Ten Children, Two Jerrycans_Regay Ali_Somalia
Refugee, migration and displacement

Drought and displacement push millions to the brink in Somalia and Ethiopia’s Somali Region

Four consecutive failed rainy seasons have driven a severe drought emergency across Somalia, pushing millions into acute food insecurity and forcing millions more from their homes. As humanitarian funding collapses, the last remaining lifelines are now at risk of being cut.  

In November 2025, Somalia’s federal government declared a national drought emergency. More than 6.5 million people, approximately one in every four Somalis, now face high levels of acute food insecurity, according to the widely used integrated food security phase classification (IPC). More than two million people are in IPC Phase 4, indicating extreme food gaps and a high risk of malnutrition and death. Over 1.84 million children under five are expected to suffer acute malnutrition in 2026 in the country.  

“We were displaced because of the drought,” says Regay Ali a displaced person who left her home in Weelbelil, around 160 kilometers from Baidoa southwest state, Somalia. She borrowed money from neighbours to reach a displacement camp in Baidoa town. “We do get water, but it’s not enough: two jerrycans – per day - for washing, bathing, cooking and drinking. Even five would not be enough. Hunger is weighing heavily on us. We were displaced because of hunger, and where we are now, we still don’t have enough.” 

Approximately 3.3 million people like Regay are internally displaced across Somalia, driven by drought and conflict, and more than 50,000 have crossed into Ethiopia in search of water and assistance according to UNHCR. Displacement sites around Baidoa and Galkayo are filling rapidly; water prices have risen beyond what most families can afford. The risk of water-borne diseases is also rising due to high numbers of people using the same limited - and at times - unsafe water sources. According to UNOCHAi, in Puntland, where Galkayo is located, approximately 170 boreholes and shallow wells were non-functional as of December 2025, severely limiting access to safe water for communities already under extreme pressure. 

At MSF’s facility in Baidoa, we are already recording an alarming number of severely malnourished children, with the hospital overwhelmed and treating patients beyond its capacity. This sharp rise at the very start of the lean season signals a worsening situation in the months ahead. 

The consequences of failed rainfalls go beyond Somalia’s borders. According to Ethiopia’s Somali Region GU (Rainy Season in East Africa) seasonal need assessment report 2025, the region is experiencing the same pattern as similar rainfall deficits have severely affected pastoral and agropastoral communities. In the south of the Ethiopia’s Somali region, particularly in Afder Zone and Shebelle Zone, dry lowlands near the Somalia border, repeated insufficient rains have resulted in livestock losses, acute water shortages and rising food insecurity. Pastoralist communities have lost their livelihoods, and competition over scarce water resources is increasing. 

“Most people in this community were rearing livestock: that was how we survived. When the rain stopped, we lost our livestock, and people fled to wherever they could find water to survive,” says Isaq Ibrahim Mohamed, a resident of Barey District in Afder Zone. “Our lives are so harsh, because there is nothing to depend on. People walk an hour or more just to fetch water from rivers, and we share it with the animals. We see diarrhoea and malnutrition.” 

During an assessment led by the Ethiopia’s Somali Region Health Bureau in collaboration with MSF in both Afder and Shebelle zones in Ethiopia’s Somali region, our teams identified urgent gaps in water and nutrition services, as local health capacity is overstretched. This situation is aggravated as more medical and humanitarian organizations withdraw due to funding shortages, while rising fuel prices linked to the escalation of conflict in the Middle East and limited supply chain movement further constrain the response.   

“From the areas we assessed with the regional health bureau, we saw a high number of malnutrition admissions in the existing facilities. What we are seeing on the ground is a reduction of the services that patients previously received, as partners scale back due to global funding cuts and shortages. This has created a heavy burden on the existing system. Water and sanitation programs are the ones most affected,” says Abdullahi Mohammad Abdi, deputy medical team leader in MSF Ethiopia. Here, MSF is collaborating with local health authorities on nutrition and wash activities in Barey district, Afder zone. MSF is also planning to expand the support to Shebelle zone. 

In Somalia, MSF has been responding to the drought emergency since December 2025. In Baidoa, more than 30 million litres of safe water have been distributed to over 21,000 people across 17 displacement sites. In Mudug, MSF is providing three million litres of drinking water, sanitation and hygiene support to nearly 11,000 people near Galkayo, including borehole rehabilitation and the distribution of hygiene kits. 

But just as the needs are increasing, global funding support has collapsed. Somalia’s Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan for 2026 is funded at only 10.9 per cent according to UNOCHA. World Food Program has cut emergency food assistance from over two million people to just over 600,000: only one in seven Somalis who needs food assistance is now receiving it. More than 300,000 people have lost access to safe water as a direct result of this underfunding, and over 70 health facilities in Puntland have closed.  

“What we are witnessing across the displacement sites is a scale of need that exceeds what any single organization can address alone,” says Mohammed Omar, MSF head of program in Somalia. “People are arriving every day, and resources are not keeping pace.  We call on the international community and governments to urgently step up their support now, with sustained and flexible funding, before more lives are lost to entirely preventable causes.” 

MSF calls on donors to immediately restore and increase funding for the humanitarian response across Somalia and Ethiopia's Somali Region, where four consecutive failed rainy seasons have pushed millions to the edge of survival. The withdrawal of aid at this moment is not inevitable. It is a choice, and it is costing lives. 

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