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Louis Belanger

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Drought in Sahel Could Become a Catastrophe for 13 Million

Posted: 03/08/2012 6:55 pm

Aid agency Oxfam launches $37m emergency appeal to help 1 million of the most vulnerable in West and Central Africa

Some 13 million people are at severe risk from a food crisis which is set to escalate into a full scale humanitarian emergency in the Sahel region of West and Central Africa if urgent action is not taken, international agency Oxfam warned today.

Across Chad, Burkina Faso, Mali, Mauritania, Niger and northern Senegal malnutrition rates hover between 10 and 15 percent, and in some areas rates have risen beyond the emergency threshold level of 15 percent. Over 1 million children are at risk of severe acute malnutrition.

In parts of Chad some villagers have been reduced to pounding ant hills to gather grain the ants have stored. They say unless they get help they will have to abandon their villages in a month's time.

Millions of people are on the threshold of a major crisis. All signs point to a drought becoming a catastrophe if nothing is done soon. The world cannot allow this to happen. A concerted aid effort is needed to stop tens of thousands dying due to international complacency," said Mamadou Biteye, Oxfam Regional Director for West Africa.


We witnessed last year the situation spiralling out of control in East Africa as the aid community failed to act swiftly. The worst can be avoided and thousands of lives will be saved if we act now. It's that simple.

The agency said that a lethal mix of drought, high food prices, entrenched poverty and regional conflict is behind the crisis.

Across the region, food prices are higher by on average 25 to 50 percent compared with the last five years average. Prices could increase by another 25-30 percent by the peak of the hunger season in July - August, putting the most vulnerable families at increased risk of malnutrition.

2012-02-02-ChaddryDSC00366.JPG
In Chad, the reality of the drought is real. Women in the village of Azoza are seen pounding ant hills in the hope to find a few grains of rice.


The hunger season has started early in the Tillabery region in western Niger. Communities have seen their food stocks dwindle and their debts pile up. Families are migrating to the cities in search of food and jobs. Some 33,000 children have dropped out of school, according to government's figures, as they follow their parents.

Erratic rains have caused a poor harvest especially in Niger, Chad, Mauritania, Mali and Burkina Faso. Added to this people have had little time to recover from the food crisis of 2010. People have also been hit by an increase in the frequency and severity of food crises in the Sahel region in the last decade.

In Mauritania 700,000 people, nearly a quarter of all families, have difficulty meeting their daily food needs. In Chad, 3.5 million people, more than 30 percent of the population, are food insecure. In parts of Senegal there has also been an increase in its population facing food insecurity.

Listen and watch my colleague Fred Perraut in Chad.

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization, agricultural production in the region is down 25 percent from 2010. The grain harvest is down by 1.4 million tonnes (metric tonnes) for the six Sahelian countries. The most affected country is Mauritania, with a 52 percent drop in crop production from last year, while Chad's food production is down by 50 percent and Niger's is 27 percent.

Although harvests in neighbouring food exporting countries such as Nigeria, Benin and Ghana have been reasonable, it is unlikely surpluses will be able to fill the food needs in the Sahel. Security, the capacity of traders and the introduction of trade restrictions in several countries have also been disrupting the flow of food. Currently food aid bought locally is 15 to 20 percent cheaper than on the international market but with high prices and uncertainty of supply the costs of supplying food will be much higher than it was in the 2010 food crisis.

The aid group also said that the conflict in Northern Mali has forced 160,000 to flee their homes with more than half of them escaping to neighbouring countries of Niger, Burkina Faso and Mauritania. Violence in Nigeria has also caused a drop in the volume of grains entering Niger and Chad.

Oxfam said that with the next harvests not due until October a concerted aid effort is needed. The UN has estimated that $724m is needed to address current needs, an amount that could rise as the crisis progresses. While some rich countries have started to donate, and the European Union in particular donating generously and early, over a half of the amount is still needed.

Oxfam needs to raise $37m to meet the needs of around 1 million people it plans to help across the Sahel region with vital aid such as food, cash, support to livestock, water, sanitation and hygiene promotion campaigns.

Find out more about Oxfam's work in the Sahel region of West and Central Africa.

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DeepThought24
NATURE, REASON, FACTS and SCIENCE...not
10:16 AM on 03/10/2012
Maybe the population has simply outgrown its ability to be self-sustaining?

Could be god/nature’s plan to moderate the population to earth’s sustainable levels (see Gaia).
10:11 AM on 03/10/2012
The sad part is that a good number of those countries are well-endowed in minerals and oil...That's the real scandal. I would still donate to Oxfam but something needs to be done with regards to how the mineral and oil revenues are used in those countries.
09:41 PM on 03/09/2012
why should it cost 37 million to help 1 million people, it shouldn't!!!
09:09 PM on 03/09/2012
We are fools if we help, it is terrible to say. These people and places are beyond help. If we don't start worrying about ourselves...
banderson2
82nd ABN Div Paratrooper Ret
06:57 PM on 03/09/2012
But we don't have a problem in attacking Libya which is right next door or Syria which is not far away. The bottom line is these people don't have any oil.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shasha HodnettDee Harris
Techie to my heart!!
05:18 PM on 03/09/2012
This has been happening in Chad, it seems like forever. I don't understand!! Throwing money at this problem is obviously not working, because of corruption. Why are we continuing to do the same thing over and over, yet expecting a different result? We should either do something to really help these people, or just quit reporting on it and let things continue to the obvious conclusion. This is a result of humans, not nature. Start telling the truth or quit reporting......
01:40 PM on 03/09/2012
Another misleading report. Drought is not the primary problem here. Please get this right. Weather is blamed when the real issue is policy across West Africa implemented by humans. Focusing on weather makes it sound as though people are at the mercy of the gods, nature or however you want to conceptualize the non-arrival of rain! The real problem is hinted at later in the article: "high food prices". And why are they high? Regional trade policy makes it difficult to move food across West Africa. Numerous checkpoints along WA's roads and highways slows the movement of trucks carrying food - and the drivers are harassed for bribes at these checkpoints, further increasing the cost of food. Articles like this are terribly, tragically misleading. The problem is NOT the weather. The problem is policy. Please see the Famine Early Warning system for more information and the Borderless campaign for the REAL solution (www.borderlesswa.com): eliminate trade barriers, they are costing Africa billions in lost trade opportunities and the root cause of high food prices that are at the heart of famine.
10:14 AM on 03/10/2012
the governance issues and policy decisions of the leaders in those countries must be addressed.
01:10 PM on 03/20/2012
Agree. Alot of waste and slow movement due to checkpoints and payments along WA roads. High prices also from western exportation of inflated currencies and France's peg of CFA to EURO. France has history of devaluing CFA and will again. PI(I)GGS of the Euro are not near as vunerable to economic crisis as CFA countries due to France's autonomous powers. Sahel climate requires countries to import a good bit of food and price can be important factor in famine potential.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tikiman
Just out taking my dogma for a walk.
08:27 PM on 03/08/2012
While the world stands idly by.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
famullar
08:21 PM on 03/08/2012
I read this and found it very funny, to me , the religion is against it but if we talk of Pahrma, then they may be right. Depend who takes this and whio refuses this. All have their own choice. I thank you Firozali A.Mulla DBAAmericans spent $5 billion last year on birth control alone. Much of the sales are from generic brands but it's a growing market, especially as more drug makers come up with new products . To illustrate how large the business is: Bloomberg reports Bayer Pharma took in $1.5 billion from its birth control pills YAZ and Yasmin. Meanwhile, Merck reported over $600 million in sales from its Nuvaring. Slashed Birth Control Subsidies
There are many birth control products, the most popular being "the pill." According to Planned Parenthood, birth control pills cost between $15 and $50 a month, depending on health-insurance coverage and the type of pill. On an annual basis, that means the pill costs between $160 and $600. Due to state and federal government disputes, Montana and New Jersey have eliminated their state family planning programs. New Hampshire cut its funding by 57%, Texas cut its family planning by two-thirds and five other states made more modest program trims. If the birth control works then you may as well try this in India. The culture refuses this. I thank you Firozali A.Mulla DBA