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Ghana schoolboy raises $4 000 for Horn


Friday, August 26, 2011

Amidst the millions of dollars pledged at an African fundraiser Thursday to help those facing starvation in the Horn of Africa, one donation stood out: the $4 000 contribution of a Ghanaian schoolboy.

 
Jerry Rawling, former president of the republic of Ghana buys a tee-shirt at the economic commission in Addis Adaba Ethiopia with the slogan 'Save Somali Children from Hunger’, from 14 year old Ghanaian boy Andrew Adansi-Bonnah.

Eleven-year-old Andrew Andasi launched his fundraising campaign after seeing television images of those struggling in famine-struck Somalia.

"I am feeling happy because I touched the hearts of the young and old, rich and poor," Andasi told AFP, thanking companies and friends in Ghana who donated to his cause.

The schoolboy's contribution, double what the African nation of Lesotho pledged, added to over $350 million raised during an African donor conference here to help more than 12 million people reeling from severe drought.

"I saw a BBC documentary about Somalia and I looked to my father and asked why are they so lean and hungry like that," he told AFP.

"I thought, I should help them," said Andasi, wearing a T-shirt with the slogan "Save Somali children from hunger".

Initially, he wanted to send bags of maize, but aid workers in Ghana persuaded him that sending money would be easier.

"My target is $13 million, but I have raised now $4,000," said Andasi who travelled to the Ethiopian capital with the support of African Union.

Worst this century

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He said he hoped the money will go toward buying maize, rice, sugar beans and to support education in Somalia.

The Horn of Africa is suffering its worst drought in decades which, combined with conflict and resource mismanagement in Somalia, has led to what the UN describes as the world's worst unfolding humanitarian disaster.

The fund-raising conference was the first of its kind by the pan-African body, which has so far pledged only $500 000 of the needed $2.4bn to assist the 12.4 million drought victims.

Andasi's home nation of Ghana pledged $500 000.

For the first time this century, the United Nations has declared a state of famine in five Somali regions and said it could spread to engulf the country's entire south.

The drought has also left millions in parts of Ethiopia, Djibouti, Kenya and Uganda facing starvation