Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Drought in east Africa the result of climate change and conflict

(guardian.co.uk, Monday 4 July 2011)- The Ethiopian government says 36 countries including India, China, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have leased farm land there. "This year we will relocate 15000 people to give them better access to water, schools and transport. [But] it is a coincidence

Prolonged drought in the Horn of Africa is the immediate cause of the severe food crisis already affecting around 10 million people in parts of Kenya, Ethiopia, Djibouti and Somalia. Rains have failed over two seasons, with a strong La Niña event having a dramatic impact across the east coast of Africa.

Now this year's wet season has officially ended, there is little prospect of rain or relief before September.

How far the current conditions, classified by the UN as "pre-famine" – one step down from "catastrophe" – can be attributed to climate change is not clear.

The last intergovernment panel on climate change report suggested that the Horn of Africa would get wetter with climate change, while more recent academic research has concluded that global warming will increase drought in the region.

However, according to aid agencies, the weather has become more erratic and extreme in recent years. The same area suffered a drought in 2006 as well as flash floods.

The structural causes of the crisis go deeper. The Horn of Africa has long been one of the most conflict-riven areas of the world and a focus of geopolitical struggles from the days of the British empire, through the cold war, to today's the "war on terror".

The World Food Programme has been feeding 4.3million people in Ethiopia, but had to reduce rations in March as funding ran out – in Kenya, it and the Kenyan government are giving food aid to 2.4 million people. Read more »
Source: guardian.co.uk

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