For over 30 years the great Sahel Desert region in Africa has been a
harbinger of the coming climate disaster our planet is facing and
surviving such has become a national priority here in Eritrea on the
eastern end of the Sahel.
Remember Michael Jackson and the great Ethiopian drought and famine of
the early 1980’s? That was just the beginning. In 2003 and 2004 we
here in Eritrea next door to Ethiopia suffered the first two year
drought in history, followed in 2008 and 2009 by another back to back
drought. Including the failure of the rains in 2013 Eritrea suffered 5
years of drought in a single decade.
This isn’t climate change, this is climate disaster and science tells
us that the world should be preparing for even worse things to come.
Thanks to the mainly western countries contribution to rising CO2
levels heating up the planet droughts will test the very ability of
our species to survive, something we here in Eritrea know all to well.
After the droughts of 2003 and 2004 the government here initiated a
major water conservation plan that along with reforestation and soil
conservation is a template for other countries to use to prepare for
the climate catastrophe being predicted.
What this means is that everywhere possible micro dams, dams and major
water reservoirs are being constructed to capture the rains that do
fall and use them to irrigate our fields, beginning to break the age
old dependence on rain fed agriculture.
Disastrous drought interrupted by record breaking floods is what is
being foretold by scientists and the only way to survive these man
made disasters is recognizing what needs to be done and then busting
ass to see it gets accomplished.
This may explain why Eritrea’s President is away from his office for
weeks at a time overseeing the construction of major water reservoirs
around the country. And all this hard work being lead from the very
top has paid off for when the rains failed in 2013 we here in Eritrea
had enough to eat while in much of the rest of the Sahel hundreds of
thousands starved to death.
Water conservation is critical but so is reforestation and soil
conservation, for without trees to help absorb the water and hold the
soil in place and terraces to catch the soil the floods wash away our
water reservoirs will fill with silt and undo all our hard work. As a
result our school children spend a month every summer planting trees
and communities alongside the national service army regularly schedule
work days to build stone wall terraces to trap the soil run off.
Colonialism and deforestation go hand in hand everywhere for forests
are the natural sanctuary for rebels fighting their colonial masters
so whether in Haiti or Eritrea cutting down trees became a weapon
against insurgency by our western colonializers.
When the Italians began to colonize Eritrea in the 1880’s over 30% of
our country was forested. By the time Eritrea won its independence on
the battle field in 1991 less then 2% of our forests remained. This
man made environmental holocaust left Eritrea very little in the way
of reserves to survive the CO2 driven climate disasters we have since
faced and forced our leaders to sacrifice a lot of other development
projects that would have raised the standard of living for our people
in our need to prepare for worse disasters to come.
Some years back the Eritrean President was ridiculed in the western
media for calling for ten years of grain reserves being kept in
storage, but today his plan is making all to much sense. Only time
will tell if all our hard work will be enough to prevent the worse
climate disasters foretold from wreaking havoc on this country but
what choice do we have?
Hopefully Eritrea’s efforts will provide a role model for other
countries around the world and help prevent untold suffering by our
brothers and sisters internationally.
Thomas C. Mountain has been living and reporting from Eritrea since
2006. He can be reached at thomascmountain at gmail dot com or when he
off in the field and away from the internet, which is much of the
time, via mobile at 2917175665.
Received on Tue Mar 31 2015 - 03:27:15 EDT