Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ethiopia: No rain, now food low

- ELIAS MESERET

WARDER, Ethiopia — Ethiopia’s government warned that it will run out of emergency food aid starting next month as the number of drought victims in the East African country has reached 7.8 million.

An internatio­nal delegation visited one of the worst-affected areas Friday near the border with Somalia, which suffers from widespread drought as well. Several hundred people lined the dusty road to meet the officials at a remote airstrip, while rail-thin camels and goats roamed in the bushes. Animal carcasses littered the ground.

“I came to this area after losing nearly all my goats and camels due to lack of rain,” 75-year-old Ader Ali Yusuf said quietly, wiping her cheek with her headscarf as she sat with other women observing the delegation from afar. The mother of 12 is just one of thousands of Ethiopians who have walked up to three days on foot to displaceme­nt camps for aid.

Ethiopia’s disaster relief chief Mitiku Kassa said in an interview that the country needs more than $1 billion for emergency food assistance. Seasonal rains have been critically small, and local cattle are dying. The number of drought victims has risen by 2 million people in the past four months.

The risk of an acute food and nutritiona­l disaster is “very high,” Kassa said.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration said hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced, with the problem compounded as people pour into Ethiopia from Somalia.

A United Nations humanitari­an envoy said donor fatigue and similar crises elsewhere have hurt aid efforts. Somalia and neighborin­g South Sudan are among four countries recently singled out by the U.N. in a $4.4 billion aid appeal to avert catastroph­ic hunger and famine. Already, famine has been declared for two counties in South Sudan.

“Our main concern should be for this drought in Ethiopia not to degenerate into a famine,” said the humanitari­an envoy, Ahmed Al-Meraikhi. The United Nations has warned that Ethiopia’s drought will pose a severe challenge to the humanitari­an community by mid-July with the current slow pace of aid.

Along with the drought, Ethiopia faces an outbreak of what authoritie­s call acute watery diarrhea, though critics have said the government should call it cholera instead.

“I’ve never seen the resources so poor to respond to the crisis,” the country director for aid group Save the Children, John Graham, said of the drought. “It is very worrying. These people are not going to be able to continue to survive in these dilapidate­d displaced-peoples camps. It could get very much worse. We are also worried that some of the children affected by the drought may die.”

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