The number of hungry Ethiopians needing food
aid has risen sharply due to poor rains and the El Nino weather phenomenon with
around 7.5 million people now in need, aid officials said Friday.
That number
has nearly doubled since August, when the United Nations said 4.5 million were
in need, with the UN now warning that without action some “15 million people
will require food assistance” next year, more than inside war-torn Syria.
“Without a
robust response supported by the international community, there is a high
probability of a significant food insecurity and nutrition disaster,” the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, OCHA, said in a report.
The UN
children’s agency, UNICEF, warns over 300,000 children are severely
malnourished.
The Famine
Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET), which makes detailed technical
assessments of hunger, predicted a harvest “well below average” in its latest
report.
“Unusual
livestock deaths continue to be reported,” FEWS NET said. “With smaller herds,
few sellable livestock, and almost no income other than charcoal and firewood
sales, households are unable to afford adequate quantities of food.”
El Nino
comes with a warming in sea surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific, and
can cause unusually heavy rains in some parts of the world and drought
elsewhere.
Hardest-hit
areas are Ethiopia’s eastern Afar and southern Somali regions, while water
supplies are also unusually low in central and eastern Oromo region.
Food
insecurity is a sensitive issue in Ethiopia, hit by famine in 1984-85 after
extreme drought.
Today,
Ethiopia’s government would rather its reputation was its near-double-digit
economic growth and huge infrastructure investment—making the country one of
Africa’s top-performing economies and a magnet for foreign investment.
Still,
nearly 20 million Ethiopians live below the $1.25 poverty line set by the World
Bank, with the poorest some of the most vulnerable to weather challenges.
Ethiopia’s
government has mobilised $33 million (30 million euros) in emergency aid, but
the UN says it needs $237 million.
No comments:
Post a Comment