects a similar convergence of climatic stress and resource constraints.

While famine thresholds have not been declared in the latest assessment, the deterioration in food security indicators and assistance coverage signals heightened vulnerability, particularly in drought-affected rural regions and conflict-impacted zones.

Operational And Stability Implications

Humanitarian agencies increasingly frame funding shortfalls not only as relief challenges but as broader stability risks. Food insecurity in Somalia intersects with displacement, livelihood loss, and security fragility in a region already confronting insurgency threats and cross-border humanitarian pressures.

Interruptions to aid flows can amplify local tensions, accelerate migration, and strain state capacity.

WFP’s warning highlights the structural dependence of emergency food systems on donor continuity amid shifting global aid priorities.

WFP Appeals for Urgent Funding to Sustain Somalia Aid