Kenya food crisis

Poor rains over four seasons had killed livestock, withered crops and dried up water sources in Kenya in 2009. This, combined with a rise in food prices, resulted in a chronic food crisis. With your support we reached 60,237 people with life-saving aid.

Gamina holds her two-year-old child Abukar as his arm circumference is measured by a Save the Children worker who’s identifying malnourished children in their community in north-east Kenya.

4 million people were on the brink of starvation. One in three children in parts of north-east Kenya were suffering from acute malnutrition, according to our nutrition survey carried out in March 2009.

We spent £251,000 from our Children’s Emergency Fund, which allows us to respond immediately to a crisis, and launched our appeal. Through your generosity we raised £630,739.

How we helped

  • We set up more than 83 remote outreach sites in north-east Kenya that provided over 11,900 malnourished children and women with supplementary, nutritious food, medicines and medical treatment to bring them back to health.
  • Many pastoralists’ livestock – which they rely upon for survival – died in the drought. We provided food vouchers to the most vulnerable families, who could then exchange the vouchers for food. They gave pastoralists access to high-protein foods like milk and meat, reaching around 6,000 people.
  • We also provided the poorest 12,000 pastoralist families with cash transfers so they weren’t forced to sell their remaining livestock, which are often their only assets.

Even though the appeal has closed, we still continue to help children and their families in Pakistan through our work. For example, we help protect more than 100,000 vulnerable children in Dadaab refugee camp, the world's largest refugee camp, where around 300,000 Somalis live.

You can help us reach other children in emergencies by supporting our Children’s Emergency Fund

Thank you.

Photostory of our response