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Soaring food prices adding to crisis

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Published Date: 11 June 2008
ETHIOPIA'S devastating famine of 1984-85, in which a reported one million people died, provoked a historic response in Britain and the West.
Rock star Bob Geldof launched Live Aid, which produced the charity Band Aid single, Do They Know It's Christmas?, and the Live Aid concerts in London and Philadelphia that raised more than £50 million.

This year's famine is nowhere near that terri
ble event, but is the worst to hit the country since 2003.

The 1984 famine came after drought and disease wiped out crops in Sidamo, the traditional bread-basket region. The Ethiopian government issued appeals for aid in March of that year, but by August thousands were dying daily. The West was reluctant to prop up the Marxist military regime of Mengistu Haile Mariam while a civil war still raged in the country's northern provinces.

Mengistu fled the country as rebels captured the capital, Addis Ababa, in 1991.

Different factors are at play in this year's crisis, compounded by dramatic increases in food and fuel prices worldwide.

Last week, a UN summit of 181 countries pledged to reduce trade barriers and boost agricultural production to combat rising food prices.

The UN children's agency has characterised this year's food shortage as the worst since 2003, when droughts led 13.2 million people to seek such aid. In 2000, more than ten million needed emergency food.

Officials estimate Ethiopia needs 300,000 tonnes of food supplies to last until the next harvest, due in September. They are warning that tens of thousands of children could die unless help arrives soon.

The World Food Programme says about £73 million is needed to feed children at risk of starvation.





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  • Last Updated: 11 June 2008 1:42 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Nuttered,

Earth 11/06/2008 13:11:09
hmmmm perhaps Ethiopia could sell some of its tanks and attack helicopters to Mugabe or Sudan, i'm sure they could do with a couple more. Might raise some needed cash to buy food for their people after all.
2

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 11/06/2008 23:10:57
the military hardware of ethiopia is a money-earning asset. They got paid by the US to invade Somalia almost 2 years ago. They successfully overthrew the Somali government, now UN troops are going to take over and protect the new government installed. The US gives them $300 million a year in food aid alone. Without the special military relationship I don't think that would happen.

The Ethiopian government has decided to take some land from its people and give it to big corporations who grow bio-fuels on the land. Also, tremendous quantities of water are wasted frivilously on those large corporate farms.
3

Dougie, Edinburgh,

12/06/2008 00:11:56
Perhaps it would help if they could get their birth-rate down to something more sustainable: 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

 

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