About 19.9 million people in Eastern Africa require humanitarian aid
as food security situation in the countries affected are not expected to
improve, the UN humanitarian agency said in its latest report received
on Wednesday.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
said an estimated 31.6 million people are already food insecure in
Southern Africa.
“While the meagre April/May 2016 harvest will temporarily improve
food access in parts of the region over the short term, food security is
likely to begin deteriorating by July, reaching its peak between
December 2016 and April 2017,” OCHA said in its Regional Flood Update
report.
Throughout the region, heavy rains that intensified in late April
have resulted in excessive flooding, affecting more than half a million
people; damaging infrastructure and livelihoods and caused over 370
deaths.
“Although the rains have also brought relief to some areas that have
been affected by the worst drought in decades, namely; parts of
Ethiopia, Puntland, Somaliland and a number of countries in southern
Africa, the food security situation in these areas is not expected to
significantly improve, due to the scale and intensity of the El
Nino-induced drought that has already depleted coping mechanisms,” it
said.
According to the UN, the rains have exacerbated the risk of communicable diseases in the region.
“As of May 25, several countries in the region had reported over
47,000 suspected cases of cholera and more than 970 cholera-related
deaths; 1,935 confirmed and 1,400 suspected cases of measles; and more
than, 2,480 cases of yellow fever and over 300 yellow-fever related
deaths,” it said.
Meanwhile, East Africa’s bloc, the Intergovernmental Authority on
Development (IGAD) is projecting flooding in some of its 11 member
countries mainly in the Northern region.
Director of Climate Prediction and Application Centre (ICPAC) at IGAD
Dr. Guleid Artan told journalists in Naivasha late Tuesday that the
effects of the El-Nino rain had led to the current humanitarian crisis.
He pointed out to countries in the north as the one which would be
affected by the flooding during the long rains which are expected to
start anytime.
Guleid noted that mitigations measures put in place by member
countries before the El Nino rains had seen lives saved, adding that the
effects of the rains had been minimized.
Director with the World Bank (WB) Prashant Singh said that the
institution had a 500 million U.S. dollar to support various countries
put in place mitigation measures.
Singh admitted that the food situation mainly in Ethiopia was
worrying, adding that WB was ready to chip in and address the current
situation.
“We have over 10.3 million in Ethiopia who are in dire need of food
and we are ready to work with IGAD and other donors to address the
current situation,” he said.
Assistant Director in the ministry of special programme Gordon Muga
defended the government over the manner it handled the El Nino rains.
He said that a total of 1.5 billion Kenyan shillings was allocated to
various government departments to put in place mitigations measures and
effects of the rains.
“As we head to the long rains, we have activated the national
contingent plan and set up eight coordination hubs across the country to
inform the public and prepare for the rains,” he said.
Source: cctv-africa.com
No comments:
Post a Comment
Add a Comment...