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Archive for July 7th, 2011

Pasture, grazing land and migration routes traditionally used in emergencies are no longer available

Posted by African Press International on July 7, 2011

KENYA-SOMALIA: Drought decimates livestock, hits incomes

Pasture, grazing land and migration routes traditionally used in emergencies are no longer available (file photo)

NAIROBI, 4 July 2011 (IRIN) – A severe drought ravaging the arid and semi-arid parts of the Horn of Africa region is threatening the livelihoods of pastoral communities, with massive livestock deaths recorded amid an increase in deadly conflict over resources.

Pastoralists depend on livestock for all their basic needs and any losses undermine their economic and food security. Livestock sales are often used to buy grain and lack of milk and meat contribute to high malnutrition levels.

“The value of livestock – people’s main assets in many of the worst affected areas – has plummeted and livestock markets have collapsed, so people have much less purchasing power than before. People’s livelihoods have already been decimated, but there is now also a real risk of large-scale loss of life,” warns Oxfam in a 1 July statement, adding that in some parts of Kenya and Ethiopia, at least 60 percent of the herds have perished.

The perception that emergency relief often does not appreciate the importance of saving livestock assets in emergencies has prompted the development of initiatives such as the Livestock Emergency Guidelines and Standards (LEGS), the equivalent of SPHERE in humanitarian circles. LEGS aims at improving relief programming with communities that rely heavily on livestock for their social and economic well-being.

According to a December 2010 International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) report, interventions to support livestock, such as supplementary feeding and commercial destocking (among recommended actions in LEGS), should be implemented before livestock are so weak they die.

In the 2008-2009 Kenyan droughts, truckloads of dead and dying heads of livestock were common.

“Supplementary feeding needs to target breeding stocks with sufficient time so that they stay healthy,” states the ILRI report. “Conflict resolution to enable pastoralists to move to key grazing areas needs to be done in advance, before large numbers of animals need pasture. Late interventions are costly and unhelpful.”

Falling prices

The weak condition of livestock has meant that the surviving cattle, for instance, have a far lower market value than normal – up to 40 percent less in parts of Kenya, says Oxfam, adding that “pastoralists in Somalia have also reported that their animals are now worth less than half of their value in late 2010”.

An oversupply of cattle in parts of Somalia due to destocking and restocking of small ruminants through cattle selling in Garissa, Kenya, meant that cattle prices were still 21 percent less in Somalia than in 2010, stated a 20 June Food Security and Nutrition Analysis Unit – Somalia (FSNAU) brief.

Increased camel exports – 7 percent of total livestock from January to May compared with 2 percent over the same period in 2010 at the Bossaso port – is an additional indicator of stress selling in drought-affected pastoral areas, notes FSNAU.

Northern Kenya, Somalia and southern Ethiopia, which are predominantly pastoral regions, are among the areas most affected by the drought. In Somalia, at least 65 percent of the population depends on the livestock sector; because of the effects of the drought, more people are sliding into food hunger and poverty.


Photo: Mohamed Gaarane/IRIN
In some parts of Kenya and Ethiopia, at least 60 percent of the herds have perished (file photo)

FSNAU estimates that at least 2.85 million people are facing food insecurity in Somalia, a 19 percent increase from January. In Kenya, the food-insecure population is estimated at 3.5 million.

Large livestock migration from northeastern Kenya and Somalia’s arid areas of southern Gedo to Juba and Bay regions in southern Somalia may lead to early depletion of pasture and water in these regions, according to FSNAU.

Destocking

According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA Kenya), subsidizing livestock markets, commercial livestock destocking and destocking for meat sales remain priority concerns in northern Kenya.

A government-run buy-back programme has been halted in some parts due to a lack of funds.

“The amount of money allocated was small considering the large population of livestock in Isiolo, Marsabit and Moyale,” Zachary Nyanga, the Upper Eastern director of livestock, told IRIN.

Nyanga said KSh37.7 million (about US$419,000) allocated in April had been used to buy 13,000 goats and sheep from herders but the funds ran out in May. He said the programme would resume once additional funding, which has since been allocated, was received.

According to a local aid worker, who requested anonymity, government and aid organizations’ activities in livestock emergency response had to be coordinated. “The whole [off-take] programme was a failure from the beginning; the government was buying animals at a higher price than us,” the aid worker said.

The government was offering about KSh3,000 ($34) for a goat/sheep, while NGOs were offering half that.

In addition, the programme did not target cattle, which are worst affected by the drought.

“My intention was to sell my 40 [head of] cattle, save the money in a bank and then buy livestock [with the money] after it rains,” said Peter Lepertet from the Wamba area of Samburu in the north. “I was also only allowed to sell four goats but I have more than 150 [sheep and goats]; it is meaningless.”

Wario Jirma, a resident from Marsabit district, northern Kenya, said: “We are losing livestock, [our] source of livelihood. The issue is very serious.”

In some areas, pasture, grazing land and migration routes that have traditionally been used in emergencies are no longer available, having been sold off, or allocated for tourism and large-scale agriculture. This has undermined pastoralists’ ability to cope with recurrent drought, notes Oxfam.

Clashes and displacement

In Kenya, at least 113 people were killed in clashes over resources between January and end-May, against 106 deaths in the same period in 2008, 138 in 2009, and 68 in 2010. According to OCHA Kenya, the high 2008 and 2009 killings occurred during above-normal dry conditions, similar to the present situation.

Conflict- and drought-related displacement has also affected education. At least 10 schools in Isiolo, Samburu and Turkana areas in the north have been closed.

“Hundreds of children have quit learning, many have moved with their parents to look for pasture, some have been displaced by a lack of water,” said Dade Boru, the Isiolo Teachers’ Union Executive Secretary. Livestock deaths and the resultant financial losses have meant parents are unable to raise school fees.

A local leader from the Oldonyiro area of Isiolo, Nicholas Lesokoye, said insecurity had affected business activities too and there were fears of more conflict. “We have received reports that a large number of armed herders have arrived and are still streaming in towards Isiolo,” he said.

With drought known to be an ever-present hazard in the dry lands of East and Central Africa, relief programming should focus on the whole drought cycle, including normal and recovery periods, rather than just alert and emergency, states the ILRI report. This is because “any given area or community is… always in some phase related to current, recent or impending drought”.

aw-na/js/mw source www.irinnews.org

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Drought has forced thousands of Somali families to migrate to urban areas

Posted by African Press International on July 7, 2011

SOMALIA: Halima Omar, “I watched four of my children die of hunger”

Photo: UNDP
Drought has forced thousands of Somali families to migrate to urban areas (file photo)

NAIROBI, 4 July 2011 (IRIN) – With 100 heads of cattle, Halima Omar’s family were considered fairly well off in their community in Da’ara village in Somalia’s Lower Shebelle region. However, after three years of consecutive drought, the herd has been reduced to nothing and the family has been displaced.

Omar, 30, has buried four of her children, who died of hunger, and is now one of thousands of drought-displaced people migrating to urban centres in search of help in southern Somalia.

Omar’s home is a makeshift shelter in a camp for internally displaced persons (IDPs), with more than 3,000 families (18,000 people) near Kurtunwarey district, 140km south of the capital, Mogadishu. A community leader in the camp told IRIN that trucks were picking up emaciated families by the roadsides and dropping them off at the nearest urban centres.

Omar survives on the good will of the local community. She spoke to IRIN on 4 July:

“We were very comfortable when we had our animals. We were one of the better-off families in Da’ara. But this changed when we lost our last cow five months ago. They died one by one. We could not even sell them.

“The cows were all we had. My husband went looking for food every day in the bush but there was not much to hunt. It was like the whole country was dying. Some days, he will come with enough from the bush to eat for one meal; other days we will go hungry. We went hungry more days than we ate. My children started dying slowly.

“I lost four of my six children to hunger. We felt helpless. There is nothing in the world worse than watching your own child die in front of your eyes because you cannot feed him.

“We finally left the village two weeks ago to try to save the last two. Now we are in this camp in Kurtunwarey with many other families like us. I am breastfeeding both of my children because I have nothing else. There is nothing left in my breasts but I have to give them something.

“Many children in this camp are so weak they can no longer control their bodily functions. The community here has been good but there too many of us and they are not much better off anyway.

“I keep wondering how long we will survive like this. I am worried about my last two children; I pray to God for help to come before it is too late for many of us.

“Every day we are burying someone here; you wake up in the morning and find that somebody’s child has passed away or you are woken up by the wail of a mother who just lost a child.

“I am losing hope; I don’t know whether or not the situation will ever get better. Every day, I keep wondering whether we will eat today or not. I will do anything to keep my children alive but don’t know what to do. There is nothing here, no job, no food.

“Maybe this is our fate or maybe a miracle will happen and we will all be saved from this nightmare.”

ah/mw source www.irinnews.org

 

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Killing for politics has to stop, says Barakissa Ouédraogo

Posted by African Press International on July 7, 2011

COTE D’IVOIRE: Barakissa Ouédraogo, “We must talk, otherwise we’ll keep killing one another”

Killing for politics has to stop, says Barakissa Ouédraogo

OUAGADOUGOU, 4 July 2011 (IRIN) – As Ivoirian and international officials discuss truth, reconciliation and trying those suspected of war crimes, Barakissa Ouédraogo, one of more than 100,000 Burkinabé who fled Côte d’Ivoire for Burkina Faso during the post-election violence, says helping families rebuild destroyed homes would do more to foster stability.

Ouédraogo said she regularly received death threats and that Burkinabé friends in Côte d’Ivoire were killed and maimed. “The violence just got to be too much – so many killed, so many injured. We had to flee.” She said presidents come and go, and that it is the people who must decide not to let politics lead to killing. Ouédraogo was born in Côte d’Ivoire, where Burkinabé have lived for generations. Having fled to Burkina in January, she recently returned to Abidjan’s Abobo District to assess the damage at her shelled home.

“I think these truth and reconciliation processes are just theatre, decoration. If you ask me, the money that would go into organizing such things could be used to fix holes in roofs, to help families who are really destitute. If you see your home repaired, you get some relief. Whatever your ethnicity, whatever your politics, that would ease your pain. There are still people living outdoors.

“You’re going to go to talk to a commission, tell them how your family was killed and you want to forgive, then what? You return to the street because your home is flattened.

“Economic activity is at a standstill… It’s too early to say that things are OK now in Côte d’Ivoire. Those who are saying that are not living the reality. Ask anyone in Côte d’Ivoire and they’ll tell you things have not yet returned to normal.

“For those who phoned me with death threats because I’m Burkinabé, all that was solely politics. Were it not for politics they wouldn’t have threatened me. They don’t know me, I don’t know them. It was politics alone that [led to all of this].

“We are all human beings with the same blood flowing through our veins. We must be together, live together and pardon one another… Even if we cannot forget everything, we must forgive. We will inevitably meet in the marketplace, in the street. We must talk to one another again, otherwise we’ll keep killing one another, even when 1,000 presidents have come and gone.

“We didn’t think the violence could reach this point in Côte d’Ivoire. When I made the trip back a friend showed me the remains of people who were burned alive in Yopougon [district of Abidjan]. Despite all the rains, the traces are still there. A human body does not simply disappear.

“We cannot know yet how things are going to evolve… There are people who support [former president Laurent] Gbagbo. We cannot erase that. Gbagbo left but his people are there… The new president is in place and people are going about their business and acting as if they accept that, but we can’t know what’s deep in everyone’s heart.”

np/cb source www.irinnews.org

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