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A severe shortfall in aid funding is putting thousands of children at risk as Ethiopia deals with its worst drought emergency in decades. Halko, a mother of four children, is from Fentale, one of the worst-affected districts. Her baby son, also named Fentale (which means “Great One” after the mountain he was born under), has been diagnosed with Severe Acute Malnutrition. This is the situation for her family, in her own words.

“My name is Halko. I am married. I have four children, including Fentale (my youngest boy, pictured below). Due to the absence of rain, the conditions here are so hot and dry. The trees give no shade. It’s really affecting us, this drought.”

“We are facing a real problem. Our livestock have no grass to eat; they are not able to produce milk. Our children also suffer because of the drought… they don`t get any curd or milk.”

“There`s been two years of no rain where we haven`t been able to harvest crops. We have no vegetables, only maize. We used to buy cabbage and potatoes from the market. We cooked and ate it during normal times but there`s no more now.”

“We eat maize porridge, with only maize and water. We are not eating more than this. In the past, we`d add different things like onion or rice, and we may have got tomato or oil sometimes. Now we can`t even get oil to cook with.”

“My youngest boy Fentale is three months old. He cries and tries to get milk from me but there is none. If I`m able to give some milk, he`s better. If he gets some milk, he`ll sleep.”

“I fear for the future. I don`t know whether Fentale will pass through this situation and grow to be a man. We are hoping he`ll recover his health. We don`t know if this will happen. The whole night I hold him and sit with him. If our child recovers I will be thankful.”

“We need food. That`s our most serious problem. Because of this drought, we have a food crisis. We need pure water and milk. It`s important for my family.”

Kefyalech, a 30-year-old mother who lives in Ethiopia, stays home to care for her six children while her husband, Derara, seeks work. But Derara often comes home without having found a job, because the coffee crop is suffering just like all the others in the two-year rainfall shortage that has gripped Ethiopia for months now, so the family remains hungry.

Three years ago, Kefyalech worked as a daily labourer and earned 10 birr (around 70 cents) a day, which covered some of the family’s expenses. But these days, Kefyalech and her children wait each night to see if Derara has earned enough money to buy maize flour, the only food they can afford.

Kefyalech’s family is not alone. Poor rainfall over two growing seasons has limited the amount farmers can harvest, and El Nino is delaying the rainfall now. The drought is challenging Ethiopia’s agriculture-based economy and has reduced its food supply.

The Ethiopian government estimates more than 10 million people will need food assistance in 2016, more than half of whom are children.

Working with the Ethiopian government, ChildFund Ethiopia and its local partner organisations in seven districts have been providing supplementary food and edible oil for 74,000 most vulnerable children and family members over the past three months. ChildFund’s local partners are also supporting the government to provide blankets, sheets and mattresses to help health centres handle the growing demand as more and more children need treatment.