WASHINGTON, Oct 9 (OneWorld.net) - Aid organizations are appealing for global help as millions of families face hunger, water shortages, disease, and death across the eastern part of Africa.
What's the Story?
The long tail of Rebecca Lolosoli's headdress is worn particularly in times of drought, and the green color is meant to serve as a prayer to the gods for rain. © The Advocacy Project (flickr)A multi-year drought has destroyed harvests, driving up the price of remaining food, and forcing people to drink and cook with whatever water they can find, even if it's unsafe. Animals are wasting away in some areas. Millions of people are suffering as malnutrition, cholera, and other maladies set in.
Staff of the Dago Dala Hera orphanage in western Kenya told OneWorld Friday that rising prices have forced them to decrease food rations for the children they care for. Their water storage tanks have been used up, meaning volunteer mothers and children must now draw unclean water from a nearby river for cooking and drinking.
"My biggest concern is the grown girls," said Edwin Odoyo, whose mother Pamela founded the orphanage for children who have lost parents to AIDS. "Going to the river alone late in the evening is making them more vulnerable to men who can sexually abuse them."
Odoyo is also worried because the children are starting to experience skin infections and stomach aches that could be signs of parasites. Since the orphanage's budget is already stretched by the high price of food, there is no money left to care for unexpected illnesses.
It's a story that's being told time and again across the region.
Masai elders in Kenya have said the current drought is the worst they've seen since 1961, when they lost almost all their cattle.
Dwindling food stocks have driven up the price of staple foods, making it increasingly difficult for those living in cities to buy enough to eat, says the Church World Service, which is supporting communities in the region.
Some parts of the country haven't seen rain since May 2008. Rivers and reservoirs have dried up, leading to water rationing in urban areas. [» Read more about Church World Service's efforts and concerns.]
Failed Harvest After Failed Harvest
"If you have one bad year, people can survive. They sell some assets to buy food and make it through the hard times, and hope to make it back the next year," said Mohammed Khaled, CARE International’s Regional Emergency Coordinator for East Africa. "But three bad years? People can’t recover."
CARE is among the local and international groups helping people cope. The group is building and maintaining boreholes and water distribution points, providing extra nutrition to young children and mothers, distributing seeds for farmers, and helping pastoralists diversify their herds and sources of income. [» Read more about CARE's efforts and concerns.]
Save the Children estimates that 20 million people will need emergency assistance through the end of the year.
"In Ethiopia, millions of subsistence farmers are dependent on weather patterns they cannot control," said the group's vice president for Global Humanitarian Response Ned Olney. "Now their children face not only hunger, but the increased vulnerability to deadly disease that accompanies severe malnutrition."
Cases of acute diarrhea -- one of the top killers of children worldwide -- are on the rise in Ethiopia, Olney's group said. [» Read more about Save the Children's efforts and concerns.]
In nearby South Sudan, Action Against Hunger has documented a spike in the number of kids suffering from severe acute malnutrition -- a life-threatening condition -- and expects a further deterioration of the situation in the coming weeks and months.
"The consequences of two failed harvests in a row are dire in a region reliant on subsistence agriculture," the group said, noting that its staff have seen entire families forced to eat leaves as the situation becomes ever more desperate. [» Read more about Action Against Hunger's efforts and concerns.]
And older people, who are particularly vulnerable, are often overlooked by aid groups faced with limited resources themselves, notes HelpAge International, warning that the situation in northern Kenya has become "survival of the fittest."
"Older people have either lost their livestock to the drought or are too weak to walk for days in the blistering heat in search of pasture for their family's remaining animals," reported HelpAge's Stephen Barrett. "They have no choice except, as one older woman told me, 'to wait and hope that food aid will come.'" [» Read more about HelpAge International's efforts and concerns.]
Climate Change to Blame
Drought and hunger are not new to this region of Africa, where many live on less than $1 a day earned through subsistence farming or animal herding. But climate change has made the situation worse, says CARE, which has been working in the region for decades.
Shorter and unpredictable rainy seasons and more severe weather have led to years of failed harvests and dead livestock this time, forcing many pastoralists and farmers to give up their land or animals altogether, the group says.
Rains that are supposed to finally come later this month are expected to bring some improvement to the drought situation, but may also cause flooding and kill weakened animals.
It's the severity and unpredictability of weather in recent years that has turned the situation from difficult to disastrous.
Omar Hussein owns 20 cows in northern Kenya. He used to have 200 cows, camels, and goats, but in 2007 there was a huge storm and most of his animals drowned. Since then, there has been a crippling drought.
Hussein is among the African farmers gathered by in Cape Town, South Africa this week to testify about the impacts of climate change on their lives.
Most of the farmers don't use the words "climate change," said Oxfam International, the humanitarian group that sponsored the gathering, but they blame weather patterns that are caused by the changing global climate.
"They say – we can't sow the same seeds we used to because they don't grow any more or -- the weather is getting unpredictable or -- the rains are getting shorter and the droughts are getting longer. We have less time to recover." [» Read more about the Oxfam climate hearings.]
- This article was compiled by Jeffrey Allen.
» OneWorld TV: Kenyan Tribeswoman Is Climate Witness
» OneWorld.net: Latest News, Groups Working on East Africa and Malnutrition Worldwide
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OneWorld partners are responding to the drought in East Africa.
ACDI/VOCA
ACDI/VOCA’s Kenya Maize Development Program
seeks to boost household incomes to help address household food
insecurity by increasing farmers’ maize productivity, improving the
effectiveness of farmer organizations like cooperatives, and expanding
farmers’ access to agricultural markets and business support services. To date, the program has tripled – and in some places quadrupled –
smallholder farmers’ yields and increased the net earnings of some
370,000 farmers – nearly 30 percent of whom are women. [» Read more and support this work.]
GlobalGiving
GlobalGiving is an online marketplace that connects you to the
causes and countries you care about. You select the projects you want
to support, make a tax-deductible
contribution, and get regular progress updates -- so you can see your
impact. [» Read more and support this work.]
Lutheran World Relief
LWR is working with partners on the ground in Kenya,
Tanzania, Uganda and Sudan to help families grow food, improve access
to water, and protect their land and income for the future.
LWR and its partners are:
Oxfam America
Oxfam America is responding to the new crisis with a multi-part relief
plan that aims to help about 350,000 people in Tigray and Oromiya. The
initiative, which needs the financial support of donors to reach all
the intended beneficiaries, includes supplemental feeding for mothers
and children, meals for school children, a cash-for-work program that
provides families with money to buy food in exchange for labor on
community projects, and veterinary care for livestock. The latter will
help to ensure cattle, goats, and sheep can weather the drought and
continue to provide critical food and income for herding families. [» Read more and support this work.]
Comments
All Living Things are Affected
All living things suffer. It breaks my heart to think about what kind of Earth my kids will live in in the future. What we see now is so alarming but I still see lots of people who do not seem to care at all.
I wish I was a millionare when.....
Issues like this always break my heart. From the time I can remember I have always wished that I had tons of money so that I could help people in situations like this, and it always makes me so sad that that are thousands of rich people out there that just hoard their money to themselves so they can live lavish lives while others are suffering day after day.