People wheeling jerrycans back to their house. Credit: Alun McDonald/Oxfam
Oxfam is providing emergency water supplies and helping look for more sustainable sources of water

East Africa food crisis

“Two successive poor rains, entrenched poverty and lack of investment in affected areas have pushed 13 million people into a fight for survival.”

Large parts of East Africa are facing the world's worst food crisis. Across the region Oxfam's humanitarian response is aiming to reach approximately 3.5 million people.

The situation

Drought is worsening across the Horn of Africa, following successive failed rains. The late 2010 rainy season failed completely in many parts of Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya, and now the April-May rains have also performed well below average. Parts of northeast Kenya have received just 10% of the usual level of rainfall.

The price of staple foods has risen to unaffordable levels for many people, and weak animals and the collapse of livestock markets have reduced people's income and ability to buy essentials. Hundreds of thousands of animals – people's main assets – have reportedly died.

Map of Oxfam's response


View Oxfam in the Horn of Africa in a larger map

Donate

Please consider helping fund our emergency work in East Africa. These Oxfam affiliates are running direct appeals for this food crisis:

Alternatively, you can also make a donation to the general emergency fund of your nearest national Oxfam affiliate. Your money will be used to fund our emergency work worldwide, which includes responding in countries such as Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia.

Oxfam in East Africa, 6 months on: Thank You

Oxfam is currently reaching more than 2.8 million people with essential humanitarian aid.

Oxfam's response

Oxfam's response to the drought includes programs in Somaliland, Ethiopia and Kenya with a mixture of emergency aid, long-term development and prevention, and advocacy to address the root causes of chronic drought. A cargo flight with 23 tons of Oxfam supplies left the UK for Ethiopia on Friday, 12 August.

Ethiopia

4.8 million Ethiopians are affected by the crisis. Oxfam is reaching about 150,000 people in the Somali region in the southeast of the country, and we are responding also in drought-hit parts of Tigray and Oromia. Overall we are scaling up our response in Ethiopia to reach 700,000 people.

Watch: Fighting drought in Ethiopia: All hands to the pump

We are helping communities look for more sustainable sources of water, by drilling boreholes, developing motorized water schemes and improving traditional water harvesting systems. In the driest and worst affected areas we have been trucking in emergency water supplies to over 69,000 people. The water is treated and used for drinking, cooking, washing and keeping animals alive. Each person gets at least 5 liters of water per day – the bare minimum that people need. Community health workers also conduct public campaigns to help stop the spread of water-borne diseases such as diarrhea.

Kenya

4.3 million Kenyans are affected by the crisis – mainly in the southern agricultural areas and the northern pastoralist regions, such as Turkana and Wajir where Oxfam is working.

People in these areas rely on their livestock as their main source of income and nutrition, but the drought has left the animals weak, dying and hard to sell. Oxfam’s “de-stocking” program buys up some of the weakest goats and, sheep – ensuring that their owners get an income and some vital cash before their assets die – and we then slaughter the animals to provide meat to the community.

About 900,000 vulnerable animals – belonging to 18,000 families – are also benefiting from Oxfam’s veterinarian and de-worming programs.

Listen: Oxfam's Janna Hamilton talks about her second day at Dadaab refugee camp, 1 August 2011.

Somalia

Four million people are currently affected as the drought worsens across Somalia and Somaliland. As of January 2012, Oxfam has now reached more than 1.5 million people with emergency aid, working through local partners.

So far more than 180,000 people have benefitted from Oxfam cash transfers in Somalia. Here's how the cash transfer program works. (pdf)

In the worst hit areas of Somaliland, Oxfam and our local partners are providing emergency water trucks, bringing clean water to villages where all other sources have dried up. 65,000 people in more than 50 villages are benefiting, and this is the only way they can get water free of charge. Oxfam engineers also repair boreholes and shallow wells in areas where there is some available water.

Read more

> Update: Community care improves childrens' health in Somalia

> Blog: Getting aid into conflict-affected Somalia: difficult, but not impossible

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