Drought |
The government on
Thursday said it has recorded only one death due to drought despite
revelations of at least seven people dying from the prolonged dry spell.
"We have only one
confirmed death in Kilifi, and it is unfortunate. The government is
committed to making sure that no one (else) dies from this drought,"
said government spokesman Eric Kiraithe during his weekly press
briefings.
The government also
warned chiefs and county officials that those found diverting Sh5.4
billion relief aid will be sacked and prosecuted.
Last week, Lagdera MP Mohamed Shidiye said at least seven people had died from the drought in Garissa.
On Monday,
governors from the Frontier Counties Development Council (FCDC) declared
the drought a disaster requiring urgent intervention.
Mr Kiraithe said
the government was on top of the drought situation, as it admitted that
one person in Kilifi County had died from the prolonged dry spell.
The government also
classified some parts of Kilifi County in an emergency state, saying
other 12 counties were only in the "alarm and alert stages."
Mr Kiraithe said
areas that have been classified as in the alarm stages are Garissa,
Kwale, Lamu and Marsabit while "alert" level include: Kajiado, Laikipia,
West Pokot, Isiolo, Makueni, Mandera, Meru (North), Narok, Samburu,
Taita Taveta, Turkana and Wajir.
FOOD RESERVES
He said some
unscrupulous individuals were taking advantage of the spell to enrich
themselves at the expense of starving Kenyans.
"This relief if for families in need and any other person found benefitting will be prosecuted as a thief," he said.
So far, 1.5 million people have been affected by the drought that the government said might persist until August 2017.
"The Government has
instituted these cross sectorial, multi-faceted interventions, to deal
with the various faces and implications of this drought crisis. Moving
forward, the government remains cognizant of the ever urgent need to
meet short term needs while maintaining a long-term strategy," Mr
Kiraithe said.
The government
spokesman said though the food reserves in the country can only last for
six months, any imports will only be authorised when the situation has
been re-assessed.
He said the government will not stop private businesspeople from continuing to import maize from neighbouring countries.
He also dismissed as unfair claims that the government was dragging its feet in the fight against the drought.
Mr Kiraithe said
the formation of the National Drought Management Agency was one of the
many steps the government had taken as a long-term strategy to tackle
future drought cases.
"The key problem in
drought management is addressing water problems. We need to implement
it, but we know it will not happen in a day," he said.
Of the Sh5.4
billion relief aid, Sh1.65 billion will be allocated to food relief,
Sh713 million for provision of supplementary feeds for children under
the age of five and provision of water, and Sh244 million for the
purchase of drought tolerant seeds and the repositioning of strategic
food reserve stocks.
Another Sh1.3
billion to buy livestock, Sh1.24 billion for drilling of boreholes and
buying of plastic storage equipment, Sh115 million for enhancing
security and Sh156 million for day secondary schools feeding programme.
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