The Star Early Edition

Cyclone Dineo rain could help east Africa

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NAIROBI: Increased non-seasonal rainfall might slightly ease dry conditions in some drought-affected areas in east Africa, a food security agency has forecast.

The Famine Early Warning Systems Network (Fews Net) said the presence of tropical cyclone (Dineo), currently located over the Mozambique Channel, is forecast to bring non-seasonal moderate to heavy rains across much of Tanzania and parts of Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia, Rwanda and Burundi during the coming week.

“This may slightly ease the currently very dry conditions in these areas, prior to the onset of seasonal rains in the Horn,” the agency said in its February report published yesterday.

Vegetation conditions remain very poor in much of east Africa, following scarce rainfall between October last year and January in many areas, particular­ly in Somalia, south-eastern Ethiopia, northern Kenya, and north-eastern Tanzania.

Vegetation­s have continued to deteriorat­e into February, particular­ly in the Horn of Africa region, as the dry season has continued, according to the report.

The report came as the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) warned last week that east Africa’s ongoing drought had sharply curbed harvests and driven up the prices of cereals and other staple foods to unusually high levels, posing a heavy burden to local households and special risks for pastoralis­ts.

“Sharply increasing prices are severely constraini­ng food access for large numbers of households with alarming consequenc­es in terms of food insecurity,” FAO said.

Local prices of maize, sorghum and other cereals are near or at record levels in swathes of Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan, Uganda and Tanzania, according to the latest food price monitoring and analysis bulletin.

The report says since late January, seasonal dryness has continued over the eastern Horn, following very poor performanc­e of the Deyr/ Hageya/short rains between October and December, resulting in an abnormally long dry season that has also been marked by hotter-than-normal land surface temperatur­es across Somalia, Kenya, southern and eastern Ethiopia, and north-eastern Tanzania.

In addition, end-of-the-season dryness in January affected cropping conditions and reduced maize yields in Burundi, Rwanda, and bimodal areas of Tanzania and led to well below average range-land resources in these countries.

“In Somalia, Ethiopia, and Kenya, range-land resources in many areas continue to deteriorat­e as the dry season continues following very poor performanc­e of the Deyr/ Hageya/short rains in 2016,” Fews Net said.

In many areas, the normalised difference vegetation index continues to show vegetation conditions that are well below normal and field reports confirm little to no pasture availabili­ty. During the past several days, small amounts of non-seasonal rainfall has fallen in localised areas of north-eastern Kenya, southern Ethiopia, and Djibouti.

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