Will Ethiopia Need Another Live / Band Aid?

Politics News
Band Aid Tigray
Band Aid, and the related Live Aid concerts, raised over $100m for the Ethiopian “famine” victims through one of the best selling single of all time “Do they know it’s Christmas?” in 1984. Besides the horrible “drought”, the country is suffering from a famine of democracy, justice, accountability, transparency, rule of law and human rights that no amount of live Aid, Band Aid or Dead Aid can cure.

By The Rakyat Post,

Poor spring rains have made Ethiopia’s worst drought in 50 years even more severe, and the government estimates the number of districts suffering a humanitarian emergency has risen by nearly one-fifth in three months.

The new figures will feed into the current revision by the government and aid agencies of a joint appeal in December for US$1.4 billion (RM5.43 billion) for more than 10 million people, some of them herders whose cattle are lying dead on the dry, dusty ground.

The number of priority 1 districts – the most severe category on a four-point scale – rose to 219 in March from 186 in December, an 18% rise, the government’s National Disaster Risk Management Commission said.

This points to “a deteriorated humanitarian situation”, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said late yesterday. Ethiopia has around 750 districts.

Priority 1 districts have a “very severe lack of adequate food security” which “may include excess mortality” and “very high and increasing malnutrition”, according to the government’s Early Warning and Response Directorate.

The number of priority 1 districts has risen by almost 350% since February 2015.

Aid agencies have said the February-April spring rains are performing poorly. In some of the worst-hit areas, the rains have failed three times in a row, Save the Children said.

“Rains are now two months overdue,” the charity said in a statement on Friday. “Places like Sitti Zone in the east, and the remote Afar region in the north, have seen barely any rain.”

These areas are mainly home to livestock herders who have been hit hard by shortages of water and fodder.
Kim Pozniak, a spokeswoman for Catholic Relief Services, visited eastern Haraghe zones in early April.

“The landscape there really looks apocalyptic – it’s just grey dust and stone,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“There were dead cattle lying everywhere in between the cactuses. The locals were telling me there are so many dead cattle, not even the hyenas can eat them all.”

The crisis is expected to worsen until August when people hope to harvest crops they will plant in June to catch the summer rains.

The total number of “hotspot” districts in need of aid rose by 3% to 443 from 429, the disaster commission said.



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