International Somalia faces diphtheria surge amid vaccine shortages and aid cuts

LeonardoBjj

Professional Wrestler
@Silver
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
12,567
Reaction score
15,506
By Abdi Sheikh

  • Cases already doubled compared with 2024
  • Minister points to vaccine shortages and aid cuts
  • Hundreds of thousands of children still not fully vaccinated
MOGADISHU, Aug 19 (Reuters) - Diphtheria cases and deaths have risen sharply this year in Somalia, where the response has been curtailed by vaccine shortages and U.S. aid cuts, Somali officials said.

More than 1,600 cases, including 87 deaths, have been recorded, up from 838 cases and 56 deaths in all of 2024, said Hussein Abdukar Muhidin, the general director of Somalia's National Institute of Health.

Diphtheria, a bacterial disease that causes swollen glands, breathing problems and fever and mostly affects children, is preventable with a vaccine that became widely available in the mid-20th century.

Childhood immunisation rates in Somalia have improved over the past decade, but hundreds of thousands of children are still not fully vaccinated.
After fleeing fighting between government forces and Islamist militants in the central Somalia town of Ceeldheere three months ago, all four of Deka Mohamed Ali's children, none of whom was vaccinated, contracted diphtheria. Her 9-year-old daughter recovered, but her 8-year-old son died and two toddlers are now being treated at a hospital in the capital Mogadishu.

"My children got sick and I just stayed at home because I did not know it was diphtheria," she told Reuters from the bedside of her 3-year-old son Musa Abdullahi whose throat was swollen to the size of a lemon from the infection.

Health Minister Ali Haji Adam said the government had struggled to procure enough vaccines due to a global shortage and that U.S. aid cuts were making it difficult to distribute the doses it had.

Before President Donald Trump cut most foreign assistance earlier this year, the United States was the leading humanitarian donor to Somalia, whose health budget is almost entirely funded by donors.

"The U.S. aid cut terribly affected the health funds it used to provide to Somalia. Many health centres closed. Mobile vaccination teams that took vaccines to remote areas lost funding and now do not work," said Adam.
Muhidin separately echoed his comments about the closures.

Overall U.S. foreign assistance commitments to Somalia stand at $149 million for the fiscal year that ends on September 30, compared with $765 million in the previous fiscal year, according to U.S. government statistics.

"The United States continues to provide lifesaving foreign assistance in Somalia," a U.S. State Department spokesperson said when asked about the impact of its aid cuts in the country.

"America is the most generous nation in the world, and we urge other nations to dramatically increase their humanitarian efforts."

Aid group Save the Children said last month that the closure of hundreds of health clinics in Somalia this year due to foreign cuts has contributed to a doubling in the number of combined cases of diphtheria, measles, whooping cough, cholera and severe respiratory infections since mid-April.
Besides the U.S., Britain, France, Germany and other major Western donors are also cutting aid budgets.

Somalia's government has also faced criticism from doctors and human rights activists for its limited funding of the health sector. In 2024, it allocated 4.8% of its budget to health, down from 8.5% the previous year, Amnesty International said.

The health ministry did not respond to a question about that criticism. It has said it is planning to launch a vaccination drive but has not given details when.

https://www.reuters.com/business/he...e-amid-vaccine-shortages-aid-cuts-2025-08-19/
 
The NGO’s should continue doing their good work with remaining donations. I read somewhere that the USAID was only about 10% of the world NGO funding.
 
Damn, $735 million in a year to Somalia?

matt-hughes-shrug-ufc-no.gif
 
So the US taxpayer is responsible for funding everything in the world.we still give a massive amount of aid but its never going to be enough. In dollars we give the most of any country.
it's also transactional. The US uses aid to obtain soft-power and leverage poor nations to have influence in nation building and also for gaining access to resources and trade advantages. China is going pretty hard in the paint as well in Africa. It tends to be form of neo-colonialism.

There's a reason the POTUS seeks the US National Security Council's advice about it, it's not altruisic. There is a return. It forms part of the overall foreign policy strategy for each POTUS.
 
Last edited:
Wonder how much China or Russia provided for the anti diphtheria of Somalia over the last decade or two... What do we owe Somalia as taxpayers? I'd feel great about directly helping sick people, but not about supplying ambiguous organizations without choice or knowledge while they waste and launder (or worse) my efforts...
 
it's also transactional. The US uses aid to obtain soft-power and leverage poor nations to have influence in national building and also for gaining access to resources and trade advantages. China is going pretty hard in the paint as well in Africa. It tends to be form of neo-colonialism.

There's a reason the POTUS seeks the US National Security Council's advice about it, it's not altruisic. There is a return. It forms part of the overall foreign policy strategy for each POTUS.
Exactly this. This isn't altruistic handing out of money. This is gaining leverage on the global stage ahead of countries like China. This is way too nuanced for MAGA idiots, so they will just clap like seals as our global standing continues to slip.
 
Why is it that its the US thats responsible for vaccinating Somalia?
 
it's also transactional. The US uses aid to obtain soft-power and leverage poor nations to have influence in nation building and also for gaining access to resources and trade advantages. China is going pretty hard in the paint as well in Africa. It tends to be form of neo-colonialism.

There's a reason the POTUS seeks the US National Security Council's advice about it, it's not altruisic. There is a return. It forms part of the overall foreign policy strategy for each POTUS.
That's true on some level but honestly I think that angle is exaggerated, if anything the reverse might be true. A lot of altruistic people who favor this kind of aid like to emphasize this utilitarian angle to justify their humanitarian efforts to state sponsors and other donors but really they just want to help. A lot of educated people who work in these organizations like doctors and lawyers would make a lot more money in the private sector.
 
Why is it that its the US thats responsible for vaccinating Somalia?
Americans used to believe that the United States was the greatest country in the world, one capable of everything from protecting global sea lanes to eradicating diseases around the world and pushing the frontiers of science and innovation.

I know, crazy right?
 
it's also transactional. The US uses aid to obtain soft-power and leverage poor nations to have influence in nation building and also for gaining access to resources and trade advantages. China is going pretty hard in the paint as well in Africa. It tends to be form of neo-colonialism.

There's a reason the POTUS seeks the US National Security Council's advice about it, it's not altruisic. There is a return. It forms part of the overall foreign policy strategy for each POTUS.

Yes I understand that as it should be to an extent.
 
Exactly this. This isn't altruistic handing out of money. This is gaining leverage on the global stage ahead of countries like China. This is way too nuanced for MAGA idiots, so they will just clap like seals as our global standing continues to slip.

I understand that and the question is what are we getting for our money in this case.
 
Why am I not surprised that people in this forum are happy that children are dying of a preventable disease.

Who is happy about it? Every child in every part of the world is not our direct responsibility.
 
Back
Top