---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 1 Sep 2011 12:48:39 -0000
Subject: KENYA: Coping with drought, high food prices
To: Jean-Francois Darcq <[email protected]>

KENYA: Coping with drought, high food prices

HOLA-KINANGO, 1 September 2011 (IRIN) - Drought conditions in parts of
Kenya have worsened an already poor food security situation, which has
been exacerbated by high food and fuel prices. IRIN spoke to residents
in parts of Coast region, who highlighted some of the challenges and
their coping strategies.

 In areas close to Tana River's Hola region, residents live off
pastoralism and riverine farming, but the drought has had an adverse
impact.

 Farher, a resident of Hara, a pastoral village on the outskirts of
Hola, said: "In the mornings, we go out in search of water and return
in the afternoon with a 20 litre jerry can of water for the children,
the goats, the house needs. We are also relying on National Youth
Service [NYS] personnel who are grading the Murram road to Hola for
water from their trucks; they are a Godsend.

 "In the afternoons we go to the Food for Work programme."

 Community members are given food in exchange for work on new
infrastructure or rehabilitation of key assets or for time spent
learning new skills to increase food security in the UN World Food
Programme's (WFP) Food for Assets, also known as Food for Work
[http://www.wfp.org/food-assets], projects.

 "The biggest problems here are a lack of water and food. Let alone
people, even the goats are hungry; the goats are just goats by name
because when you take them to the market, no one wants to buy them as
they are emaciated.

 "If the situation remains as it is, we will have to move again. I
don't think there is a worse place than this - the river is far, the
hospitals too.

 "You know, all you need in life is water; if it rains, most of these
problems will end."

 Livestock deaths

 Mohammed Barisa, a former Hara area councilor, told IRIN he now had
only three surviving cows from a herd of 200; the rest have died since
2009 due to unfavourable weather and pasture conditions.

 He said: "The people are here, but the herds have moved to Garsen and
Kipini [in the Tana Delta region]; so has the milk. We have black tea
in the morning.

 "Without livestock, we are doing many things to survive. Some of us
are engaging in casual jobs such as watchmen at the NYS camps or
slashing weeds for some little money. Others, who are in the Food for
Work programme, share the maize and beans they are given at the end of
the month with those who are not on the programme.

 "The children are getting food from the School Feeding Programme
[SFP]. But they still have to take water to school, which the parents
have to bring from the river, to cook the SFP food." WFP's SFP
programme has been ongoing during the August school holidays.

 "As for me, my priority now that I no longer have many cows is just
to educate my children by engaging in any casual jobs," said Barisa.

 Hara village Chief Mohammed Dubat said: "We have all but forgotten
about samli [a ghee made from goat's milk], yet before it was like our
cash crop."
 According to the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET),
accelerated depletion in grazing resources, increasing livestock
deaths, declining livestock terms of trade exacerbated by
exceptionally high food prices, and limited food and non-food
interventions are contributing to pastoral food insecurity.
 In the Duwayo area, 25km from Hola town, residents rely on floodplain
farming but reduced Tana River flooding in the past two years has
negatively affected food availability as a resident, Isaac Dima, told
IRIN: "Most of the people have moved from here due to a lack of food.

 "For those of us who have remained, we have been selling wood to our
Somali brothers to fence their bomas [homesteads]; in exchange, they
give us some beans or rice.

 "In the shops, you buy something today and three days later the price
has gone up. For example, 1kg of maize flour was about 25 shillings
(US$0.27) in the past, but now it is almost 80 shillings ($0.80)

 "The children are not getting a proper diet. Before, they would even
have bananas and mangoes to eat but now they just have to eat ugali
[maize meal], and githeri [a mix of maize and beans], which is not
suitable for them.

 "Even the beekeepers are harvesting very little honey for sale.

 "We are now hoping that the flowering mangoes will do well if it
rains in October." The short rains season is expected to begin in late
October, according to FEWS NET.

 Fending off elephants

 In parts of the coastal areas of Kilifi and Kwale, charcoal burning
is the major coping mechanism following failed past harvests there,
with food insecurity aggravated by wildlife invasion. Salama wa
Kazungu, a resident of Bamba, about 50km from Kilifi, said: "I am
relying on charcoal burning for a livelihood.

 "I sell a 90kg bag of charcoal at 300 shillings ($3.33), but there
are few customers as everyone else here is selling charcoal too.

 "I need about 200 shillings ($2.22) daily to feed my five children
but how can I get this money if I am only able to sell one bag of
charcoal every two months?

 "Sometimes, we just boil some wild vegetables to eat.

 "There are people I know who have died after eating some poisonous
plants but the reports probably did not reach the right people as we
are not getting food aid here. Maybe someone else should die so that
we can get some relief food."

 In the Kinango area of Kwale, also in Coast region, wildlife invasion
of farmland due to drought conditions is compounding food insecurity,
as Chai Ramoyo told IRIN: "Now that it is dry, the elephants are going
to the low-lying areas such as Mazola and Nyango in search of food.
Some farmers have abandoned their farms here and gone to Msambweni and
Lungalunga to evade the animals. But it is just those who are able to
leave who have gone to farm elsewhere.

 "Here, when people plant, they ask God for rain and then they say,
please let there be no wildlife.

 "There is a time seven elephants came to my shamba [smallholding] and
ate my crop for three hours, there was nothing I could I do."

 Another resident of Kibaoni village, close to the Mwaluganje Elephant
Sanctuary [ http://www.elephantmwaluganje.com/PROJECTS/8/html/Projects.html
] in Kwale, Mazore hamadi Mwakuwewa, showed IRIN the bow and arrows he
uses to protect his crop: "I guard my crops day and night from
elephants and baboons; the warthogs are a problem too.

 "We are hungry because of the wildlife invasion; the farm is mine but
the wildlife belongs to KWS [the Kenya Wildlife Service]. Sometimes, I
feel like we are farming to benefit other people."

 In the lower eastern area of Ngomeni in Mwingi, residents are
frequenting market centres "as there isn't much to do at home", they
say. A succession of past poor crop seasons plus high food prices has
adversely affected food security there. In response, some women are
engaging in petty business at the centres.

 "If you get 20 shillings [$0.20], it is cheaper to come to the kiosk
for some tea and chapatti than try to buy food from the shops," said a
resident. The northern parts of Mwingi are among areas classified as
being at the emergency food insecurity level, according to FEWS NET.

 aw/mw
[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93632



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