Millions facing
famine in
Ethiopia as
rains fail
International
aid agencies
fear that the
levels of death
and starvation
last seen 24
years ago, are
set to return to
the Horn of
Africa. Paul
Rodgers reports
Sunday, 30
August 2009

Women
and children
gather at a food
distribution
centre in
Ethiopia's
Oromiya region
Reuters
Women and
children gather
at a food
distribution
centre in
Ethiopia's
Oromiya region
The spectre of
famine has
returned to the
Horn of Africa
nearly a quarter
of a century
after the
world's pop
stars gathered
to banish it at
Live Aid,
raising £150m
for relief
efforts in 1985.
Millions of
impoverished
Ethiopians face
the
threat of
malnutrition and
possibly
starvation this
winter in what
is shaping up to
be the country's
worst food
crisis for
decades.
Estimates of the
number of people
who need
emergency food
aid have risen
steadily this
year from 4.9
million in
January to 5.3
million in May
and 6.2 million
in June. Another
7.5 million are
getting aid in
return for work
on community
projects, as
part of the
National
Productive
Safety Net
Program for
people whose
food supplies
are chronically
insecure,
bringing the
total being fed
to 13.7 million.
Donor countries
provided
sustenance to 12
million
Ethiopians last
year, more than
half of it
through the UN's
World Food
Programme (WFP).
Having passed
that total only
eight months
into this year,
and with the
main harvest
already in
doubt, aid
agencies fear
the worst is
still to come.
"We're extremely
worried," said
Howard Taylor,
who heads the
Department for
International
Development's
office in
Ethiopia. DfID
has given £54m
in aid to the
country this
year, and
Britain has also
contributed
through the EU.
"This is exactly
the time when we
shouldn't turn
away from the
people in need,"
he said.
Sourse Oromia
Times