Source: IRIN
Even as the UN announced that famine had spread to more areas in  south-central Somalia, reports from the capital, Mogadishu, indicate  that the suffering of the drought-displaced, mostly women and children,  was increasing, with reports that government forces and Al-Shabab  militia were hampering aid distribution in areas under their control. 
 "The situation is such that most of those reaching Mogadishu are  mainly women and children because most of the men have remained in the  Al-Shabab-held areas since they fear being arrested by government forces  for allegedly being pro-Al Shabab,” Su'di Mohamed Ali, director of  administration and finance in the Ministry of Women Development and  Family Affairs, told IRIN. "Al-Shabab itself often prevents men from  going to government-controlled areas." 
 
 Anbiya Abdulkadir Osman, a mother of five, told IRIN her husband was  shot dead on 27 July by an Al-Shabab militiaman near Afgoye "after he  refused to obey the militiamen not to go along with us, his family. Now I  am left alone; I live on the street without food, shelter or water. I  pray to God to send help my way." 
 
 However, Ali Barre Hirsi, also known as Ali-Gab, the commander of  the Central Police Division of Mogadishu, said: "We have heard from some  members of the parliament that Al-Shabab forces the IDPs to go to 50km,  but we do not have any more information about it. Of course our duty is  to control the security of the government-controlled regions such as  Mogadishu and we capture the suspected persons and send them for trial.  So far, we have arrested several persons who were accompanying the  drought-displaced people and we transferred them to the intelligence  agency to investigate allegations that they are part of Al-Shabab. They  will be brought before the judiciary as soon as the investigations are  complete." 
 
 Dismissing as baseless claims that government forces were diverting  food aid, Hirsi said the police did not interfere with aid distribution,  it "only secured the IDP camps". An IDP had told IRIN that government  forces were grabbing the food aid provided by aid organizations. 
 
 Worst humanitarian crisis 
 
 On 3 August, the UN announced that three new areas in southern  Somalia - parts of Middle Shabelle region, the Afgoye Corridor and parts  of Mogadishu - had deteriorated into a famine situation. 
 
 The Afgoye Corridor, 25km west of Mogadishu, has been hosting an  estimated 400,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) since 2007. 
 
 According to the Famine and Early Warning System Network (FEWS NET), the drought situation is the most severe humanitarian  crisis in the world today and Africa’s worst food security crisis since  Somalia’s 1991/1992 famine. 
 
 On 20 July, the UN declared famine in Lower Shabelle and southern Bakool regions in southern Somalia, warning that the situation could worsen because  the drought had been compounded by insecurity, lack of aid and food  price inflation. 
 
 Another round of the nutrition survey expected to begin on 8 August  is likely to confirm that the famine had spread to Gedo and Bay regions  in south-central Somalia, said Grainne Moloney, the chief technical  adviser of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s Food Security and  Nutritional Analysis Unit (FSNAU) for Somalia. 
 
 FSNAU’s last survey recorded global acute malnutrition rates (GAM)  of more than 50 percent in some parts of Bay and Gedo, she said. “The  situation has probably deteriorated there.” A GAM value of more than 10  percent generally identifies an emergency.  The malnutrition data and the rates of crude mortality recorded in  Somalia are the worst anywhere in the world in the past 20 years,  confirmed Moloney, “except for maybe North Korea [in the 1990s]; we  don’t really have good data from there”. 
 
 FSNAU confirmed on 3 August that the famine had spread, based on  outstanding nutrition data. “We had been awaiting results from those  areas,” she said. Delivering aid to all the regions now part of the  famine zone besides the Mogadishu IDP community remains problematic  because of Al-Shabab’s control. 
 
 Moloney appealed to the donor community to help keep the aid flowing  for at least the next 18 months. “The next rains expected in October  will only lead to harvests in January [2012] – people have lost all  their livestock, food prices are extremely high – it will take at least  three or four seasons for them to recover. The famine conditions are not  going anywhere soon.” 
 
|  Photo: UN Photo/Stuart Price | 
| A man arrives at an IDP camp in Mogadishu: The UN has delcared famine in five areas of southern Somalia | 
 Officials of local civil society organizations have been trying to  find shelter and food for the displaced arriving in Mogadishu. 
 
 "Here [the second bridge road in Mogadishu] we have about 250  families; we have distributed shelter for 100 people and we continue to  seek shelter for the remaining 150 families," Mohamed Abdi Dhodi, an  official of the Abyan Organization, a local NGO, said. "In terms of  food, we feed them once a day. We use at least three bags [50kg each] of  rice a day yet we only received 25 bags from international aid  organizations. Our problem is that we do not have medicine for the sick  children and mothers." 
 
 Dadaab deteriorates 
 
 In refugee camps in Dadaab, northeastern Kenya, housing an estimated  400,000 Somalis, the situation is fast deteriorating as hundreds keep  arriving daily, stretching basic services at the already congested  camps. 
 
 Long-term camp residents, who have set up small businesses, told  IRIN food prices had more than doubled and their customer numbers were  shrinking. 
 
 "Life is becoming very difficult every day; we are now buying 1kg of  sugar at Ksh120 [US$1.20] yet it used to be Ksh70 [$0.80] just the  other day," Omar Jelle, a father of one, who also takes care of eight  relatives, told IRIN. 
 
 The start of Ramadan - the Muslim holy month of fasting - in early  August has made matters worse for many refugee families who have to take  in more arrivals daily. 
 
 "Every family is hosting at least two [new families] in a compound  that was meant to accommodate only one family," a refugee said. "As the  new arrivals wait to be registered and get food, they share the little  that older refugees have, even the little water available." 
 
 At the same time, local Kenyan communities living around the Dadaab  camps have expressed concern over pressure on land as refugee numbers  continue to rise. The locals say the new arrivals are settling on land  they use to graze their livestock. 
 
 Moreover, the locals have complained about lack of support from aid  agencies assisting the refugees. "We expect to be considered because we  are also affected by the drought," Jama Ali, a local resident of Dadaab,  told IRIN.