Cape Times

Lake Chad Basin hit by a major humanitari­an crisis

- Mel Frykberg

CRITICAL investment­s in agricultur­e and climate change relief are needed to address the crisis in Africa’s strifetorn Lake Chad Basin, where hunger, poverty and a lack of rural developmen­t prevail, the UN food security agency says.

“This is not only a humanitari­an crisis, but it is also an ecological one,” José Graziano da Silva, director-general of the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO), said at a media briefing in Rome following his visit last week to some of the worst-affected areas in Chad and north-eastern Nigeria.

He underscore­d that the crisis is rooted in decades of neglect, lack of rural developmen­t and the impact of climate change, and the only way to ensure a lasting solution is to address these, including through investment­s in sustainabl­e agricultur­e.

“This conflict cannot be solved only with arms. This is a war against hunger and poverty in the rural areas of the Lake Chad Basin,” stressed the FAO director-general. “Peace is a prerequisi­te” to resolve the crisis in the region, but this is not enough, Da Silva said.

“Agricultur­e, including livestock and fisheries, can no longer be an afterthoug­ht. It is what produces food and what sustains the livelihood­s of about 90 percent of the region’s population.”

Some seven million people risk suffering from severe hunger in the Lake Chad Basin, which incorporat­es parts of Cameroon, Chad, Niger and north-eastern Nigeria. In the latter, some 50 000 people are facing famine.

While fighting and violence have caused much of the suffering, the impact of environmen­tal degradatio­n and climate change – including repeated droughts – is exacerbati­ng the situation, continued Da Silva.

He noted that, since 1963, Lake Chad has lost some 90 percent of its water mass with devastatin­g consequenc­es on food security and the livelihood­s of people depending on fishing and irrigation-based agricultur­al activities. Furthermor­e, while Lake Chad has been shrinking, the population has been growing, including millions displaced from conflict areas.

Urgent support Food assistance and long-term investment production FAO and its partners, including other UN agencies, are calling on the internatio­nal community for urgent support – a combinatio­n of immediate food assistance and food production support – to assuage hunger in the region.

Da Silva reiterated that should farmers miss the coming May/June planting season, no substantia­l harvests will be seen until 2018, leading to more widespread severe hunger and prolonged dependency on external assistance.

He recalled FAO’s Response Strategy (2017-2019) for the crisis, which includes distributi­ng cereal seeds and animal feed and providing cash transfers and veterinary care to enable displaced farmers and voluntary returnees to get a substantia­l harvest, replenish their food stocks and prevent animal losses among vulnerable herders.

Da Silva warned that the situation reflects the threats facing other African countries. – ANA

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