jeremy konyndyk, the conditions that we just saw in somalia don't happen overnight. how long have the problems leading up to a u.n. declaration of famine been being up in somalia? >> by the time it gets to the point of declaring famine there's been a whole process of degradation of the economy, of people's ability to support themselves, of resources that have occurred and grown and grown to the point where basically the ability of many, many somalies, of about 11 million people across the entire region because we need to remember that ethiopia, an kenya are also suffering similar conditions it gets to the point where those 11 million people searchly have no means what so ever to support themselves. they've lost their crops. they've lost their livestock. they've lost any other means of income. and to a large degree they have either in the case of people in southern somalia, no choice but to either find aid which is scant in that part of the world or to flee. fortunately in ethiopia kenya and some other parts of somalia, they are getting in. >> suarez: weather forecast