The Philippine Star

Skies go black in Africa’s worst locust plague

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KENYA ( AP) — The hum of millions of locusts on the move is broken by the screams of farmers and the clanging of pots and pans.

But their noisemakin­g does little to stop the voracious insects from feasting on their crops in this rural community.

The worst outbreak of desert locusts in Kenya in 70 years has seen hundreds of millions of the bugs swarm into the East African nation from Somalia and Ethiopia.

Those two countries have not had an infestatio­n like this in a quarter-century, destroying farmland and threatenin­g an already vulnerable region with devastatin­g hunger.

“Even cows are wondering what is happening,“said Ndunda Makanga, who spent hours Friday trying to chase the locusts from his farm.

“Corn, sorghum, cowpeas, they have eaten everything.”

About $70 million is needed to step up aerial pesticide spraying, the only effective way to combat them, the UN says. That won’t be easy, especially in Somalia, where parts of the country are in the grip of the al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab extremist group.

When rains arrive in March and bring new vegetation across much of the region, the numbers of the fast-breeding locusts could grow 500 times before drier weather in June curbs their spread, the United Nations says.

The rose-colored locusts turn whole trees pink, clinging to branches like quivering ornaments before taking off in hungry, rustling clouds.

As thick clouds of the insects deEven a small swarm of the insects can consume enough food for 35,000 people in a single day, said Jens Laerke of the UN humanitari­an office in Geneva.

Farmers are afraid to let their cattle out for grazing, and their crops of millet, sorghum and maize are vulnerable, but there is little they can do.

The locals are really scared because they can consume everything,” Kitoo said.“I’ve never seen such a big number.”

The locusts eat the fodder for animals, a crucial source of livelihood for families who now worry how they will pay for expenses like school fees, he said. His own concern about the locusts? “They will lay eggs and start another generation,” he said.

 ?? AP ?? A farmer walks through swarms of locusts feeding on her crops in Kenya on Friday.
AP A farmer walks through swarms of locusts feeding on her crops in Kenya on Friday.

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