High food prices, combined with frequent droughts and floods have enlarged poverty and continue to threaten livelihoods and well-being. A famine in part of southern Somalia in 2011 killed 250,000 people. 2,000,000 people are struggling to meet their nutritional food needs and are at major risk of falling into a food security and nutrition. These on-going problems in Somalia are continuously causing malnutrition rates to increase by a large percentage every year. The following graph indicates the start and downfall fall of food security in Somalia and why it went up for a brief period before dropping again. These statistics have been collected over a two year period and have a column of statistics for each month of the time conducted. The estimated number of deaths in October, 2010 was at 5,000 deaths and reached 32,000 deaths in July, 2011. 32,000 deaths was the maximum number of casualties in this recorded time period of food insecurity, after that record number of deaths, it started to drastically decrease in the following months from then. The graph shows that from September 2011–October 2011 the amount of food insecurity related deaths decreased dramatically from 27,000 down to