No
Food in Drought-Hit Ethiopian Regions,
UN Official Says
By Peter Heinlein [VOA] Addis Ababa | 23
June 2008
The
United Nations is sounding another alarm
about severe food shortages in Ethiopia,
where tens of thousands of children are
facing starvation. VOA's Peter Heinlein
in Addis Ababa reports the U.N.
children's agency UNICEF is appealing
for nearly $50 million in emergency aid
for the hardest-hit areas, where food
stocks are depleted and the next harvest
is months away.
A senior U.N. children's agency official
visiting drought-ravaged areas of
southern Ethiopia during the past week
found families with no food, not enough
money to buy any, and no hope of
replenishing supplies until at least
late September.
UNICEF Deputy Director Hilde Johnson
says everywhere she went, government
officials and aid workers gave the same
assessment.
"A clear message was conveyed to us from
all of them: There is no food," said
Hilde Johnson. "The assistance needs to
be taken to scale, and it has to happen
urgently. There was absolutely no
inconsistency. That was the message from
everyone."
The UNICEF official says during her
four-day visit, she had positive
meetings with Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi and other senior leaders, some of
whom have accused aid agencies of
exaggerating the food shortages for
fund-raising purposes.
UNICEF's Johnson says in her talks, all
government officials agreed the food
shortages are serious and getting worse.
She told reporters the ministers
expressed hope the crisis would ease
later this year if conditions improve.
But she says there are many 'ifs'.
"The government do think they will be
able to curb in the sense the situation
later, meaning August, September, If the
rains come in accordance with normal, If
there is an adequate vegetable
harvesting, If other complementary
measures are kicking in, plus If the
supplies they are buying externally to
come into the market, plus aid
bilaterally they are negotiating comes
in," said Johnson. "So there is a clear
"if", and that is no secret."
U.N. humanitarian agencies say it is
impossible to know how widespread the
food shortages are in a country where
record-keeping is poor.
"It is very very difficult for us to say
how many children are dying," she said.
"From our visit in the hot spot areas of
Kambala, we were told by health
extension officers that children were
dying in the villages now, and that for
quite many it was too late. There is no
doubt there is a risk of children dying
in numbers in the hot spots."
Ethiopian officials have repeatedly
emphasized that this drought is not a
famine, such as the one in the mid 1980s
that killed an estimated one million
people.
Ethiopia's disaster preparedness agency
this month more than doubled its
estimate of the number of people needing
food assistance from 2.2 million to 4.6
million.
Disaster preparedness agency chief Simon
Mechale is predicting worse conditions
in July. He recently appealed to donor
nations for $325 million worth of
emergency food aid to make up an
expected shortfall of 390,000 metric
tons until the next harvest comes in.