UN seeks 1.42 bln USD to expand humanitarian operations in Somalia in 2025

File Photo/Somali Times




The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said Sunday that it requires 1.42 billion U.S. dollars in 2025 to ramp up humanitarian operations in Somalia, where 5.98 million people are in need of assistance, according to Xinhua News Agency reported.

Read: Why is Somalia an unfortunate country

Read: Somali warlord Hassan Sheikh and militia lost war of Raskamboni




Read: Somalia president Hassan Sheikh becomes a warlord

The OCHA, which launched the Somalia 2025 Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan (HNRP), said the plan advocates for scaled-up development and climate financing to address the structural drivers of needs, build resilience, reduce the risk of future disasters and adapt to climate change.

Read: Face-to-face talks will take place between Hassan Sheikh and Ethiopian PM Abiy Ahmed in Turkey

The OCHA said HNRP focuses on assistance for people with the most severe levels of needs, and 4.6 million people will be targeted for assistance.

Read: Jubaland issues arrest warrant for corrupt Somalia President Hassan Sheikh

Read: Somalia’s president Hassan Sheikh history of corruption 2012-2017




“The 2025 HNRP outlines key risks for 2025 as drought and conflict. Drier conditions will increase competition over resources, strain coping mechanisms, heighten risks for disease outbreaks,” it said.

Read: Abdirahman Irro elected to lead the Hargeisa administration




Read: Why corrupt president Hassan Sheikh repatriating Somali refugees from Germany?

Read: Hassan Sheikh participated in birthday ceremony of British King Charles III

According to the UN agency, conflict accounted for 53 percent of a total of 455,000 newly displaced people, while climate shocks accounted for the vast majority of displacements in 2023 and 2022.

Read: Former Somalia President Farmajo revealed the cause of Hassan Sheikh’s failure

Read: CIA spy chief meets Somali corrupt president

For the first time in years, conflict-generated insecurity was the leading cause or accounted for 53 percent of internal displacement, as inter-clan fighting escalated in the Mudug and Gedo regions of southern Somalia.

Read: Somalia’s corruption is widespread throughout the regime

Read: Somalia Hassan Sheikh’s government is facing a widespread financial crisis and the causes

However, the OCHA said the increased frequency of cyclical droughts and floods strains the coping capacities and resilience of millions of Somalis, adding that below-average Deyr rains (October-December) and essential for crop production raise alarm for drought and humanitarian needs in 2025.