More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
GET UPDATES FROM Scarlett Johansson
 

Food Crisis in East Africa: Exclusive Report From My Oxfam Trip

Posted: 09/26/11 10:00 AM ET

This is the first installment of Scarlett's video journal from her trip to Dadaab, Turkana and Lodwar with Oxfam to shine light on the drought and food crisis that continues to unfold across East Africa. After this one, you can view the later installments here and here, and please visit Oxfam for more information and to help out.

Several months ago I came across an article in the Wall Street Journal about a refugee camp that profoundly struck me. I was aware of the global food crisis, but the statistics this particular article stated were overwhelming. Dadaab, which I had never heard of before, is the largest refugee camp in the world. It was declared full occupancy in 2008, but has received between 600 and 1,500 Somali refugees daily since.

These are victims of political conflict, severe drought and famine, and the population in these camps has now reached roughly 400,000. I tried to wrap my head around what the conditions of that camp must be like, how its occupants were surviving everyday life in the barren, arid landscape with the barest of essentials. How did anyone manage to source food or clean water? And what must the conditions be like in regards to sanitation?

As an Ambassador of Oxfam since 2004, I knew that our organization must have a presence there. Sure enough, I learned that Oxfam has been working in Dadaab since 2009, providing water sanitation, building latrines, digging boreholes, laying pipe and constructing tap stands amongst other aid. We planned a trip for late September and decided to not only highlight the crisis amongst Somali refugees but another global crisis affecting the entire Horn of Africa, the worst drought the area has seen in over 60 years.

Pastoralists, farmers and fisherman have seen their means of survival virtually die off, while entire communities are left in a state of flux and starvation with no means of relief. These communities are dependent on Oxfam's relief for both emergency response and for long term sustainable solutions. The media's spotlight on both of these crises is inconsistent and insufficient. These issues need to be addressed on a global scale immediately, as roughly 13 million people are at risk and most of Southern Somalia has been declared in a state of famine.

I visited Dadaab, Turkana and Lodwar with Oxfam and wanted to write a journal with accompanying pictures for Huffpo. But after one day in the fields, I realized the scale of what we were witnessing was almost impossible to put into words and decided to do a video log over the three days time so that I might shed light on the crisis as well as Oxfam's vitally important work. If you are inspired as I am and are able or would like to contribute to the cause, please help me raise funds by going to oxfamamerica.org/scarlett.

Please remember that no amount is too small and Oxfam's low administrative cost means that the maximum amount goes directly to effecting positive change in virtually millions of people's lives.

 
This is the first installment of Scarlett's video journal from her trip to Dadaab, Turkana and Lodwar with Oxfam to shine light on the drought and food crisis that continues to unfold across East Afri...
This is the first installment of Scarlett's video journal from her trip to Dadaab, Turkana and Lodwar with Oxfam to shine light on the drought and food crisis that continues to unfold across East Afri...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 134
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
Al Schrader
Some overnight ideas take decades
05:35 AM on 09/28/2011
The finest agricultural land on Earth is in Africa. Lake Tangenica is more than 1,000 feet deep and contains 4,500 cubic miles of fresh water (four thousand, five hundred) for irrigation, and tillapia fish farming. It's enough to feed the entire planet (6 billion humans). It's all just sitting there....Al-
10:14 AM on 09/27/2011
I commend her for all of her effort. However, charity begins at home.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yota Daga
06:38 AM on 09/27/2011
Thank you so much Ms Yohansen, for shining a light on this tragic situation.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zaida Adams
04:23 AM on 09/27/2011
Thank you for your article.
03:02 AM on 09/27/2011
If you feel helpless and overwhelmed by the African situation, Bono's organization, "One.org", has solutions. "One" doesn't ask for money, it asks for your voice.

To read about their mission, see http://www.one.org/c/us/about/3782/
To read about the challenges and their solutions, see http://www.one.org/c/us/issue/3776/
The main website is one.org

Here is part of their mission:

ONE is a grassroots advocacy and campaigning organization that fights extreme poverty and preventable disease, particularly in Africa, by raising public awareness and pressuring political leaders to support smart and effective policies and programs that are saving lives, helping to put kids in school and improving futures. Cofounded by Bono and other campaigners, ONE is nonpartisan and works closely with African activists and policy makers.
01:58 AM on 09/27/2011
ScarJo proves she's more than just looks. Way to go girl! Somalia needs our attention more than ever.
01:55 AM on 09/27/2011
Truly inspiring. I am so glad you have brought this to the media's attention. I would much rather learn how I can help and donate rather than hear about some celebs 600 dollar haircut or something along those lines. You have inspiried me to help and to spread the word so thank you. Keep up the good work!
12:56 AM on 09/27/2011
Bravo! Your best work yet...
photo
Hitchslap2
Half lies and the rest isn't true...
12:04 AM on 09/27/2011
It's no accident that Scarlett Johansson and Sean Penn are both in the news for having reached across the globe to actually do something for human beings who are in need. While I'm sure neither of them would want the spotlight on themselves, ironically, they would want Americans to think about the kinds of people who are running (ruining) our government. The kinds of people who sit around whining and throwing partisan daggers at one another while millions of human beings are in peril. Millions of Americans are in trouble. If nothing else, stop and think about Scarlett and Sean's global efforts, and maybe we can all mirror their compassion on a local level...at the very least. As for Washington D.C. and those who "serve" the American people, there are no words...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bluelyne
01:01 AM on 09/27/2011
Neither one would like the spotlight on themselves? I hope you really aren't that naive. If you don't want the spotlight on yourself, you channel money and resources through something/someone else and you stay anonymous. If you are that much of a private person, you sure aren't a movie star. Give me a break. Publicity is a huge part of their job. You don't go to see movies of actors you don't know.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
falco1998
10:36 PM on 09/26/2011
The only problem with helping these people is the leaders take everything we send over. The starving people don't get it and of course continue to starve, along with lack of birth control, in which they don't believe in, they keep making babies that starve to death or get diseases. This has been going on for years and years now. It really is time that we take care of the hungry in America. More power to Scarlett, but like Brad and Angie take this route also when they need to start taking trips in the U.S. and they'll see what people are suffering here.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlueZoo
Independent voter, Independent thinker!
12:09 PM on 10/02/2011
I don't know about Scarlett but I do know about Sean Penn. He has been physically in Haiti for the last 21 months. He stays there and he lives in a small hut, not some big house or mansion! He has used his celebrity to get pain meds and blood when the American Red Cross would send neither. He has watched these celebrities and politicians come and promise help but he watches them go and knows they have used their trips for personal gain and not to help. He begs nations throughout the world for food to feed the people of Haiti and he has been so successful at obtaining tractors, etc., for removing the rubble and clearing the streets in Haiti that his plan is now being used internationally for disaster relief. He has vowed he will not leave Haiti until the people he cares for have a place to live. The two camps he runs have had their numbers reduced from a high of 55,000 people to 23,000, as a direct result of Penn finding and building places for these people to live.

As for your belief that celebrities should do these things at home, our government does provide for people and there is no removal of rubble to be done so that people can move about. Medical care is available at any hospital. The hospitals in Haiti were destroyed. Your disregard for the plight of others is truly disheartening.
10:29 PM on 09/26/2011
She does more than you, you non-contributing consumer sponges.
Philimanjaro
Hate is law in the two-party system.
02:03 AM on 09/27/2011
Hopefully nobody on this forum is a doctor.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
09:09 PM on 09/26/2011
BRAVO, Ms. Johansson.

To her detractors I would say this. We live in the real world. A world dominated by a media whose attention to such issues ranges from momentary to non-existent.

In the real world it is necessary on a regular basis to refocus the media on such issues as this refugee crisis. It has been the tradition for decades to utilize celebrities in this effort to refocus that attention.

Mock her if you will, but if you read the article or at least watched the video, you cannot deny that you now know more about the issue than you did. Which means that her trip was a success, it accomplished its purpose.

Ms. Johansson could have chosen not to make the journey and instead lay by a pool sipping cocktails and fanning herself. Instead she chose to make an effort, which by the way put her in harm's way.

What is the point of attacking her for doing something positive with her time?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bluelyne
01:06 AM on 09/27/2011
How much effort does it take to get on a plane and go over there for a few days? It's not like she's using her vacation time from work. She has plenty of money and plenty of time to do whatever she likes between movies. I know people are starving in Africa and I've never been there. It's called watching the news. I'd be alot more impressed if she spent her time over here at shelters, being a Big Sister, actually putting yourself out and using your time for someone else. Not flying in and out of a foreign country, telling us it's bad and coming home. And staying anonymous about it.
07:57 AM on 09/27/2011
Sounds like you know her well. I am sure you have it all down just right. I do wonder about the anonymous part though. Her name is on the article and its her in the video and its published on one of the highest visited sites on the net. Just saying. I don't want to ruin your thinking process.
08:56 PM on 09/26/2011
To those very small minds who enjoy knocking this young woman for making this trip, I would simply ask the following question...

What have YOU done to help address the issue?

No matter your skin color, your nationality or your political beliefs, these refugees are your fellow human beings, existing on the same fragile planet that you are. They are your brothers and your sisters, and they share the same ancestry that you do (oh, sorry, that's called science.)

Would you object so strongly if it was Lee Greenwood making the same effort?

I applaud Ms. Johansson for her good work.
09:21 PM on 09/26/2011
I did the National Geographic Genome project, where millions are donating their DNA to track mass migrations in the past.

I found, as everyone does, that we all started in Africa. Then went up through Asia, and ended up in Denmark. I have 4 gene mutations from the norm for the world, that's how they can track the migration. So due to 4 genes, we are all African.

Other interesting thing, our ancestors co-existed with the Neanderthals, same place, same time. I always assumed they had died out.

They even have a place on the site where you can contact genetic cousins all over the world, if you and they choose to.
02:40 AM on 09/27/2011
Thank you for your detailed and intelligent response.

See kids? It's called SCIENCE!
08:48 PM on 09/26/2011
population out of control...land can't support them...and this is one of our problems here in the US now... but we refuse to recognize it...to many people for the needed jobs thanks to our efficiency with the help of technology...got it yet...don';t think so...we are too arrogant ... had you noticed our shelves are not empty from under production..we world wide can make more stuff than we can consume no mater where it is made.....that is not rocket science..its economics 101...the ole viking
09:10 PM on 09/26/2011
ole viking.... you a Dane as well?

Problem is not there aren't jobs. problem is those jobs and 49,000 factories that closed here went overseas, for the most place.
01:23 AM on 09/27/2011
ya en dansk...tella de dansk ? other problem..we don't make the machine tool in the US to rebuild those places or the trained people to know how to run them... and we could not consume all that came out the doors and we could not export them because those other countries we sent the factories too would be making the same stuff we are in a real bind that we don't know how to find a way out of for the long term...we need people trained in the humanities to guide us...the technocrats don' have a clue the ole viking