More than half of 
 
  Toronto
  Homeless and without Assistance, Imagine
 
  TORONTO
 , 
 
  Oct. 8
  /CNW/ - The recent multiple droughts in 
 
  Somalia
  caused massive refugee displacement, a spike in food prices and in turn, increase in malnutrition in Somali children and adults. As a result, the dire living conditions in 
 
  Somalia
  made it a perfect recipe for the world's worst humanitarian condition, according to the United Nations. In response, a group of Canadian university and college students and graduates decided to organize an initiative titled Walk for 
 
  Somalia
 .
In an interview with Human Rights Watch, refugee researcher, 
 
  Gerry Simpson
 , states: "The refugee crisis worsens with every day of delay, continued paralysis and unresponsiveness puts the well-being of all the refugees - new and old - at grave risk." Medicine Sans Frontier states, of those refugees, 600,000 live in Afgoye, the world's largest refugee camp for internally displaced people.
As conditions worsen, WFS requests Canadians' immediate attention and assistance. UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator 
 
  Mark Bowden
  said: "
 
  Somalia
  needs to be seen as a priority case, the implications of not responding now are a future of miserable destitution but also the potential to tip the region into a far greater level of crisis through the movement of Somalia's population out of the country if assistance isn't provided, we have critical shortages in the water, sanitation, health and nutrition areas which endanger the relief operation at the moment." He also added: "before this I worked in Darfur and I'm concerned that conditions for the displaced populations in 
 
  Somalia
  are if anything worse than in Darfur."
Walk for 
 
  Somalia
  is a non-political initiative. Looking beyond the short, news-clips of the violence, piracy and general chaos that far too often, constitutes the entire discussion about 
 
  Somalia
 ; WFS would like to remind Canadians that 
 
  Somalia
  is not on the verge of a catastrophe, the catastrophe is a daily reality for over 3.2 million people. In support of this campaign, we call on all to come out and join us on 
 
  October 10, 2009
  for a silent walk on behalf of those suffering in what the UN has labelled the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.
    
    Please join us:
    Saturday October 10th 2009
    Start: Yonge and Dundas
    End: Queens Park
    1:00 pm
    
For further information: Warda Abdulsamed, Communications Director, Walk for Somalia, (416) 854 4719, [email protected]
           
          
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