Although a repeat famine is unlikely, the situation in East Africa remains dire despite recent rains.
“More than 9 million people still remain in need of emergency
assistance, and conditions may deteriorate further as the major rains
and harvest are forecast to be below average,” a United States Agency
for International Development (USAID) spokesperson wrote in a statement
to Circle of Blue. “The United States continues to be deeply concerned.”
Food security in the region is largely dependent on seasonal rains,
which in recent years have failed at worst and performed inconsistently
at best.
For example, rains from June through September have decreased
approximately 15 percent to 20 percent over the past 20 years in
southern Ethiopia, according to an analysis by USAID’s Famine Early
Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET). Furthermore, precipitation across
the Horn during last year’s main rainy season, from April through June,
amounted to only 30 percent of the 15-year average (from 1995-2010)
in some areas, according to data compiled by the United Nations Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and FEWS NET.
2011 Crisis / 2012 Reprieve
Poor performances like this led to the Horn’s worst drought in 50 years,
which last year withered crops, killed livestock, and pushed up food
prices — conditions that eventually led to the widespread food crisis.
By the end of July 2011, the United Nations had declared famine in parts
of Somalia, which was further aggravated by political instability that
blocked the delivery of aid.
Above-average rains from October through November of last year helped
restore crop production and pastoral conditions, USAID’s spokesperson
wrote to Circle of Blue. In Somalia, the resulting harvest decreased the
number of people needing life-saving aid from 4 million to 2.3 million,
and the United Nations then declared the famine to be over, OCHA
reported in February.
But the report also warned that food stocks from that harvest could run low by May.
This year’s primary rains — beginning in April — have, so far, been
uneven in distribution and timing. Northern and central Somalia have
received only delayed and erratic rains, but pasture and water
conditions are now average or above-average in most areas of southern
Somalia, according to USAID. Water supplies have also been replenished
in pastoral and agro-pastoral areas of Ethiopia’s Somali Region, parts
of southern Tigray Region, and in the North Wollo, South Wollo, and
Oromiya zones of Amhara Region.
It is unclear how long these advances will last, however.
“Crops fed by these rains are reported to face serious risks, due to
the forecasted cessation of the rains resulting in a shortened growing
period,” USAID’s spokesperson wrote. “Acute water shortages are already
present in southwestern regions of Ethiopia, impacting water
availability for people, their livestock, and crop production. For
example, the sweet potato crop that typically helps smallholder families
through the hunger season is expected to be severely reduced, creating
food deficits early in the year.”
International Aid
In March, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) appealed for $US 50 million
to strengthen the Horn of Africa’s resilience to drought, saying that
continued international aid is key to avoiding another crisis.
Overall, aid agencies have requested $US 2.78 billion for the Horn,
but only 24.1 percent has been funded, according to OCHA’s most recent Humanitarian Bulletin.
USAID committed $US 120 million last week, bringing its total
contributions to $US 1.1 billion since the onset of the 2011 crisis.
“This assistance is targeted to avoid the crisis from escalating in
Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia where the lateness and insufficiency of
rains are expected to have a significant negative impact on crop
production,” USAID’s spokesperson wrote to Circle of Blue.
The combination of international aid, improved rains, and lower food
prices mean it is unlikely that the Horn of Africa will experience a
repeat of last year’s famine, according to USAID.
“The situation continues to be serious, but forecasts at this point
do not indicate a food crisis of the same severity as in 2011.”
Written By Codi Yeager@circle of blue
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