The Herald (South Africa)

Ethiopians gripped by fear of succumbing to drought

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three years of failed rains, the animals in the southern Ethiopian village of Kura Kalicha are dying.

Dozens of decomposin­g cattle carcasses lie on the parched earth, their flesh picked over by scavengers.

Local government official Jilo Wile fears the villagers will be next to succumb to the drought.

More than 100 residents are in hospital in critical condition from malnutriti­on.

“This number includes children, elders and pregnant women,” Jilo, who has lost 73 of his 75 cows, said.

Like its neighbours Somalia and Kenya, southern Ethiopia is enduring the Horn of Africa’s worst drought in decades.

Five consecutiv­e rainy seasons have failed and the one under way is expected to as well, prompting warnings from aid agencies that more help is needed to head off a humanitari­an crisis.

Nearly 12-million people, a tenth of the population, are estimated to be food insecure in Ethiopia’s drought-affected areas, according to the UN.

Somalia has been hit the hardest with the drought claiming an estimated 43,000 lives last year, but still short of the famine many aid workers had predicted.

No fatalities have yet been directly attributed to the drought in the Oromiya region, where Kura Kalicha is located, or the neighbouri­ng droughtaff­ected regions of Ethiopia, but humanitari­an workers expect it will not be long.

“Collective­ly, as communitie­s they have run out of coping mechanisms,” Kate Maldonado, from internatio­nal aid agency Mercy Corps, said after a recent visit to southern Ethiopia’s Somali region.

The population across much of southern Ethiopia’s lowlands relies on its livestock, with diets supplement­ed by basic crops like maize.

Residents say the aid on offer has been insufficie­nt and slow to arrive.

Ethiopia’s federal government last month issued a statement saying they were working with aid organisati­ons to help those in need.

Oromiya regional government spokespers­on Hailu Aduga said authoritie­s had reacted promptly.

“The aid is not enough given the number of those who are in need. But we have been working to avoid a loss of human life,” he said.

Everyone agrees the available resources are inadequate.

Last year, Ethiopia received only half of the $3.34bn (R60.3bn) required for humanitari­an needs, including the drought, but also the fallout from the two-year war in the northern region of Tigray, which ended in November after tens of thousands of deaths.

“If we don’t scale up our assistance, it won’t be possible to prevent the looming hunger crisis from affecting children, girls and their families,” Mudasser Siddiqui, country director for child rights organisati­on Plan Internatio­nal, said.

Jilo Guracha, a 40-year-old mother of seven, walked 85km in the scorching heat to reach a camp where she and her two sons could receive food rations.

The camp, in the Dubuluk district, was set up a year ago in an empty field, and now hosts 53,000 people who live in small huts made from grass and used plastic bags.

“Some are committing suicide after failing to provide for their family,” she said.

“We beg the government to save us from dying of hunger until God brings us rain.”

 ?? Photograph: TIKSA NEGERI/ REUTERS ?? DESPERATE TIMES: Roba Galgalo, 26, walks next to his emaciated cows at Kura Kalicha camp for people internally displaced by drought near Das town, Oromiya region, Ethiopia
Photograph: TIKSA NEGERI/ REUTERS DESPERATE TIMES: Roba Galgalo, 26, walks next to his emaciated cows at Kura Kalicha camp for people internally displaced by drought near Das town, Oromiya region, Ethiopia

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