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Appeal for food aid to ease hunger pangs in Marsabit

Wednesday, April 17th, 2024 04:22 | By
Residents of Marsabit walk past a carcass of a cow that died following a prolonged drought in the region. PHOTO/Print
Residents of Marsabit walk past a carcass of a cow that died following a prolonged drought in the region. PHOTO/Print

Leaders and stakeholders have appealed for food assistance to feed thousands of famine-stricken families in North Horr constituency of Marsabit who are staring at starvation.

The leaders pointed out during a sub-county steering group (SCSG) meeting at Kalacha Township that 36,050 residents were experiencing acute food shortage due to  prolonged drought after  five consecutive failed rainy seasons.

Meeting, which consisted of players from the National government, Non-Governmental Organisations, the National Drought Management uthority (NDMA) and county government, described the situation as dire and called for urgent intervention measures to avoid loss of life.

Pastoralist Community Initiative Development Assistance (PACIDA) chief executive Patrick Katelo said the situation was bad as the communities had lost over 80 per cent of their livestock to the severe drought while the few that survived were killed by floods and rainstorms that hit the region recently.

“The malnutrition levels have increased tremendously among locals as they do not have any source of food or income,” Katelo said, adding that lactating and expectant mothers, children and the elderly were the hardest hit. The SCSG heard that there was a risk of an outbreak of waterborne diseases and malaria as well as rift valley fever, owing to the current rains and floods, which have been enhanced by rejuvenated seasonal rivers from the southern Ethiopian highlands.

Nominated member of Marsabit Assembly, Darare Gonche, appealed to the government to mobilise resources and extend the needed assistance without delay.

She decried the bad state of roads which has left many areas inaccessible saying mothers seeking antenatal medical care cannot reach health facilities.

Marsabit North DCC Pius Njeru while chairing the meeting said that plans were underway to avail relief supplies for famine victims in the area.

Njeru observed that the drought, which is a condition induced by climate change, has been made worse by the floods and the recent rift valley fever outbreak.

The DCC said the delayed relief food consignment for the months of March and April from the national government was being fast tracked and urged the non-state actors to consider reallocating the resources towards famine mitigation.

Seed money

He also disclosed that plans for a livestock restocking programme aimed at enabling pastoralist communities to regain their source of livelihood were underway.

“The seed money for the restocking plan has been allocated and the beneficiaries will soon be buying small stock like sheep and goats to enable them to get back on their feet,” said the DCC.

A spot check in various villages in the constituency revealed a sorry state of affairs with many hunger victims saying they had stayed for days without anything to eat. At Chille village in Kalacha division, 87-year-old Daracha Roba said he has never witnessed or heard of a devastating weather phenomenon as the prevailing one his entire life.

Appealing for food aid from the government and well-wishers, Roba disclosed that he had only three goats and two camels out of 200 and 50 respectively before the devastating drought set in.

“The drought claimed my entire livestock herd of goats and camels save for three goats and two camels,” said the father of six while seated on a mattress spread on the floor.

“I sold one of the goats when the children came for the school holiday to buy them food but it is hardly enough because prices of food items here are exorbitantly high,” he moaned.

A survey in the transit town which is also the division headquarters failed to locate a single cereal dealer while stocks in shops are low as shopkeepers were no longer replenishing food items because the purchasing power of the residents has reduced.

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