ALWAYS PROMISES, NOTHING BUT PROMISES |
People are starving in East Africa -- again -- as the world
looks away. Humanitarian groups are growing increasingly concerned about two
hunger emergencies unfolding in East Africa -- one caused by drought, the other
by war.
Millions of people in Ethiopia and South Sudan are short on
food, international agencies say, and in South Sudan, conflict has made it
difficult for outside groups to help.
Ethiopia’s emergency unfolded swiftly, as the worst drought
in around 60 years saw successive crop failures. Between August and October,
the number of people in need of help doubled, and numbers have continued to
rise sharply since, with the drought exacerbated by El Niño. Now, 10.2 million
Ethiopians are in critical need of food aid. International agencies are trying
desperately to raise funds to prevent the food emergency from deteriorating
into a full-fledged famine, but so far they say they have raised only a small
portion of the cash they need to offer help. An estimated $1.4 billion in
humanitarian aid and donations is needed to address the crisis, according to a
joint document issued by humanitarian agencies and the Ethiopian government. Cattle,
which families rely on for meat, and oxen used to plow the fields to plant
crops, have been dying in huge numbers in Ethiopia, though there is no official
estimate on how many have perished.
“The issue is critical," said Amadou Allahoury, the
Ethiopia representative for the Food and Agriculture Organization. "The
livestock sector is already highly affected." He said the U.N. hopes to
save "the core breeding animals," but so far lacks sufficient
funding. About 80% of the population relies on agriculture to survive,
according to Allahoury.
John Graham of Save the Children said last month in a
statement that people in the worst affected areas were forced to make terrible
choices: slaughtering the oxen that would be used for planting next season --
should the rains come -- and eating the seeds saved for planting. “The severity
of the current drought is devastating communities and undermining the
tremendous progress that the country has made in development over the last
decade; we cannot stand by and watch that progress be lost,” Graham said.
In South Sudan, the crisis is taking place in slow motion,
as the frozen wheels of a bitter two-year conflict leave people marooned, out
of reach of humanitarian agencies. Some 40,000 of them are in a “Phase 5”
hunger emergency, which, translated from humanitarian bureaucratese, normally
means famine. For technical reasons, however, it hasn't formally been declared
a famine, in part because humanitarian workers haven't been able to get to some
of the worst-hit areas to count how many people are dying. Many people in South
Sudan couldn’t plant crops because of fighting. Around 3 million people are
facing a hunger crisis and need assistance, according to humanitarian agencies.
Of those, 400,000 are in a severe emergency situation and 40,000 are in a
catastrophe.
“There are people who are -- right now -- facing
catastrophic levels of hunger. They are starving,” said Challiss McDonough,
spokeswoman for the World Food Program in a phone interview. “We have been very
limited in our ability to get in and measure how bad things are.”
“There are 12 million people in South Sudan. Out of 12
million people, 5 million people are food secure. It means that there are 7
million who have problems,” according to Serge Tissot of the U.N.’s Food and
Agriculture Organization, which assessed the need last month. “The situation is
worse now in 2016 than it was at the beginning of 2015.”
Without peace, the humanitarian crisis in South Sudan will
almost certainly deteriorate. The International Crisis Group warned last month
that South Sudan would probably slide back into war in coming months.
“Humanitarian needs globally are so enormous right now that
donors are struggling to do anything near what’s needed. You’ve got layered
global humanitarian crises,” she added, referring the conflicts in Syria and
Yemen, and the massive numbers of refugees. “It’s hard for the donors to keep
up,” according to McDonough.
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