Saturday, 20th April 2024
To guardian.ng
Search
Breaking News:

Eritrea president dismisses food crisis fears despite drought

By AFP
23 January 2016   |   12:35 pm
Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki on Saturday dismissed fears the Horn of African nation faces a food crisis, despite sweeping drought across the wider region leaving millions in need of aid. Floods and failed rains caused by the El Nino weather phenomenon have sparked a dramatic rise in the number of people going hungry in east…

drought

Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki on Saturday dismissed fears the Horn of African nation faces a food crisis, despite sweeping drought across the wider region leaving millions in need of aid.

Floods and failed rains caused by the El Nino weather phenomenon have sparked a dramatic rise in the number of people going hungry in east Africa.

But authoritarian and isolated Eritrea has long rejected UN food aid in favour of a policy of self reliance, and Isaias said he was not worried.

“In view of the harvest shortfall that has affected the whole Horn of Africa region, President Isaias stated that the country will not face any crisis in spite of reduced agricultural output,” the information ministry said, after he was interviewed by state-run media.

Isaias praised the government’s “judicious policy and approaches of bolstering its strategic food reserves.”

In November, the UN warned that Eritrea was among the countries at risk, like all the other nations in the wider region.

“The current El Nino pattern, being the strongest ever recorded, has caused severe drought in the Horn of Africa nation, resulting in crop reduction by 50 to 90 percent; even failure in some regions,” the United Nations said earlier this month.

In Ethiopia, over 10 million people need food aid, it added.

In Eritrea, few if any major foreign aid agencies are allowed operate, while the UN has limited access across the country, and most assessments are dependent on government reports.

Thousands of Eritreans flee the county each month, saying they are escaping conscription and rampant rights abuses.

Refugees from the repressive Red Sea state make up the third-largest number of people risking the dangerous journey to Europe after Syrians and Afghans, running a gauntlet of ruthless people smugglers to make the treacherous Mediterranean crossing.

2 Comments

  • Author’s gravatar

    The biggest group of refugees in the UK last year were Romanian. Over 5 million have fled Ukraine over the last ten years.
    Migration is a funny thing…..AFP is French propaganda.
    Re Eritrea about 5 million people. They achieved most of the millennium goals.(which is something that can not be said for a lot of countries. Built a lot of Dams to catch water in seasonal streams and rivers. Planted a lot of Fruit trees. Building roads, upgrades to medical training etc. The UN and EU is Fund, helping to improve some things. Obviously the Author at AFP was too lazy to follow the news broadcasts in Eritrea.

    Now Ethiopia on the other hand is 90 million people with 10 million in drought conditions. Far harder to deal with.

  • Author’s gravatar

    It is not that they are unaffected by the drought, but they have saved enough food reserves during good harvest years and are able to cope without outside help. Something nobody in the region has been able to do. The Eritreans need to be commended. The Eritrean government is also not known to shy away from asking for help when they do need it. The history of Eritrea and the EPLF is one of organizing relief assistance into Eritrean territories even when the world was only focused on Ethiopia.