Urban poor cannot afford to eat
Inter Press Service (Johannesburg) 23
June 2008
INTERVIEW
Ethiopia,
a nation of 80 million people, has been
the site of famine and drought
throughout its tumultuous history.
Arising from a myriad of causes and
often shepherded along by political
instability, the country's 1984-85
famine, for example, left over a million
dead and served as the impetus for the
fund-raising concerts of Live Aid in the
United States and the United Kingdom.
Today, Ethiopia once again stands at the
brink of a substantial food crisis, with
the Word Food Program currently
estimating that, of Ethiopia's 80
million citizens, 3.4 million will need
emergency food relief from July to
September. This is in addition to the 8
million currently receiving assistance.
UNICEF has asserted that the country's
food shortage this year is the most
severe since 2003, when droughts forced
13.2 million people to seek emergency
food aid.
IPS correspondent Michael Deibert
sat down in Addis Ababa with Abera Tola,
Director of the Horn of Africa Regional
Office of Oxfam America, to hear his
insights as to Ethiopia's latest food
crisis.
IPS: Could you describe the
current food crisis in Ethiopia?
ABERA TOLA: We have a food
shortage, a drought and a famine, all of
which are different things. Nationally,
we have a food shortage in Ethiopia,
which the drought has also exacerbated.
During the harvest time in January and
February, the price of maize was only
180 birr ($1 is worth roughly ten
Ethiopian birr), but now it is 500 birr.
And teff ( a type of grain used to make
Ethiopia's distinctive spongy injera
bread),was 400 birr in February, and now
it is 1000 birr. Who can afford that?
This is the big question now.
If you go to Oxfam program areas, you
can see that the farmers are ok, at
least they have grain and they have
something to eat stored away, they can
have a surplus to send to the market.
But the most affected in this country
are really the urban poor, more than the
rural poor. The urban poor have to have
an income in order to buy grain, but
that income is not there. In the city of
Addis Ababa, around 4 million people,
more than 80 percent, live on less than
$1 per day. How can they afford food?
We have seen the government effort
distributing maize at a lower price,
around 300 birr, but we believe that
more has to be done to support the poor.
IPS: How would you characterize
the Ethiopian government's efforts thus
far in the face of this crisis?
Some actions taken, such as not allowing
export of grain, might have helped.
Again, you have some maize and wheat in
government stores, which they are
distributing. There are efforts, these
efforts are really appreciated, but more
has to be done. More policies have to
come out related to food shortage
issues. We have arable land in Ethiopia,
but what is not there is investment,
particularly in the areas of
infrastructure. There are no roads, no
electricity and investors are not
willing to go and do farming. investors
are not encouraged to come to Ethiopia
and engage in the agricultural sector.
IPS: Hunger is obviously a
recurring theme of life in Ethiopia.
What do you think are the underlying,
fundamental causes of that?
We have to have good polices, strategies
to really tackle poverty in Ethiopia. We
are living in an area of cyclical
drought and food shortages, every year.
Last year, we at Oxfam raised $3
million, and the year before we raised
the same amount of money, and we are
doing that with meagre resources. If
there was a government strategy that
would address the root causes, we would
be more than happy to collaborate with
the government.
IPS: Why aren't rural farmers
producing food the way they did before?
There are a lot of issues within that.
They are producing, but a farmer who
owns 2 or 3 hectares produces 20
quintals of teff (1 quintal is
equivalent to 100 kilograms), as you can
imagine the household in Ethiopia is
about 6 or 7. To sustain his household
the farmer needs more than half of that.
What he can bring to the market is about
5 quintals.
Now, he will not bring the whole 5
quintals to the market at the same time
because he has to speculate. Of course
there are some social factors which push
him to sell during the harvest time. He
has to pay for his fertilizer, he has to
send his children to school and buy
uniforms and exercise books, but after
that he will try and keep the rest and
wait for the market. And thus the price
goes up.
IPS: What do you think is the
greatest developmental issue facing
Ethiopia today?
Really, again, the food crisis and, by
extension, the energy crisis. We are
lucky to have electricity today, but
tomorrow we don't expect any. Energy
meaning not only oil, but in the rural
areas where we have 80% of the
population, they are using firewood.
There, they have to cut trees, and the
deforestation of the country is really
alarming, it's at about 30 percent now.
There should be a policy to stop it. The
poor farmers should be helped to plant
trees and rewarded for planting trees.