Drought |
Drought victims
continue to live in fear and uncertainty as the recent severe drought
has killed two million livestock so far, according to a report of the
Food & Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations. The
primary reason for the death of the livestock is linked to a rise in
drought affected areas and people.
The surge in
drought was disclosed by the government after the completion of a Belg
assessment Humanitarian Requirement Document (HRD), which was jointly
developed by the government and humanitarian organisations, involving
more than 200 individuals.
The current food
and nutrition crisis is significantly aggravated by the severe blow to
pastoral livelihoods, reads the report of FAO.
The effects of low
rainfall also continue to have a devastating impact on the food security
conditions of the country as the number of people who are in need of
immediate assistance has increased from 7.8 million to 8.5 million,
becoming the third worst drought in half a century.
Oromia and Somali
regional states remain severely affected by the drought, accounting for
over half of the drought victims in eight regions of the country,
affecting 10.6pc and 31pc of their population, respectively.
Also, the number of priority Weredas has grown from 454 to 461, half of which are severely affected by the drought.
The report is
released as the average price of food has reached its highest level
since October 2015, hitting 12.5pc in the past month, growing by an
unprecedented level against the target of the government to keep the
rate at a single digit.
The document showed
a significant change in the humanitarian context, requiring urgent
life-saving interventions, pushing the humanitarian requirement of the
country to 1.2 billion dollars from 948.6 million dollars as of January
2017, of which about 771 million dollars is covered by the government
and donations from humanitarian partners.
The United States,
the government of Ethiopia and the United Kingdom are the major donors
to the drought with a fund of 179 million dollars, 147 million dollars
and 40 million dollars, respectively.
The increase in the
humanitarian need is mainly attributed to the poor performance of Belg
(spring) rains this year, especially in Oromia, Somali and Southern
Nations, Nationalities & Peoples' (SNNP) regional states, where the
effects of the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) was very high, according to the
report.
Two months ago, the
United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(UNOCHA), in its report, disclosed that the food stocks of the World
Food Programme (WFP), the National Disaster Risk Management and Control
(NDRMC) and the Joint Emergency Operation Plan (JEOP) will be depleted
owing to the deteriorating food security rate in the country.
Now with the rise
in the number of drought victims, NDRMC and WFP are expected to supply
84pc of the total food in the drought affected areas whereas the
remaining will be covered by support through the Non-Governmental
Organisation (NGO) consortium.
The food shortage
is also exacerbated by the attacks of the Fall Army Worm (FAW), induced
in some of the regions of the country, affecting 2.7 million hectares of
land in six regional states.
First seen in South America, an irrigated maize farm in Yeki Wereda, in SNNP, was the first to be attacked by the FAW.
Maize, whose price
has doubled over the past two months, is highly attacked by the armyworm
among all crops. Of the 1.7 million hectares of planted maize in the
country, about 22pc has been heavily infested, with all maize-growing
areas at risk of damage.
The chance of
spreading to sorghum-growing areas in Afar, Amhara, Tigray and Somali
regional states is also very high, according to the mid-year review.
"We are preparing a
protocol to conduct a study on yield loss assessment at the FAW
infested areas," said Woldehawariat Assefa, director of Plant Health
& Quality Control at the Ministry of Agriculture & Natural
Resources (MoANR).
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