Ethiopia’s government is calling for
international assistance to help feed 8.2 million people after
erratic
rains devastated crop yields.
Climate shocks are common in Ethiopia and often cause poor or failed harvests that lead to acute food shortages.
The government has allocated $192 million for food and other aid and
is appealing for $596 million in assistance from the international
community for the remainder of 2015, said Mitiku Kassa, secretary of the
Ethiopian Disaster Prevention and Preparedness Committee.
More than 300,000 children are in need of specialized nutritious food
and a projected 48,000 more children under 5 are suffering from severe
malnutrition, according to a government assessment conducted in
September.
The situation is “incredibly serious,” said John Aylieff, an official
in Ethiopia with the U.N.’s World Food Program, who said Ethiopia needs
the international community to help remedy the worst effects of El Nino
conditions.
The conflict in South Sudan is also exacerbating the food insecurity
situation, said Dennis Weller, the USAID mission director in Ethiopia.
Since the outbreak of violence in South Sudan in mid-December 2013,
hundreds of thousands of South Sudanese refugees have fled to Ethiopia
and are living alongside local communities.
“We are seeing malnutrition rates go up in some of the host
communities. We are looking at ways of reducing the stress levels to the
host communities in Ethiopia by providing supplementary feeding that
could bring the malnutrition levels down,” he said.
(AP)
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