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    Drought returns to Sahel, bringing hunger

    DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — For the third time in the past decade, drought has returned to the arid, western shoulder of Africa, bringing hunger to millions. Aid agencies are warning that if action is not taken now, the region known as the Sahel could slip into crisis.

    More than 1 million children in the eight affected countries are expected to face life-threatening malnutrition this year, according to the United Nations Children's Fund. The region has not yet recovered from the last drought two years ago, and many families lost their herds which means that they will not have assets to purchase food.

    Aid workers also worry that donors are suffering from "famine fatigue," as the looming West African crisis comes just six months after Somalia's capital was declared a famine zone.

    "I think there is a real risk that people may think this is the kind of thing that just happens every few years," Stephen Cockburn, the West Africa regional campaign manager for Oxfam, said of the droughts in the Sahel.

    Earlier this week, aid agencies revealed that thousands of people died needlessly in the Horn of Africa because donors waited until people started dying to respond. The warning signs were there as early as August 2010 but aid wasn't ramped up until July 2011.

    Signs of the looming famine in the Sahel were first detected late last year, according to the report released Wednesday by Oxfam and Save the Children. The lessons of Somalia and the Horn of Africa, where as many as 100,000 people died, are front and center in how aid agencies are responding to the potential famine in West Africa.

    "Everyone recognizes in looking back that there was a delay in responding (in the Horn of Africa). Tens of thousands of people died because of that delay ... We know from this recent and painful experience what the risks are," said Cockburn.

    He said that there could be more hope for the Sahel, since the indications of a crisis have been detected early on.

    "The alarms (for the Sahel) were already sounding in November and December. Every country in the region, and every president in the region, has recognized this and asked for outside help," he said.

    The U.N. children's agency was among the agencies reacting early. The organization issued an appeal in December and began ordering therapeutic foods for infants and toddlers. By then, Niger had already issued its own alert saying that more than half the country's villages were vulnerable to food insecurity.

    Droughts in the Sahel — a region spanning eight countries, including northern Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, northern Nigeria, Cameroon and southern Chad — have become increasingly frequent with emergencies declared in 2005, 2008 and 2010. The consequences are especially dire for children, said UNICEF spokesman Martin Dawes.

    "In this crisis adults will suffer, but children will die. Why? Because nutrition deterioration is a vicious cycle — in growing, the body requires more to replace and make up what it lacks and when the right kinds of food are not available the situation gets worse," said Dawes. "They go from moderately malnourished to acute, and lifesaving intervention is needed."

    As the child gets weaker, he or she becomes more vulnerable to routine problems, like diarrhea. The child is less able to fend off diseases, and the effects are more pronounced, Dawes said.

    Even during a non-drought year, as many as 300,000 children die of malnutrition in the Sahel, says Cockburn. It's a region that is perpetually on the edge, and any extra shock sends it over the precipice.

    "The increasing frequency of droughts in the Sahel means that communities have had little time to recover from the last food crisis," according to Malek Triki, the Dakar-based spokesman for the U.N. World Food Program. "Their savings are exhausted and livestock herds have not been rebuilt."

    The United Nations is already purchasing food and deploying specialized teams to the region. Grain prices across the region are rising and WFP has observed a rush on maize by wholesalers, who are buying up local stocks. Markets are emptying and staples including millet and sorghum are now in short supply.

    Traders from the Sahel are traveling increasingly greater distances to buy maize, with some spotted as far as northern Ivory Coast, according to the WFP.

    Cockburn said that the hard-learned lessons of Somalia are already bearing fruit. He is cautiously optimistic by the response from the European Union, which announced this week that it is doubling its humanitarian aid for the Sahel.

    Kristalina Georgieva, the European commissioner for humanitarian aid visited Niger on Wednesday in order to see the problem up close.

    "Within months people will begin to starve unless we act," she said, according to a statement posted on the European Union's website. "The alarm bells are ringing."

     

    32 comments

    • Komet  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      NGOs are the crack dealers of Africa. They keep the Africans addicted to the aid so that reforms are never truly enacted. All the while they drive around in new Range Rovers, flying back and forth to Europe and America on shuttles, and generally getting in the way of people getting back on their feet. It's a heck of a racket!
    • YYY  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      For as long as I could remember, we have been sending food to Africa. I think we are actually encouraging people to live and breed where there is no possibility to ever self sustain themselves.
    • Hurley  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Instead of handout how about we give these people a hand? Maybe this part of the world is just not capable of sustaining a large population of human beings. Yes, feed the hungry man and hungry child but shouldn't we also be looking at ways to help that this situation doesn't repeat itself? There has been famine in this part of the world for as long as I can remember.
    • *  •  1 mth 5 days ago
      The Presidents of these countries have enough money stashed in France to aid their people. Gabon's President's family has 60 mansions and billions of dollars and they could sell those and help their continent's people. Biya of Cameroon has enough money to feed the continent because he sure does not spend it on his country. He has stashed money around France and lives in France most of the time, ignoring his country, yet they still elect him over and over for more than 30 years now. Those countries have been exploited first by the oil companies and now by their current Presidents. How much money is enough for those greedy leaders? I say it is Africa's problem. Not ours. They have plenty of money and we have our own needs in our prospective countries. I agree with Stuart from Florida. Sink or swim. Next it will be East Africa. Enough begging when your pockets are full of greed money. Share it with your fellow countrymen African Presidents!
    • penurius  •  Orlando, Florida  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      As the world population continues to soar food is expected to become more expensive and scarce. One has to wonder what will happen to these arid areas whose population has exceeded the ability to feed themselves when there is no longer sufficient surplus food that can be sent from other places. They simply will not get the food and millions will starve to death. Eventually hunger will cruelly put the brakes on their population growth that in recent decades has been supported by handouts. Then the UN politicians and relief agencies will realize it would have been far more humane to adopt policies of population control rather than just soliciting more and more food aid that likely won't be available too much longer.
    • william  •  Salisbury, Maryland  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      Africa has to help itself.Plenty of our tax money goes to help them have more children.
    • slayer  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      We can't afford to keep saving these people. Especially when so much of the aid doesn't get where it needs to go. Its time for someone other than the U.S. to step up. Obviously we have to solve our own problems before we can help elsewhere.
    • JESUS CHRIST  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      lets just let them die africans will never evolve
    • Harry  •  San Jose De Guaymas, Mexico  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      The problem is that there is way over population in these countries. The Sahel is always subject to drought as is many parts of the world. Northern Mexico and the S.W. U.S. is going through a severe drought. When people choose to move into these areas famine is just around the corner. If human beings do nothing to control their population, nature will.
    • Anthony  •  Stuart, Florida  •  1 mth 5 days ago
      It's a sad shame but if these peoples can't figure it out and improve their own situation without the guidence form the outside well they are a doomed soceity destined to disappear into history . Some people we keep helping to keep their heads above water and they refuse to learn how to swim . Can't help these type of mentality absent prone souls .They are not here to stay . All the help in the world kinda gives up after a period of time .Sorry , we just have to leave it in GOD's hands ..
    • Gene  •  Walnut Creek, California  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      I think some birth control is called for.
    • Easily Offended  •  Tallahassee, Florida  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Why would we expect 'equal' outcomes if we knew thsat there were not identical practices?
      .
      One country controls its populations and practices birth control while another society is toally out of control, have way too many kids they cannot possibly feed.
      .
      Should we feed em some more so they can have even more kids they cannot possibly feed? Feed em more and all you will get is more starving kids unles they change in a major way.
      .
      When I was a kid, there were only a few hundred million starving children each year in Africa.....and now that the West (largely the US) has fed the Africans (largely for FREE) for over 60 years, we now have easily over a billion starving people in the world (and we are to blame, if we keep giving them food and not requiring them use birth control)
    • Easily Offended  •  Tallahassee, Florida  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Too many children leads to lots of hungry people ........ no magic and no blaming the West
    • Slaytanic  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Another Muslim country that hates non-Muslims but have no problem looking for and asking Christian countries for help and food. It's sad that since switching over to Islam many prosperous and stable countries have seen their quality of life turn to dust and their countries turn to ruin. There is a reason that Islamic countries are the poop shoot of the world, and it's not because the people are lazy or inept, it's because Islam is the destroyer.
    • bill  •  Prior Lake, Minnesota  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      So experts who are living off taxpayers/donors say another "crisis" can be averted if we send money and food... so... another even larger crisis can occurr and another and another... enough... They NEED new government and a population control plan more than anything.
    • Yahoo User  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      well if they would quit the practice of slash and burn and over grazing that might help, but heck that makes too much sense lets just send a bunch of money to the ngos
    • americathefree  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      There is an over population problem in most of Africa yet Islam and the Catholic church encourages them to breed in an attempt to outbreed the other. The Catholic church's policy against condoms not only causes excess population but adds to the increase in AIDS. There are Muslims who are resistant to health care workers inoculating children against Polio and other diseases due to paranoia. The religious war going on there will continue to keep Africa in the dark ages.
    • B  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      Over $75 billion in aide to African countries in 10 years and nothing to show for it. Sterilize every newborn.
    • BuzzBeGone  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      And drought never left west Texas...
    • Jennifer  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      I am not without compassion toward suffering people, especially children. And I can't pretend to know why particular cultures do what they do, I just have to respect their differences. But I cannot understand why entire populations choose to live in geographic areas that are historically incapable of sustaining these large populations. You see annual animal migrations all over the world - these herds/flocks are moving to where the resources are. It's a survival instinct.
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