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Meet the doctors and nurses behind the fight against starvation in Somaliland


Saturday May 6, 2017

In Somaliland, medical workers are in a desperate race against time to save millions of children from death.

The children are at risk of starvation in South Sudan, Somalia, Yemen and Nigeria. According to Carolyn Miles, the CEO of Save the Children, of the 20 million people at risk of starvation across the four nations, 10 million of them are children younger than 18 years old.

ABC News anchor David Muir and his team recently traveled with Miles to isolated villages deep in the deserts of Somaliland, a self-proclaimed independent country in northern Somalia. Villagers said that it has not rained in the country in at least three years.

At the Burao Nutrition Stabilization Center in Somaliland, Muir and his team met with Dr. Yousef Ali.

According to Ali, the country is on the verge of famine.

"That's what I believe. That's what I believe," said Ali, the center's regional director of health. "We're seeing it here. I don't need a witness to prove it."

International refugee agencies say a humanitarian crisis is imminent.
At one hospital, a nurse told Muir that a little girl named Hamda was so weak, the medical staff feared she'd die minutes after arriving at the center. Hamda was still holding on when ABC News arrived.

Dr. Jama Mohamed Ahmed told Muir he sees children like Hamda every day.

"They are dying ... due to severe dehydration," Ahmed said.

Yet the doctors and nurses in Somaliland continue to fight for their patients, even while conditions continue to worsen.
 



 





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