http://www.dw.com/en/ethiopia-we-only-have-a-time-window-of-three-weeks/a-19051179
Ethiopia: 'We only have a time window of three weeks'
Ethiopia is experiencing the worst famine in half a century. Rights group Save the Children has warned that time is running out for the international community to save thousands of people from starvation.
Date 16.02.2016
Author Interview: Brian Thomas
A two-year-long drought worsened by the El-Nino weather pattern has destroyed crops and livestock in Ethiopia and Somalia. DW spoke to children's rights activist, Joachim Rahmann of NGO Save the Children to find out the magnitude and implications of the famine.
DW: You have been in the region, you have been talking to your colleagues there. Just how bad is it - can we expect it to get worse in Ethiopia?
Joachim Rahmann: The situation in Ethiopia at the moment is already at a magnitude where ten million people are directly dependent on food aid. It is not only in Ethiopia, a similar situation is unfolding in the northern regions of Somalia. Right now, we face one of the largest food insecurity crises that the region has experienced for over 50 years. What we observe is that the situation will likely get worse over the next half a year. Some regions have already been without rain for over two years. And until the next major rainfalls are expected in summer, the number of people directly dependent on food aid will actually increase and we are at ten million right now already.
Of those ten million, children are the most vulnerable, aren't they?
Children are absolutely the most vulnerable and it is not just the situation of food aid that makes the situation for children so bad. Children are already suffering from what we call severe acute malnutrition. 400,000 children are affected by that. But the situation also bears further risks for child protection. People are leaving their regions where there used to be pasture, children are not being sent to school anymore because of the severe malnutrition - they simply cannot focus. Some schools have already closed. We expect that 2.5 million children will drop out of school. This is a crisis of food insecurity that is also a much larger humanitarian crisis for children.
In 1980, Ethiopia saw a catastrophic, devastating famine. Did Ethiopia learn its lesson from 1980? Is it prepared for this famine?
Compared to the famines in the past, this is a famine of huge magnitude. It is probably the biggest in the past 50 years simply when we look at the environmental dimension of the famine. But when we look now, the political systems are in place, this is a different situation than we have experienced in the past. Over the last decade, Ethiopia has made huge economic gains. Child mortality has been reduced by two thirds. There were systems in place and there still are systems in place from the Ethiopian side to tackle food insecurity. There are regularly around eight million people in cash for work programs to address people's food insecurity needs during the lean season. But the situation is so huge that the Ethiopian government cannot cope with it by itself. The Ethiopian government has already committed around 370 million dollars (330 million euros) to the crisis. The country is living up to the expectations. But the crisis is so large that the international community has to step in and it would be unforgivable in a situation where the magnitude is large and where the government itself is already living up to it, where the systems are in place, where people can be reached, to not get assistance from the international community.
But the international community is already in Ethiopia; your organization has 1,000 workers there. What else needs to be done in what you say is the worst famine in half a century?
>From the situation where we are right now, we can say that organizations like Save the Children are already present on the ground, they are supplying direct food aid, and they are addressing children's child protection needs. But the international appeal of which Save the Children is part of goes up to 1.4 billion. This is the scale of the crisis we are talking about.
And if we compare it internationally, Save the Children only labels two crises right now as category one which is the Syria crisis and the Ethiopia crisis. But for the Ethiopia crisis only half of the funds needed to address the most immediate needs have been committed. And we only have a time window of three weeks to commit these funds to not risk people dying.
What happens if the time window is not met?
If the time window is not met, the food supply chain cannot be maintained. It takes time to procure food in the magnitude that is needed to supply to people, when ten million people are already food insecure. It is the size of the population of some European countries! And that is in direct need of food aid. That takes time. The next rains are only expected in summer. So the next three weeks are crucial to live up to these expectations.
You have mentioned the other category one catastrophe which is Syria. Are you personally concerned that we might be looking at donor fatigue, that people are simply not aware, governments do not have the resources to contribute in the way you are saying needs to be done to help these millions of people in Ethiopia?
Governments are partly living up to the expectations that we see in the Ethiopia food insecurity crisis as well, they are living up to the expectations in the Syria crisis. But of course, in both situations more needs to be done. If we see that only half of the appeal for Ethiopia is met, of course we are advocating as a child rights organization for governments to do more in Ethiopia, to assist the Ethiopian government, to assist international NGOs to not let people die in a situation where it is purely preventable.
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Joachim Rahmann is advisor on Africa with the German division of the child rights organization Save the Children.
Received on Tue Feb 16 2016 - 07:11:01 EST