Tuesday April 11 2:12 AM ET
Ethiopian Cycle of Famine Continues

AP Photo


By ANDREW ENGLAND, Associated Press Writer

GODE, Ethiopia (AP) - Sakorey Faday and Adan Mohammed are young women from
two different African countries, but they share experiences as similar as
they are tragic.

Adan spent 10 days walking 60 miles with her three children to a feeding
center in Gode, 360 miles southeast of the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa.
The trek proved too much for her 4-year-old daughter and 1-year-old son. Both
died along the way.

Faday walked to Baidoa in neighboring Somalia in search of help after drought
ended her farm work. Faday's husband died a year ago; the twin to the tiny,
malnourished baby wrapped in her arms died at birth. Now, she says, she has
nothing.

These women's odysseys took place in February and March, as severe food
shortages brought on by drought began to threaten millions of lives. Similar
tales have been told over and over again in Ethiopia and Somalia.

``I have not seen rain for 18 months,'' said Adan, whose family's herd of 200
cattle and sheep died months ago. ``I just have to wait for something from
God.''

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The 33-year-old Adan, looking sad yet dignified in her dusty traditional
veils, her remaining child tucked under her arm, now lives in a tiny hut of
dried grass and bits of cloth. Faday has no place of her own and is forced to
rely on charity.

But nature is not solely responsible for the desperate situations of people
like Adan and Faday. Politics, war and centuries of nomadic culture all have
played roles.

The entire region has a history of conflict and perennial food shortages. Of
the countries bordering Ethiopia - Kenya, Sudan, Eritrea and Somalia - only
Kenya can claim any meaningful stability.

In recent years Ethiopia has perhaps suffered the most from drought, worsened
by on-and-off warfare since the mid-1970s.

In 1984, televised images of skeletal, starving Ethiopians pulled on the
world's conscience, and as many as 1 million died. But famine also came in
1972, 1974 and 1989.

Officials in Gode, which is home to ethnic Somalis and one of the
worst-affected areas, say the drought comes in 10-year-cycles.

Now, 11 years after the last severe food shortage, the message is being
repeated. This time, aid groups say 7.7 million are at risk.

``These people are really on the edge,'' said Ben Foot, country director for
the British branch of the international charity Save the Children.

The situation is exacerbated, local officials say, by the nomadic lifestyle
of the people who live in the region. The nomads rely on livestock for food
and income. When the rains fail, cattle, goats, camels and sheep die -
leaving the people with nothing. They then migrate to feeding centers,
stretching local resources and increasing the risk of disease. Some 70
percent of the 3.5 million people in Ethiopia's Somali region, are nomads,
government figures say.

Ibrahim Abdi, chairman of the regional emergency task force, said the key is
to persuade nomads to settle and diversify into farming.

``The problem is people do not adapt so quickly because agriculture is very
laborious work,'' he said. ``If they get a harvest for two or three years,
they will then go and buy cattle and go back to where they started.''

Teshome Emanek, head of the government's disaster preparedness and prevention
committee, said regional authorities in Ethiopia - where regions have some
autonomy - lack the means to end the cycle of famine.

In Gode, the Wabe Shebelle River still flows strongly, but it has not been
used efficiently for irrigation.

``Nothing is being done at this time to bring them (the nomads) off the
land,'' Teshome said.

He estimates it would take at least 10 years to change local habits.

The Somali people on both sides of the border have been nomads for centuries,
and their allegiance is to the land and their clans, not to any state. Most
would resist changes.

Aid officials say political attitudes and trade regulations need to change
throughout the region so that the nomads can take their herds to the closest
market without being blocked by national borders.

In the meantime, the government is asking donors for more than 800,000 tons
of food to keep famine at bay.

But for Adan and Faday, the misery seems guaranteed to continue indefinitely.

``I am a beggar,'' Faday said. ``I have nothing for the future.''

-

On the Net:

http://www.savethechildren.org


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