Millions of people face food shortages in the the Horn of Africa
FAO calls for immediate response to
prevent catastrophe due to severe drought
With as
little as one-quarter of expected rainfall received, widespread
drought conditions in the Horn of Africa have intensified since the
failure of the October-December rains, FAO said today.
FAO estimates that over 17 million
people are currently in crisis and emergency food insecurity levels
in member-countries of the Intergovernmental Authority on Development
(IGAD), namely Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, South
Sudan, Sudan and Uganda, which are in need of urgent humanitarian
assistance.
Areas of greatest concern cover much of
Somalia, north-east and coastal Kenya, south-east of Ethiopia as well
as the Afar region still to recover from El Nino induced drought of
2015/16; and South Sudan and Darfur region of Sudan due to the
protracted insecurity.
Currently, close to 12 million people
across Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya are in need of food assistance, as
families face limited access to food and income, together with rising
debt, low cereal and seed stocks, and low milk and meat production. A
pre-famine alert has been issued for Somalia and an immediate and at
scale humanitarian response is highly required.
Acute food shortage and malnutrition
also remains to be a major concern in many parts of South Sudan,
Sudan (west Darfur) and Uganda's Karamoja region.
FAO warns that if response is not
immediate and sufficient, the risks are massive and the costs high.
"The magnitude of the situation
calls for scaled up action and coordination at national and regional
levels. This is, above all, a livelihoods and humanitarian emergency
- and the time to act is now", said FAO Deputy Director-General,
Climate and Natural Resources, Maria Helena Semedo. "We cannot
wait for a disaster like the famine in 2011".
Semedo was speaking on behalf of the
FAO Director-General at a High-Level Panel on Humanitarian Situation
in the Horn of Africa chaired by the United Nations
Secretary-General, António Guterres, on the sidelines of the 28th AU
Summit (Addis-Ababa).
"The drought situation in the
Region is extremely worrying, primarily in almost all of Somalia but
also across Southern and South-eastern Ethiopia, and northern Kenya.
As a consequence, with the next rains at least eight weeks away and
the next main harvest not until July, millions are at risk of food
insecurity across the region", Semedo said.
For his part Guterres said: "We
must express total solidarity with the people of Ethiopia on the
looming drought, as a matter of justice." The UN
Secretary-General called for a stronger commitment to work together.
Drought impacts livelihoods
Repeated episodes of drought have led
to consecutive failed harvests, disease outbreaks, deteriorating
water and pasture conditions and animal deaths.
"Insecurity and economic shocks
affect the most vulnerable people", warned Bukar Tijani, FAO
Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for Africa.
"The situation is rapidly deteriorating and the number of people
in need of livelihood and humanitarian emergency assistance is likely
to increase as the dry and lean season continue with significant
negative impact on livelihoods and household assets as well as on the
food security and nutrition of affected rural communities", he
added.
In 2016, refugees and asylum seekers
increased by over 0.5 million to 3 million compared to 2015.
Strengthening FAO's efforts to drought
response
"FAO's partnership to build
resilience to shocks and crises in the Horn of Africa is critical and
will increase," assured Tijani.
Recently, FAO and IGAD agreed on some
key steps to enhance collaboration in mitigating the severe drought
currently affecting the countries in the Horn of Africa region and
strengthening food security and resilience analysis.
The two organizations emphasized the
importance of enhancing the role of the Food Security and Nutrition
Working Group (FSNWG), The Integrated Phase Classification (IPC) and
the Resilience Analysis Unit to enhance the effectiveness of the
Early warning-Early action and resilience investments.
FAO calls for joint priorities to
increase and include enhanced coordination, increased and systematic
engagement of member States and effective response to member States'
identified needs, as well as strengthened resource mobilization
efforts.
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