The 2020–present Horn of Africa drought is an ongoing drought that hit the countries of Somalia, Ethiopia, and Kenya. The rainy season of 2022 was recorded to be the driest in over 40 years,[3][4] with an estimated 43,000 in Somalia dying in 2022.[5][6] As of 2023, the region is now in its 5th failed rainy season[7] and a 6th failed season is predicted.[8]

Quick Facts Country, Location ...
Horn of Africa drought
CountrySomalia, southern and south-eastern Ethiopia, northern and eastern Kenya,[1] Djibouti, Sudan, South Sudan, Uganda
LocationEast Africa
PeriodOctober 2020 – present
Refugees4.5 million refugees and 13.5 million internally displaced [2]
Theorysevere drought, irregular rainfall
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Background

The drought is preceded by the 2011 East Africa drought and the 2017 Somali drought, and is caused by the El Niño effect.[9] The negative conditions of the Indian Ocean Dipole is also a contributor to the drought.[10]

Humanitarian situation

As of 2023 46.3 million were affected by the drought.[2] This includes 9 million women of reproductive age (15 to 49 years) who face dangers to their health and aggravated risks of gender-based violence due to the drought.[11] 13.5 million have been internally displaced while 4.5 million have become international refugees.[2] With 9.5 million livestock being reported dead, broken down into 4 million in Ethiopia, 2.5 million in Kenya and over 3 million in Somalia, the region has seen monetary losses resulting in $1.5 billion being lost in livestock alone.[11]

Somalia

In Somalia it is estimated that 6.7 million have been severely affected by the drought, with 1.8 million children left malnourished. In Somalia an estimated 51.4k have been internationally displaced while 3.1 million remain displaced internally. [2] The droughts effects are further exacerbated by the Russo-Ukrainian War, as Somalia imported 90% of its wheat from the region, with its own farming capabilities destroyed in the 3 decade long Somali Civil War.[12] By 2022 the drought had already claimed the lives of 43,000 people in Somalia half of which under the age of 5.[6] The Baidoa and Burhakaba districts in the Bay region of the country are the most affected and are closest to famine as of now.[13]

Response by governments and organisations

In Somalia the government has launched the SURP-II (Somalia Urban Resilience and Project Phase II) programme, which would mainly help Garowe, Baidoa, and Mogadishu deal with the drought by providing monetary assiatance and health kits towards households, constructing communal latrines and emergency water supplies, and also providing further healthcare via mobile clinics. [14] The World Bank has pledged to give 70 million USD to finance this initiative.

The World Health Organisation has also collaborated with local forces to fight diseases like cholera and measles, which have seen a resurgence in Somalia due to the drought, distributing Vitamin A, offering deworming services, and vaccination campaigns.[2]

Kenya

In Kenya the northernmost regions of the country, the Turkana, Samburu, Marsabit, Isiolo, Mandera, and Garissa counties remain the most affected by the drought, Kenya's Arid and Semi-Arid Lands, or ASAL. The drought has exacerbated conflict in the region, with the nations pastoralists being most affected,[15] with the violence growing to such an issue that Uhuru Kenyatta, the president of Kenya, deemed it a "national emergency".[16] Furthermore, a large amount of school children have had to drop out to support their families due to the situation.[17]

Response by governments and organisations

The Kenyan government has taken steps to protect pastoralists against the drought, allowing pastoralists to sign up in a $120 million insurance scheme that will help them when drought hits, backed by the World Bank.[18]

Ethiopia

Overall

On 29 March 2022, the International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies (IFCR) reported that 6.8 million Ethiopians were in need of humanitarian assistance.[19] By October the same year, UNICEF reported that around 29.7 million people in Ethiopia were in need of humanitarian assistance.[20]

Northern Ethiopia

Thumb
May 2021 map of people in need of humanitarian assistance that received food aid in the Tigray Region.

Beginning with the onset of the Tigray War in November 2020, acute food shortages leading to death and starvation became widespread in northern Ethiopia, and the Tigray, Afar and Amhara Regions in particular. As of August 2022, there are 13 million people facing acute food insecurity, and an estimated 150,000–200,000 had died of starvation by March 2022. In the Tigray Region alone, 89% of people are in need of food aid, with those facing severe hunger reaching up to 47%.[21][22] In a report published in June 2021, over 350,000 people were already experiencing catastrophic famine conditions (IPC Phase 5).[23][24] It is the worst famine to happen in East Africa since 2011–2012.[24]

The main reasons for the famine are the Tigray War, which caused mass displacement and loss of harvests, in addition to then-ongoing locust infestations in the region. As reported by The Economist, the federal Ethiopian government was "deliberately holding back food in an effort to starve" the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF);[25] a claim disputed by the Ethiopian government in late January.[25] On 10 February 2021, Abera Tola, head of Ethiopian Red Cross Society (ERCS), described displaced people "reach[ing] camps in Tigrayan towns [being] 'emaciated'" and that "their skin [was] really on their bones." He estimated that "eighty percent" of Tigray was unreachable by humanitarian assistance.[26] In early February 2021, Muferiat Kamil, Ethiopian Minister of Peace, agreed with World Food Programme representatives to allow increased food distribution in Tigray Region.[26] While the situation improved after the March 2022 truce and allowed for humanitarian distribution of food, the lack of rain in the spring of 2022 compounded the already existing food insecurity.[27] The resurgence of fighting after the ceasefire collapsed in August 2022 exacerbated the situation even more; by October, between 400 and 900 a day were dying of starvation.[28]

Livestock and wildlife

Pastoralists have reported much of their livestock perishing in the drought. In 2021, half of the lifestock of men in the town of Kargi, Kenya was reported to have died,[29] with 2.4 million livestock perishing in the entirety of Kenya.[17]

Furthermore, the deaths of

were reported between September 2021 to 2022 May by the Kenya Wildlife Service in the Amboseli, Tsavo and Laikipia-Samburu areas.[30]

See also

References

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