Little Relief in Ethiopia's Famine

Published: 13 April 2000 y., Thursday
An estimated six children die each day in this small corner of the Horn of Africa, where millions of people are suffering from a three-year drought and the resulting food shortage. Sharis is one of 7.7 million Ethiopians threatened with starvation. Aid agencies say a potential human catastrophe looms. Ethiopia, mired in a 23-month border conflict with Eritrea, has appealed for 920,500 tons of food aid because it can't muster sufficient resources on its own. Its own food reserves, which should be at 400,000 tons, are down to 50,000 tons, regional government officials say. Only half the relief food Ethiopia asked for has been pledged by donors. In Denan, 375 miles southeast of the capital Addis Ababa in Ethiopia's Somali region, as many as five families arrive daily at the camp, which is already home to 6,000 people. Most are nomads who rely on cattle, sheep, goats and camels for food and income. When their livestock dies, they have no alternative but to trek to a town in search of aid. The U.N. World Food Program estimates that more than 90 percent of the cattle and 65 percent of the sheep in the region have died. The gritty earth of Denan is baked hard, and nothing grows from it. Temperatures regularly rise above 100 degrees. International aid workers say no feeding center has been set up in Denan because the town of 7,000 lacks clean water with which to mix the children's food into gruel.
Šaltinis: AP
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Deadlock

Tallinn's embattled mayor, Juri Mois, submitted his resignation on May 31 following months of criticism from the opposition and then members of his own Pro Patria party for a series of political blunders. more »

Toledo wins presidency of Peru

Ex- shoeshine boy to become 1st leader with Indian roots more »

Anti-Balt talk trips up Ilves again

Estonian Foreign Minister Toomas Hendrik Ilves has caused another wave of fury among supporters of Baltic unity by a recent interview to the Wall Street Journal Europe. more »

Oxford Measures The Internet's Impact

Oxford University this week said it was creating the Oxford Internet Institute, a multidisciplinary center dedicated to studying the Internet's societal impact. more »

A Sticky Wicket for Tehelka.com

Tehelka.com shook the foundations of the Indian government in early March more »

The bill

German pensions reforms approved more »

16 dead in India election hotspots

Defying threats of violence, millions voted in legislative elections in five states of India Thursday, but rebel attacks and clashes between political parties killed 16 people, officials said. more »

A very rude act of hooliganism

National Bolsheviks get stiff sentences more »

A new front in the divorce wars

Visitation rights online catch on more »

Seven Civilians Killed In Chechnya

Seven local residents, 6 men and one boy, were killed in the village of Kirov-Yurt in the Vedensky region of Chechnya on Monday more »