Spiraling food prices tipping millions in East Africa towards catastrophe
Oxfam International Press Release
24 July 2008
Oxfam appeals for immediate action to avert disaster while there is still time
Skyrocketing food prices risk pushing millions of people across East Africa towards severe hunger and destitution, Oxfam warned today as it appealed for money to bolster its emergency work across the region.
A toxic cocktail of factors, including successive droughts, violent conflict and chronic poverty, has put an estimated 9 to 13 million people in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. This situation has been compounded by rapidly rising food prices.
Oxfam's Rob McNeil, who has just returned from the Somali and Afar regions of Ethiopia said: "This is a catastrophe in the making; we have time to act before it becomes a reality. The cost of food has escalated by up to 500 percent in some places, leaving people who have suffered drought after drought in utter destitution. Some of the roads we travelled on were littered with dead livestock. There is little or no pasture or water for the animals that people rely upon. People are increasingly becoming desperate. I saw people in one village reduced to pounding the food pellets intended for their animals into porridge to feed their families. We fear that the worst could be yet to come as the crisis deteriorates across East Africa ."
In Somalia , the cost of imported rice increased by up to 350 percent between the beginning of 2007 and May 2008. In areas of Ethiopia , the price of wheat has more than doubled over a six-month period and food prices are expected to remain prohibitively high for many until the next harvest in October.
Besides a succession of poor rains, drought, high food prices, violent insecurity and chronic poverty, the region has been hit by pests and disease. An infestation of voracious caterpillars 1 has damaged almost 70 per cent of crops and pasture in four northern districts of Kenya. Northern Kenya and Uganda have also suffered from an attack of a virus 2 that causes high death rates of goats and sheep.
This is the second serious drought in the region in the last three years and the human toll of the crisis is huge:
- In Somalia , 2.6 million - some 35 percent of the population - require emergency assistance. This could increase to half the population of the country (3.5 million) by the end of 2008. Between 18 and 24 percent of children are acutely malnourished.
- In Ethiopia , the government estimates 4.6 million people are now in need of emergency food assistance. This has more than doubled from 2.2 million in need of help at the beginning of this year. Some 75,000 children are suffering from severe acute malnutrition in drought stricken areas according to the government.
- In Turkana, northern Kenya , an Oxfam survey showed that 25 percent of children are suffering from acute malnutrition, the highest in the country.
High malnutrition rates have been reported in several parts of Ethiopia and could increase without an immediate increase in humanitarian assistance. To address the worsening food crisis the Ethiopian government requires an additional $430 million.
Oxfam is calling on international donors to increase aid levels to the region. A UN appeal for emergency aid for Somalia , one of the worst hit countries, has only received 37 percent of funding needs. The Ethiopian government estimates that only one-third of the funds necessary to manage the crisis has been received .
"The Irish public always responds generously to emergency appeals but they must be asking why does this happen year after year. The answer is that both governments in the rich and poor world need to invest in a concerted action to tackle the underlying causes of these cyclical crises. Long-term investment in safety net schemes, agricultural development and building capacity of people to prepare for future disasters is needed to prevent the vicious cycle of food crises, which have plagued East Africa", said Jim Clarken, Oxfam Ireland's Chief Executive.
Across the region, Oxfam is currently reaching an estimated 500,000 people with water, food aid and cash programmes. It needs extra money to reach many more. Oxfam is also helping people to protect and recover their livestock and their seeds for the coming planting season, and in the long term, to secure their livelihoods.
- Army worms
- Peste des Petits Ruminants (PPR)
Notes to Editors
- More about the East Africa Food Crisis
- Images by award-winning photographer Nick Danziger, who has visited the Somali and Afar regions of Ethiopia , are available. VNR footage is also available.
- Michael O Riordan, Oxfam Ireland 's Humanitarian Co ordinator is available for interview.
- People can donate to Oxfam's work in East Africa in the following ways ;
- b y post: you can post a cheque or postal order made payable to Oxfam Ireland to: Oxfam Ireland , FREEPOST, 9 Burgh Quay, Dublin 2
- By phone: 1850 30 40 55
- Donate online now
- Or call into your local Oxfam Ireland shop
For more information, to arrange interviews, or to receive a copy of the report, contact:
ROI: Paul Dunphy, Media and Communications Executive, 01 635 0422, paul.dunphy [at] oxfamireland.org
NI: Phillip Graham, Media and Communications Officer, 028 9089 5959, phillip.graham [at] oxfamireland.org
Oxfam Ireland is an independent member of Oxfam International- a group of thirteen non-governmental agencies dedicated to fighting poverty and related injustice around the world.


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