4 African states ‘running out of special food for starving children’

Children stand outside Adi Harush Eritrean refugee camp in the Mai Tsberi town in Tigray, Ethiopia. (File/Reuters)
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Updated 28 August 2025
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4 African states ‘running out of special food for starving children’

  • British-based aid group says supplies are getting dangerously low in Nigeria, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan

NAIROBI: At least four African countries will run out of specialized lifesaving food for severely malnourished children in the next three months due to shortages caused by aid cuts, Save the Children said.

Supplies were getting dangerously low in Nigeria, Kenya, Somalia, and South Sudan of high-energy biscuits, peanut-based Plumpy’Nut paste, and other treatments known as Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food, RUTF, the British-based aid group said.
“At a time when global hunger is skyrocketing, the funding that could save children’s lives has been cut because of recent aid cuts,” Yvonne Arunga, the charity’s regional director for East and Southern Africa, said.
Save the Children did not name specific donors or funding reductions in its statement. The US has slashed humanitarian assistance this year, and other Western powers have also been cutting funding as part of longer-term reductions. 
Some clinics in the four African countries were turning to less-effective treatments for malnourished children, Save the Children said.

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Some clinics in the four African countries are turning to less-effective treatments formalnourished children, Save the Children says.

In Kenya, where an estimated 2.8 million people are estimated to have experienced high levels of acute food insecurity during this year’s March-to-May rainy season, stocks are expected to run out in October, it added.
The statement said RUTF supplies in Nigeria, Somalia, and South Sudan would run out within three months.
Government officials from the four countries did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Globally, funding cuts are expected to cut off nutrition treatment this year to 15.6 million people across 18 countries, including 2.3 million severely malnourished children, Save the Children said. 
Cuts by the US left 60,000 to 66,000 metric tonnes of food, including 1,100 tonnes of fortified biscuits, stranded in warehouses for months earlier this year, Reuters reported in May. The US government later agreed to hand over 600 tonnes of the biscuits to the UN World Food Programme, but stated that it would have to destroy nearly 500 tonnes, which had expired the previous month. 
Earlier this month, the US State Department announced it would provide $93 million for RUTF supplies to treat more than 800,000 children suffering from severe acute malnutrition in 13 countries, including Nigeria, Sudan, Kenya and Democratic Republic of Congo.


‘Stay out of our politics,’ Australia’s former PM tells Netenyahu

Former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull talks to the UK’s Channel 4 News. (Screenshot)
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‘Stay out of our politics,’ Australia’s former PM tells Netenyahu

  • Turnbull slams Israeli prime minister in Channel 4 interview
  • Netanyahu’s attempts to link Bondi massacre to Palestine policy ‘unhelpful’

LONDON: Australia’s former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull has told Benjamin Netanyahu to “stay out of our politics” after the Israeli leader linked the recognition of Palestine to the Bondi Beach mass shooting.
Fifteen people were killed when a father and son opened fire on people celebrating the Jewish festival of Hanukkah on Sunday evening.
Netanyahu said Australia's decision to recognize Palestinian statehood earlier this year had poured “oil on the fire of antisemitism” in the weeks leading up to the attack.
When asked about the comments on Channel 4 News in the UK, Turnbull said: “I would respectfully say to Bibi Netanyahu, please stay out of our politics.
“If you've got that kind of commentary to make, you are not helping … and it’s not right.”
Turnbull backed the current Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s government for recogizing Palestinian statehood in August along with many other Western nations as international pressure grew over the war in Gaza.
In a speech after the Bondi attack, Netanyahu said: “A few months ago I wrote to the Australian prime minister that your policy is pouring oil on the fire of antisemitism.”
He added: “Antisemitism is a cancer that spreads when leaders are silent.”
Turnbull said the vast majority of countries in the world recognize Palestine as a state and support a two-state solution to the conflict.
He said Australia is a very successful multicultural society that can not allow foreign conflicts to be imported.
“We need to ensure that that wars in the Middle East or wars in any other part of the world are not fought out here,” he said. “Trying to link them, which is what Netanyahu has done, is not helpful and that's exactly the reverse of what we want to achieve.”
Albanese also rejected Netanyahu’s comments when asked about whether there was a link between his approach to Palestine and the Bondi attack.
“Overwhelmingly, most of the world recognizes a two-state solution as being the way forward in the Middle East,” he told broadcasters. “This is a moment of national unity where we need to come together … We need to wrap our arms around members of the Jewish community who are going through an extraordinarily difficult period.”
Albanese visited in hospital the man hailed a s hero for disarming one of the attackers.
Ahmed Al-Ahmed, a shopkeeper who moved to Australia from Syria in 2007, is recovering after tackling the gunman.