Jamaica Gleaner

Millions face hunger as El Niño compounds drought crisis

-

HARARE (AP): THE UN World Food Programme (WFP) said on Wednesday that it was working with Zimbabwe’s government and aid agencies to provide food to 2.7 million rural people in the country as the El Niño weather phenomenon contribute­s to a drought crisis in southern Africa.

Food shortages putting nearly 20 per cent of Zimbabwe’s population at risk of hunger have been caused by poor harvests in drought-ravaged areas where people rely on small-scale farming to eat. El Niño is expected to compound that by causing belowavera­ge rainfall again this year, said Francesca Erdelmann, WFP country director for Zimbabwe.

El Nino is a natural and recurring weather phenomenon that warms parts of the Pacific, affecting weather patterns around the world. It has different impacts in different regions.

When rains fail or come late, it has a significan­t impact, Erdelmann told a news conference.

January to March is referred to as the lean season in Zimbabwe, when rural households run out of food while waiting for the next harvest.

More than 60 per cent of Zimbabwe’s 15 million people live in rural areas. Their life is increasing­ly affected by a cycle of drought and floods aggravated by climate change.

Dry spells are becoming longer and more severe. For decades, Zimbabwe’s rainy season reliably ran from October to March. It has become erratic in recent years, sometimes starting only in December and ending sooner.

Once an exporter of food, Zimbabwe has relied heavily on assistance from donors to feed its people in recent years. Agricultur­al production also fell sharply after the seizures of white-owned farms under former President Robert Mugabe, starting in 2000 but had begun to recover.

The United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID), the US government’s foreign aid agency, has estimated through its Famine Early Warning Systems Network that 20 million people in southern Africa will need food relief between January and March. Many people in the areas of highest concern, such as Zimbabwe, southern Malawi, parts of Mozambique and southern Madagascar, will be unable to feed themselves into early 2025 due to El Niño, USAID said.

Erdelmann said WFP had received a donation of US$11 million from USAID.

Zimbabwe’s government says the country has grain reserves to last until October, but it has acknowledg­ed that many people who failed to harvest enough grain and are too poor to buy food from markets are in dire need of assistance.

Staple food prices are spiking across the region, USAID said, further impacting people’s ability to feed themselves.

Zimbabwe has already acknowledg­ed feeling the effects of El Niño in other sectors after 100 elephants died in a droughtstr­icken wildlife park late last year.

 ?? AP ?? A woman walks along a path in a deserted field in Zvimba, rural Zimbabwe, in June 2021.
AP A woman walks along a path in a deserted field in Zvimba, rural Zimbabwe, in June 2021.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica