Kuwait Times

Despair as crippling drought hammers Australian farmers

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MURRURUNDI, Australia: A crippling drought is ravaging vast tracts of Australia’s pastoral heartlands, decimating herds and putting desperate farmers under intense financial and emotional strain, with little relief in sight. While the country is no stranger to “big drys” and its people have long had a reputation as resilient, the extreme conditions across swathes of Australia’s east are the worst in more than 50 years.

A smattering of rain earlier this week did little to ease one of the driest starts to the year on record, turning pastures to dust and destroying huge areas of grazing and crop lands. With no feed, farmers have been forced to ship in grain or hay from other parts of the country to keep sheep and cattle alive, spending thousands of extra dollars a week just to stay afloat. Some exhausted graziers spend hours each day hand-feeding their stock because the ground is too dry for grass to grow. Others have been forced to shoot starving cattle.

“They are shooting their stock because they don’t want them to suffer. They are shooting them because they just can’t afford to feed them anymore,” Tash Johnston, cofounder of charity Drought Angels, said. Farmers have also had to ration water for their families and their herds because the dams on their properties are dry or nearly empty. Many face the prospect of abandoning their homes altogether-some after being on the land for generation­s.

It is a scenario repeated across New South Wales state, where agricultur­e contribute­s more than Aus$15 billion to the state’s economy annually, employing more than 77,000 people. Authoritie­s on Wednesday officially declared the entire state in drought. Conditions are similarly dire in Queensland to the north, where the state government says nearly 60 percent of land is suffering drought conditions.

“This would be the first time in two generation­s, back to the 1930s, that we haven’t got a crop up in the autumn or winter time,” Greg Stones, who runs a small farm of cattle, sheep, grain and crops near drought-hit Gunnedah, a five-hour drive north of Sydney, said. “The land is too dry... We’ve put cattle on the highway (near the farm) for the first time in my life (so) they get a bit of rough grass.” — AFP

 ??  ?? AUSTRALIA: This photo shows a road dividing two dry farm paddocks in the droughthit area of Quirindi in New South Wales. — AFP
AUSTRALIA: This photo shows a road dividing two dry farm paddocks in the droughthit area of Quirindi in New South Wales. — AFP

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