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New famine threat for Ethiopia

Overwhelmed aid groups sound alarm at hunger crisis

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Published Date: 11 June 2008
LIKE SO many other victims of Ethiopia's hunger crisis, Usheto Beriso weighs only half what he should. He is always cold, even when swaddled in a blanket. His limbs are stick-thin.
But Usheto is not the typical face of Ethiopia's chronic food problems, the scrawny baby or the ailing toddler. He is aged 55, and among a growing number of adults and older children hit by severe hunger after poor rains and crop failure in southern
Ethiopia, health workers say.

"To see adults in this condition, it's a very serious situation," said nurse Mieke Steenssens, a volunteer with Doctors Without Borders, as she registered 5'4" Usheto's weight at just 73lb (5¼st).

Warnings about the worsening situation in Ethiopia prompted the British government to send an extra £10 million in aid to the country, the International Development secretary, Douglas Alexander, has announced. It follows £5 million approved last month.

The combination of drought and rising food prices has left 126,000 children facing severe malnutrition, Unicef says. It says more than three million Ethiopians will need emergency food aid in coming months.

It is the older victims, aid groups say, that suggest an escalation of the crisis in a country that drew international attention in 1984, when a famine compounded by communist policies killed some one million people.

This year's crisis, blamed on a country-wide drought and skyrocketing global food prices, is far less severe. But several aid groups have sounded the alarm. "We're overwhelmed," said Margaret Aguirre, a spokeswoman for the International Medical Corps, a California-based aid agency. "There's not enough food and everyone's starving and that's all there is to it.

"Older children are starting to show the signs of malnutrition when normally they might be able to withstand shocks to the system," she added.

The worldwide food crisis tied to soaring prices could push up to a billion people across the globe into hunger, experts say.

But in Ethiopia, a drought is more disastrous because more than 80 per cent of people live off the land. Agriculture drives the economy, accounting for half of all domestic production and 85 per cent of exports.

The annual "lean season" that begins around June is marked by near-empty grain stores, with the next harvest not due until around September. Locust invasions and poor rains have worsened the situation.

Ethiopia already receives more food aid than almost any other country in the world, most of it from the United States, which has provided $300 million in emergency assistance in the past year.

But despite the international help, the country of 78 million is again facing hunger on a mass scale, said John Holmes, the top UN humanitarian official.

"The World Food Programme feeds some 8 million already, together with the others in Ethiopia," he said. "But we may need to increase that, because of drought."

Studies in southern Ethiopia – the epicentre of the crisis – suggest up to one in four young mothers is showing signs of moderate malnutrition.

Ethiopia's chief disaster response official, Simon Mechale, said that the food situation was "under control" and will be resolved within four months. But in the countryside, there are signs that drought has taken a more serious toll.

At a recent food distribution in a village some 150 miles southwest of the capital, more than 4,000 people showed up for free wheat and cooking oil, but only 1,300 rations were available.

Harried health workers picked through the crowd, sorting out the sickest children. Frantic mothers proffered their withered infants.

Ayelech Daka said her six-year-old son, Tariken Lakamu, has been living on one meal a day for the past three months.

"He was very fat three months ago," said his mother. "He was normal. Now, he's a pile of bones and skin."





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  • Last Updated: 11 June 2008 8:13 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 11/06/2008 02:11:28
http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/62669

here is a link that tells a lot about the reasons why there is so much hunger in Ethiopia. The land is being taken from the people and given to international corporations. and the crops grown are used for bio-fuel.

2

Watson,

Irvine 11/06/2008 04:33:19
Thanks to Gordon Brown and his Nu Labour "socalists" this country will soon be in the same situation. Child poverty and pensioner poverty are growing fast under this government.
3

Scotish Exile,

11/06/2008 07:55:49
Years and years of hand outs (probably siphoned off by corrupt officials and politicians) and they still struggle, I am afraid they must learn to stand on their own too feet. Harsh but true
4

oder,

Scotland 11/06/2008 09:16:55
1 Wally,By The Rivers Of Babylon

bio-fuel is a recent innovation, Ethiopia has suffered this food problem for the last fifty years, while it may aggravate the situation some what, it is not the cause of it, corruption, civil war, drought, have all played a part.
5

Dougie, Edinburgh,

11/06/2008 12:17:28
The average Ethiopian woman has five children and the population is already far beyond what the land can support:
http://www.xist.org/earth/pop_growth.aspx

This problem will only increase and the more money the British government pumps in (we just gave them another 10 million) the bigger the population will grow and the more starvation there'll be in the longer term.

Until Africans learn to get their birth-rates under control, there's no prospect of a solution to hunger in Africa.
6

Nuttered,

Earth 11/06/2008 12:59:36
You hit the nail on the head there Dougie. Ethiopia just can't support a population of 78,000,000 people.
Not really surprising when you think about it....300 million condoms maybe of more long term assistance than US$300 million care of the USA.
Still they have plenty of money to continue the war in Somalia ;)
7

,

11/06/2008 16:22:08
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
8

Chaplin,

11/06/2008 17:33:23
A friend of mine told me he would no longer give money until he saw a starving Ethiopian soldier.
I think he had a point.
9

American,

11/06/2008 20:54:28
#5-dougie-I've thought the same thing over the years. One other thing, I know a few volunteers who went to africa (?-dont quite remember where exactly) to try to help them and to teach them to be a little self-sufficient. The volunteers became frustrated because they were the only ones sweating and working--so they packed it up and came home.
10

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 11/06/2008 21:24:01
I was curious and so I looked in CIA Factbook web site. I found Ethiopia has about 20% more population than UK, but almost 5 times as much land. From what I read they do have water, but unfortunately the big corporate farms are squandering it. You would be surprised how people will work the land when they actually own the land without a threat to ownership. In many poor countries a big basic problem is that ownership of the land is always in question. this is a huge obstacle to development in many places. The link I put up in #1 says the government has taken land from the people and given it to these big corps who use it for bio-fuels farming.

The government of Ethiopia seems to have a lot to answer for. it is very common today worldwide that governments serve private interests including large corporations that cause the government officials to prosper, but do not serve their people. I think that is what is happening in Ethiopia and in many countries.

Remember also, Ethiopian government is allied closely with the US. Ethiopian troops took over Somalia on behalf of the US, Ethiopia was paid for this. The $300 million in food aid is a favor to the government of Ethiopia and to the US farmers, not to the people of Ethiopia. thats how it always works.
11

truth123,

uk 11/06/2008 22:40:14
the CIA fact book's got a lotta bullsh!t about Ethiopian and Ethiopians. don believe any of that @ Wally(above me)
12

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 11/06/2008 23:28:12
There is a food crisis worldwide for the poor. Here is a very nice article on it.

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/newsfull.php?newid=128288

Bio-fuel subsidies are a significant factor in this crisis. The US & EU should not subsidize bio-fuels because what it amounts to is subsidizing a process that wastes both energy & food.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/01/AR2008060101963.html?wpisrc=newsletter

it takes more energy to produce ethanol from corn when you include the energy used to grow the corn than the ethanol provides. Yet in the US at least the transformation of corn to ethanol is subsidized. Otherwise it would not be done as it is uneconomical. It serves to drive up the prices of both food & fuel.

The entire run-up of fuel prices as well is a complete fraud. Here's 3 articles on that.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8878

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9138

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9042

profit is a priority even if it means taking from the taxpayers to produce it. But people's lives are not a priority. that is why Ethiopia has hunger - the real reason.

"1 Timothy 6:10 For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows."
13

Dougie, Edinburgh,

12/06/2008 00:12:14
7 Vincent-W
Firstly, nothing is going to make Ethiopia rich so it's irrelevant what that would hypothetically do to the fertility rate. Secondly, even if there were adequate food and the fertility rate dropped to replacement level overnight, the population would still double over the next thirty years. Why? Because of the age profile of the existing population. Thirdly, there's no simple relationship between wealth and fertility. In Europe for example, the native people of France have far higher fertility than those of Spain - despite being richer. Likewise rich Sweden has far higher fertility than Russia. In Africa, it's typically the richest people who have large families.

As for how much food I may or may not throw out (not much), so what? I can't send my food scraps to Africa can I? And even if I could, how would contributing to an even bigger population in Africa solve the problem long term? The more money and food aid they get, the bigger their population gets, the greater their need.
14

Dougie, Edinburgh,

12/06/2008 00:13:04
It's hard to feel sympathy for a father of 77 children who complains he can't afford to feed them.

'Polygamy doesn't work' says father of 77
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/ethiopia/1905322/'Polygamy-doesn't-work'-says-father-of-77.html
15

,

12/06/2008 07:49:30
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
16

Dougie, Edinburgh,

12/06/2008 11:39:36
15 Vincent-W
Regardless of what someone wrote in the Lancet, fertility rates are very complex. A major reason for the decline of fertility in Spain is the weakening of traditional Catholic culture whereby women used to expect to get married, spend their life at home and bear a large family. It's not as simple as quality of life and education but of course it's related to it. Here's another example: in Britain, Pakistani born women have three times as many children as British born women. Certainly, they're not as well educated on average but that in no way accounts for all of the difference. Clearly, culture is a huge influence. So it would be wrong to assume that merely making Ethiopia (or any other such country) slightly richer or better educated is going to have much impact on fertility.

I don't know why you think I throw out food - I don't. As for giving money to charities benefiting Africa, this actually contributes to the longer term problem just as surely as giving heroin to an addict contributes to his addiction. See what Andrew Mwenda has to say:

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/markets/africa/article684563.ece


 

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