Hundreds of children have started to starve to death in Sudan's war-torn western province of Darfur.
The BBC's Hilary Andersson saw the burial of two-year-old Ikram and says 400 other children in the same camp in Kalma were unable to keep food down.
Their families have fled attacks by pro-government Arab militias, accused of forcing black Africans off the land.
Last week, a senior aid worker said 300,000 people would starve in Darfur, even if help is sent immediately.
Some 10,000 have died in Darfur, since a rebellion broke out last year and one million have fled their homes.
The rains have already begun to fall, which will soon make Darfur, an area the size of France, virtually impassable, our correspondent says.
'Too little'
Speaking after his return from the area, UK Secretary for International Development Hilary Benn said Darfur was undoubtedly the largest humanitarian crisis in the world and more aid agencies were needed there.
"We are in a race against time in Darfur," he told MPs.
He admitted that the UK response to the crisis had been too little, too late but said the UK was committed to doing all that it could.
"I have also been concerned about the adequacy and speed of the UN's response, although this should now change."
Our reporter in Darfur says that while Ikram died, another boy on the same mat, Joseph, could not be coaxed to eat.
His mother could do nothing but watch.
The mother of nine-month-old Adam says that she walked without food for 10 days to reach the camp.
"The militias burnt our village... They were burning the children," she said.
Our correspondent says village after village in Darfur has been burnt, while food is running out in all the camps, where people have sought refuge.