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Inequality
Global food price rises exacerbate famine in Ethiopia and
Somalia
By Barry Mason
3 July 2008
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It is not unusual for Ethiopia and Somalia to be hit by drought
and food shortages, but this year the rise in food costs makes
an already disastrous situation worse.
In Ethiopia, the area affected is in the triangle of land in
the east and southeast bordering Kenya and Somalia, comprising
the Somalia, Oromiya and Amhara regions. According to Reuters,
a NASA earth observatory picture taken from space shows the eastern
half of the country withered in drought.
Around 4.5 million Ethiopians are in need of food aid, with
as many as 75,000 children facing acute malnutrition and illness.
Ken Caldwell, international operations director for the charity
Save the Children, explained, Hunger hits children first
and hits them hardest. Ethiopian children, who are going hungry
because their parents cant afford to feed them, will be
among the first victims of the global food price rises.
As in previous years the impact of a poor belg rainfall
(the belg rains fall March to May) has left the area to
be classified by FEWSNET (famine early warning network) as either
highly or extremely food-insecure.
A Reuters report of June 13 quoted Elisabeth Byrs, of the United
Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
Seasonal rains have been poor or have failed in many
parts of Ethiopia with dramatic effects on harvests in crop-producing
areas, she explained, and the effects of the drought had
doubled the numbers needing food aid.
All the NGOs working in Ethiopia repeat the danger to children.
The American-based CHF International explains how the droughts
effect on livestock means that milk production has almost ceased,
and that this is having a marked impact on childrens nutrition.
The medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), in a press
release of June 5, said, Since MSF started its intervention
in this region on 13 May, over 700 children with complicated severe
malnutrition...have been admitted to its three stabilisation centres.
In addition more than 1,500 other malnourished children are being
treated as outpatients in eight clinics around the region. In
Ethiopia around 7 million people routinely rely on food aidmalnutrition
is nothing new. However, this year, the situation is much worse....
An MSF emergency nutritional project will generally be started
if a rate of 3 percent severe acute malnutrition is found in a
certain area. In some places in Ethiopia, recent assessments revealed
a rate of 11 percent.
The UN has launched an appeal for US$325 million to provide
400,000 tonnes of food aid in Ethiopia. The fact that just two
months ago the UN estimated around US$70 million was needed shows
the rapidly increasing severity of the situation.
One indication of the impact of rising food prices and the
weakening of the Ethiopian currency is a statement by the UN that
staple food costs nearly four times more than a year ago.
The NGOs, as well as pointing to the longer term factorsthe
impact of climate change making droughts more frequent and the
reduced agricultural output resulting from IMF-World Bank economic
programmesalso highlight massive food price rises.
Care International on its website comments: The situation
in Ethiopia is not only due to the current drought but a combination
of additional factors including dwindling natural resources and
agricultural productivity due to the effects of climate change....
For millions of people, there just isnt food available,
but in many cases even food is for sale on local markets, the
price is so exorbitant that poor people simply cant afford
to pay.
Francois Calas, MSF head of mission, explained that whilst
the failure of the early belg rains had initiated the famine,
other factors such as high rates of inflation and an increase
in food prices have also played a part. For most people life here
is a daily struggle and for many of them this year that struggle
became too much to bear.
In Ethiopia, as in most African countries, agriculture has
been seriously set back over the last three decades by IMF-World
Bank free-market policies as well as by the influx of subsidised
US and European Union food production after local markets have
been forced open by the World Trade Organisations Agreement
on Agriculture.
A recent article entitled Destroying
African Agriculture by Walden Bello in Foreign Policy
in Focus is an indictment of the impact of Western policies.
He writes, African agriculture is a case study of how doctrinaire
economics serving corporate interests can destroy a whole continents
productive base. At the time of decolonisation in the 1960s, Africa
was not just self-sufficient in food but was actually a net food
exporter... Today the continent imports 25 percent of its food,
with almost every country being a net food importer.... [S]tructural
adjustment saddled Africa with low investment, increased unemployment,
reduced social spending, reduced consumption, and low output,
all combining to create a vicious cycle of stagnation and decline.
He continues, According to Oxfam, the number of Africans
living on less than a dollar a day more than doubled to 313 million
people between1981 and 2001.... [S]tructural adjustment [has had
the effect of] severely weakening the continents agricultural
base and consolidating import dependency.
Neighbouring Somalia has also been hit by drought, but here
the situation is made seriously worse by the invasion of US-backed
Ethiopian troops coming to the rescue of the Transitional Federal
Government (TFG). For the last year and a half, they have attempted
to drive out the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) that ruled the capital
Mogadishu and large parts of Somalia during 2006. The ICU drove
out the warlords that preyed on the civilian population, many
of whom are allied to the TFG. Washington, which claimed that
the ICU contained Al Qaeda members, has justified the invasion
and subsequent atrocities on the grounds of pursuing the war
on terror.
The UN has warned that the number of people needing emergency
food relief in Somalia is likely to increase by nearly a third
to 3.5 million in the next three months.
Few NGOs now risk working in Somalia. Medecins Sans Frontieres
had four of its aid workers killed this year but continues to
operate in 12 locations through local people. Its latest report
on the situation in Hawa Afdi, on the road between Mogadishu and
Afgooye where many have fled the fighting in the capital, reports
a 400 percent increase in the number of children under five suffering
malnutrition.
Between 13 and 19 June, over 500 children under five
years old were admitted to this nutritional programme [in
Hawa Afdi], suffering from acute malnutrition, MSF reports.
In the Mogadishu-to-Afgooye corridor, more than 250,000 people
are now living in extremely crowded conditions, with their number
steadily increasing as they flee the fighting in the capital.
MSF states that in all its 12 locations, we have seen
a drastic deterioration in the health situation over the last
year, and increases in malnutrition over the last three months.
It also points to the issue of the increasing prices of staple
foods, explaining that Some items have risen by up to 200
percent since the beginning of this year. Food price rises
have been compounded by the devaluation of the currency by 80
percent between April 2007 and 2008.
See Also:
The world food crisis and
the capitalist market--Part One
[7 Jun e2008]
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