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The ‘green famine’ of southern Ethiopia: Myth or Real?

By Tegga Lendado

This article is dedicated to the victims of the recent drought, disease, malnutrition, famine, and others who are facing premature death in Southern {www:Ethiopia}. The purpose is to induce rational, religious and humanitarian response with its readers. From the outset, I beg that it should not be construed as a sectarian or political motivation. My intention is to inform readers to pray intelligently, donors to give responsibly and the government to engage actively. It short, it is a call for environmental justice. Let it be clear that I am presenting these brute but humble thoughts as a concerned moral agent, simple-minded thinker and an international development professional as well as an environmental advocate. The article is based on brief observations and discussions with concerned individuals to whom I am grateful.

Southwestern Ethiopia used to boast of its green vegetation. Just over a century ago, 40% of the land was covered by forest. When Emperor Haile Sellasie reigned in 1930, the forest had dwindled to 10%. By the time he was deposed in 1974, it had reduced to 4%. With advent of Dirgue’s public ownership policy of the rural land, the peasants recklessly abused state forests. In 1978, the estimated amount of the forested land mass was only 3%. The current estimate is only 2%.

With desertification effect of the Sahara Desert, commonly called the Sahel and other major factors such as deforestation, Ethiopia’s climate has changed to more arid and hotter, only varied by the higher altitudes and the Danakil depression served by the monsoon wind and precipitation. The moisture content of the hot air of the bright and scorching sunlight is so thin that an elderly person may experience shortness of breath in the highlands. The heat wave may seem unbearable in the lowlands as well. The eco-system has been adversely affected due to continuous neglect and abuse of forest conservation, development and management. Apart from the recent millennium tree-panting effort, apparently there have not been any major forestry development projects in the last two decades in the region. Contrarily, hundreds of acres have been arbitrarily cleared for farming in Gamo and Kaffa. Wild fires in Bale and Arsi Zones had irreplaceably damaged sizeable natural forests in recent years.

There are also other factors that contribute to un-productivity of the farmland including over-population, over-grazing, soil degradation due to erosion and over-utilization, wild wind, improper application of commercial fertilizers, lack of land use policy such as propagating and maintaining traditional peasantry as a way of life for the rural population, in lieu of modern and mechanized farming, urbanization and industrialization. Peasantry, with its primitive means of production such as hand tools and animal traction does not permit the weak peasant to produce more than s/he or the family consumes. Except in Gamo area, terracing and irrigation are hardly known in the region. For years people have depended only on seasonal rain alone. With all these shortcomings, it is simply absurd and unethical to expect the undernourished poor peasant to produce surplus. Communal labor-intensive cultivation like the debo system used to be very effective in the past when land was plenty and powerful oxen were readily available. But now family holdings have diminished and the number of oxen per household is 0.45, according to my small short-lived sampling for estimates in Wolayita, Sidama and Kembata areas a few months ago.

Thus, recurrent drought and famine are attributed to such phenomenon as deforestation, topsoil depletion, excessive grazing, etc. Scanty and erratic rainfall is also to blame. Fast growing vegetation can mislead a tourist’s eye but not so with a native observer. Bushes may bud and the grass may grow for a short while and everything around the peasant’s garden may look green. The peasant may plant traditional crops only to harvest unripe and inconsumable products. Such was the case in Southern Ethiopia when I had visited Wolayita and Kambata in early 1992. The land was lash grassy and the plants on the fields were strikingly green. The soil was moist and muddy. But the peasants were skinny and weak. The kids had bulgy belly and blurring eyes denoting signs of malnutrition or undernourishment. One could be misled to conclude that those peasants were lazy and unproductive.

In the 1970s, the student-led revolution had “land for the tiller” as a motto. I never advocated for it then and would never do now. For the most part, the tiller was the poor peasant. Of course, I could agree on allotment of land to the few landless serfs who deserved the ownership of occupied by absentee owners. The government seems to be stuck with the communistic “land-for-the-tiller-revolution” even if communism had long proved unproductive in the era of mixed or so-called free-market economy. In Federal Democratic Ethiopia, all land is public property such that all peasants may occupy, but not own it. Peasants possess only primitive and rudimentary means of production. The little holding of the peasants are shared with their adult children through the years such that little is left to produce any thing substantial. This vicious circle is conspicuous in densely populated areas like Guraguae, Kembata, Wolayita, Timbaro, etc. Amazing techniques of mountain tilling is observed in Kembata alone. What admirable and courageous peasantry! But, we must note that the people are in the brink of famine and disease prone. Can someone “bail out” these populations before they totally collapse In light of the multifaceted chronic and recurrent problems, what should be done?

Famine is the worst form suffering leading to slow death. A couple of shoeshine boys told me, “We prefer to go to the warfront rather than dying the slow death here”. Traditionally, southern Ethiopians produced surplus food. They were content with their life and did not opt for nomadic or migrant life. Other people come from elsewhere and settle among them enjoying the kind hospitality. Interestingly, the new comers excel their hosts bringing freshness and vitality but sharing the little resource the hosts have. Such social intercourse was being promoted in the south to the extent that, whenever and wherever there was famine in other parts of the county, subsequent governments used to resettle the affected populations in regions such as Gamo, Keffa, Wolayita, Bale Arsi, Gofa, etc. This created some pressure on the peasants as the new comers scrambled for the scarce resources. Thus, famine became another misery the people had to share. In reality, the outcome of socialist Ethiopia (1974-1991) was simply a shared life of poverty and all the curses attached to it.

In Halaba, and Northeastern Hadiya areas, along the Shashemanae-Soddo Highway, the landslide is scary. Apart from the erosion of the topsoil, the ground cracks leaving crevices of about 2-3 meters wide, 4 meters deep and hundreds of meters long. The same phenomenon is observed near Lake Abaya and other Rift Valley depressions. A thorough integrated study may be needed to alleviate the condition.

Let us not forget blaming apathy and ignorance in our brief analysis of the green famine. Drought-resistant tuber crops such as enset, boyna, boye, sweet potatoes, cassava, etc., are not popular in some part of the south. Recently, I visited a farm in Tikur Wuha area of Awassa town. I spotted three species of sweet potatoes. I asked a female Guragae farmer where she got them. She told me her husband brought them from Wolayita Zone. She introduced them for the first time to her neighbors. Soon many peasants started planting that species of sweet potatoes in Sidama district.

Traditionally, Ethiopians do not consume much tuba crops, fruits and vegetable except for the people of the enset culture. Some vegetables take little time to grow and less effort to cultivate; yet, multitudes of peasant do not seem to know that. So, a concerted dietary education needs to be offered to the public to diversify consumption habits.

Peasantry and farming are two similar careers of rural life. A peasant is a small holder who produces for his/her family’s subsistence. A farmer is an entrepreneur who produces food for commercial consumption in large quantity and better quality. Apparently, we do not have peasants in USA. Here, only less than 4% of the population is engaged in commercial/industrial farming. These farmers are the ones that produce surplus for the local and international markets. They use machineries and implements, skilled labor, improved variety of seeds, scientifically and technologically advanced mechanisms, techniques and systems of input and output. Farmers own or lease a large piece of land for commercial and industrial farming employing sophisticated machinery and equipment. Ethiopian peasants do not merit the name “farmers” because they do not have all those qualities the name is attached with. However, all the rural population in Ethiopia, 85% has traditionally been called “farmer”. In the last four decades, Ethiopian peasants have been unable to feed themselves, let alone producing surplus for urban consumption.

Cash crops such as sisal, sugar cane, cotton, coffee, flower, tea, nuts, eucalyptus, tea, etc., have discouraged the production of staple foods. Some staple products such as teff, sorgham, barley, and corn are now becoming cash crops that the peasant may not afford to use for his family’s consumption. During Janhoy’s time the hundreds of acres of land along the Shashemane Awassa High Way was allotted to sisal production. Wonji and Matahara sugar plantations have occupied massive land. Dergue cleared Bebeka area in Kaffa for coffee and tea plantation. The current government introduced flower production en masse to attract foreign investment. Apart from competing and interfering with cereal production it has yielded millions of foreign currency income. However, given the fact that it may lead to soil degradation, which leads to low productivity, it might be advisable to moderate or alternate such production. Besides, would it not be wise for Ethiopia to be food self-sufficient before venturing to flower production in this persistently sluggish global economy?

Cited Problems and Pro-active Solutions

1. Environmental Justice: Climatic change associated with global warming (due to industrial pollution) and poverty (due mainly to resource misappropriation, unscrupulous exploitation, mismanagement or corruption seem to be major global problems, necessitating global attention) mineral depletion, forest decimation, wildlife exploitation, soil and water resource degradation, etc., (need regional planning). Nations that are victims of global pollution should be recompensed for the loss of life. On the contrary, nations that do not pollute the environment should be rewarded, if globalization is to be real and fair. Western industrial nations and other emerging economic powers including China, India, Brazil, Russia, South Africa, Australia, New, Zealand, etc., should eliminate or radically reduce pollutant technologies for the welfare of the “global village”.

2. Population Explosion: Cultural and moral education/legislation to check irresponsible and immoral childbearing and rearing; health care and life-skills education, motivational education, etc. For example, it is immoral to produce children only to pass the responsibility to adoptive parents, agencies or public institutions. Forced under-age marriage, uncontrolled libido (distribution of plastics to kids as a way of HIV prevention and prostitution as a cope-out way of life, etc.).

3. Land Policy: The peasant should not be held hostage of his/her small unproductive land. Capable peasants should be allowed to purchase properties, develop their holding, sell and resell their land so that there is transfer or exchange of wealth. Most monetary systems such as insurances and banks base land as real asset. Peasantry should be replaced by industrial urbanization so that proper land use planning could be executed. Land for food production, cattle grazing, industrial site, forestry and wildlife reserve and development, etc. should be allocated for voluntary tillers.

4. Mode and Means of Production: Peasantry and farming should be clearly distinguished so that proper attention should be given to the rural communities such as subsidized communal farming, industrial development, cottage industrial development and structured private production of cash crops and staple foods.

5. Paradigm Shift: As such, I do believe, agriculture should be industry-led, not the other way round, for Ethiopians to “starve-no-more”. Mass production and food preservation mechanisms such as refrigeration technology, food processing, proper food handling and delivery schemes, etc, would reduce famine and dispel the stigma of starvation from Ethiopia. For this to happen, there needs to be a paradigm shift in the minds of national and regional political leadership.

6. Kind of Production: Cash crops such as sisal, sugar cane, cotton, coffee, flower, tea, nuts, eucalyptus, etc., have discouraged the production of staple foods. Some staple products such as teff and corn are now becoming cash crops that peasant may not afford to use his family’s consumption. During Janhoy’s time the hundreds of acres of land along the Shashemane Awassa Highway were allotted to sisal production. Wonji and Matahara sugar plantations have occupied massive land. Dergue cleared Bebeka area in Kaffa for coffee and tea plantation. The current government introduced flower production en masse to gain the much needed foreign currency. Apparently, the flower production is competing with cereal production despite the fact that it is yielding millions of foreign currency. It should be noted that soil degradation leading to low productivity might be caused by such cash crops besides de-incentivizing the peasant, thereby further reducing national food sufficiency.

7. The myth that southern Ethiopia is the breadbasket of Ethiopia should now be dispelled and proper attention should be given to the region’s relapsing food shortage due to unreliable rainfall. Proper regional planning should take into consideration utilizing the major rivers and lakes such as the Omo, Bilate, Abaya, etc.

8. Centralization of Industrial Sites: Many industries have been established in Addis Ababa and its vicinity in the last decades. The rural towns such as Arba Minch, Dilla and Soddo are over-populated with able-bodied and educated youngsters looking for employment. Light and heavy industries should be relocated and/or started in those rural towns in view of diversifying the economy and check undue urbanization.

Conclusion

For the sake shortening the article, let me quickly move on to my concluding remarks. We can endlessly blame the governors, the people, the facilitators, NGOs and the victims. Certainly, we have done that many times and for too long. The time has now come for the silent intelligentsia, the withdrawn Diaspora and the subdued professionals to take responsible actions and play practical roles according to the dictates of their hearts and minds. It is easy to be part of the problem by blaming others or staying aloof forever.

The Ethiopian Diaspora and other concerned entities can get involved with the local governments or non-governmental organizations (if there are any remaining in the country, owing to the perceived ordeal of the recent regulation) working in southern Ethiopia at the following levels.

Relief: Governmental, non-governmental, humanitarian, ecclesiastical, religious, non-religious, domestic or expatriate entities should collaborate in the effort of saving life. Individual donors should give whatever resource to avert famine, be it financial support, imperishable food, means of transportation, medicine, clothing, etc. Contacting persons or organizations engaged in the effort would reveal the need of the time.

Rehabilitation: Once the relief work is done, rehabilitating takes over. Without interrupting the relief effort, rehabilitating the victim can take place in light of extending to his/her short-term person-centered resettlement goals. This may involve recuperation of lost items, namely housing, health care, rationed food and other essentials, etc. to the point where the person can take care of himself/herself.

Development: If the person were rehabilitated well, he/she would want to think of his/her long-term goals. Thinking along with the person, one may provide him the necessary tools, implements, seeds and techniques. Specialized agencies may give micro-loans, etc to transform the sustenance of the victim. A benevolent giver may sponsor a family or a child through established humanitarian agencies engaged in the affected areas.

(Tegga Lendado, PhD., is a development consultant based in Atlanta, USA. He had worked for the United Nations Development Program in Southern Africa for many years. He can be reached at [email protected])

9 thoughts on “The ‘green famine’ of southern Ethiopia: Myth or Real?

  1. Very good article, balanced and non-rhetorical.
    Being critical with sharing and participating in a practical way is the only solution to tackle our centuries old problems.

    Thanks Elias for posting such positive looking article and many thanks for the author for breathing fresh air in our highly and dangerously polluted political environment by our shenanigans.

    Cheers

  2. Ato Lendado has expertly outlined the solutions to the problems of Southern Ethiopia in his detailed article. To avoid the loss of such valuable information as cyber-wind, I suggest he should run for office for that region and bring about the desired outcome.

  3. Dear Tegga:

    I read article after articles afetr articles that state the problem/recommendation for change. It is very encouraging to see Ethiopians write their concerns about their country. However, what Ethiopia badly needs right now is experts like yourself and others to gather to discuss ways you and others can have an impact immediately. Hold a summit of enviormentalists, development consultants, medical doctors, engineers, lawyers, architects, farmers, bankers, geologists, politicians,government officials, etc to meet anywhere (in Addis Abeba-so that the money is spent there) and pass a consensus of what can be done today, tomorrow, next week, next month, next year, within the next few years to help Ethiopia. It is very easy to write articles after articles stating what is wrong and point our fingers at Haile Selassie, The Derg, EPRDF and sit back, but to be the first to say I am willing and able to give a helping hand with my knowledge and time for my country redeems the mistakes of the past and give Ethiopia a new beginning. Can one take a subatical for 6 months, a year to give back to his/her country? As you stated in your article, you are neutral development specialist commenting on what you saw and what can be done to help Ethiopia. Be the first to volunteer your services, and see what follows.

  4. This is a very good article.

    We must stop blaming every government, Haile Sealise DERG or EPRDF, let us figure out how to help Ethiopia.

    We need CHANGE!

    All Ethiopians together

  5. Dr. Tegga Lendado I agree in most of the fact about the present situations of Southern Ethiopia. But the situation was long predicted by a genuine and concerned Ethiopian from the region Dr. Dagnacew Yirgu as far as 1973, when he was the General Manager of Institute of Agricultural Research (IAR). He was working day and night to avert the current situation before it became a reality. I am sure many Ethiopians do not know about Dr. Dagnacew, but I can testify to this I have never met an Ethiopian dedicated to his people and country like Dr. Dagnachew because I worked with him. Like many true Ethiopians he became a victim by pseudo Ethiopians who took state power after the fall of the king.
    Reading your article I was struck by one quote you wrote about the thinking of present Ethiopian children. “A couple of shoeshine boys told me, “We prefer to go to the warfront rather than dying the slow death here”. Like you and many other Ethiopians professionals I was forced to leave Ethiopia, after the DURG declared war in Eritrea. I concluded then that there was no hope for Ethiopia, as long as it plunged itself in war. Since then famine is moving north to South, East to West without and an end in site. Development and war can not go together. War is distraction. As long as Ethiopian children see as a way out of poverty, the leaders would find war internally or externally, as territorial integrity, border clashes or outlet to the sea. There was no need for the DURG to continue war in Eritrea and also there is no need to keep war going in Eritrea, Somalia or Ogaden by the present government. War robes the young and able body and leave behind the old and the sick to care for the land, and those can not feed themselves let alone to produce any surplus. War drives out the educated population out of their country to languish in foreign land as refugees. Before Ethiopia entered into the perpetual war i.e. never ending wars, Ethiopian students returned to their country without wasting time to attend even their graduation ceremonies. Today every kid who finished high-school wants to leave the country.
    About the student lead revolution of early 70’s, I say they were genuine Ethiopians who dreamt for Ethiopia free from exploitation, who wanted Ethiopia to progress socially and economically. Many of those brilliant Ethiopian died for what they believed leaving behind the pretenders to lead the country in wars and famine.
    As long as the war mentality exists Ethiopia will never come out of poverty no matter or how much charity is poured in the country by NGOs or others. Only Ethiopians can free ourselves from the predicament we have locked in ourselves. Last I say this, Seek Peace and all other things will be added unto you.
    Tariku Tazabiw

  6. I am not quite sure if some of us really understand what is ailing our country. The writer and few comments posted seem to suggest that it is the responsibility of the diaspora intelligentsia to come together to find a solution. This line of argument, of course, ignores the fact that there is a “government” minding (in fact, does not mind at all) the business of the nation and decides solely and arbitrarily what needs to be done. First thing first, even if we are successful at gathering most of the intelligentsia (and who said that everyone in the intelligentsia cares about the nation?) and came out with a plan of action, who can say that there will be a green light from the government to go ahead and implement the suggestions? It is much easier to assess the problems of the nations and suggest well-intentioned ideas to solve the nation’s problem, but we seem to forget that there is a real obstacle by the name of Woyane that has the decision making power on any all idea big and small. When most of the diasporas opposition groups raise their voice against the actions of the government, it is not merely a hobby or looking for something to waste time; the real reason behind those actions is to address the problem in the only way possible; to address it in such a way as to finally get rid of the government which is the real culprit. For those of us who occasionally forget about the nature of the government, let me remind you by rehashing what you already know.

    1. The Woyanes have all the say in the treasury of the nation. Among the Woyanes, only very few individuals have the final say on how to spend the nation’s fund. If these individuals saw fit to invade a country without a cause or wage a war for a meaningless piece of land sacrificing thousandths of Ethiopians, then it will be done; but if they feel like it is ok to give a very historical and fertile land to the neighbors, that will be done too, no need to deliberate on the matter. If some of you harbor the notion that the parliament is the sole body to declare war or decide on matters of border issues, then I forgive you for thinking that a gathering of the intelligentsia is the secret for solving our problems.
    2. The Woyanes control all the income of the nation, they make sinful amount of money leasing the land that belongs to the people, they control the investment and the commercial activity of the nation, they steal the gold reserve of the nation in broad daylight, they spend a disproportionate wealth of the nation on a single chosen state, etc. Why? Because they can. I thought we all knew that; but some of us forget that when we hear other dire aspects of our nation we tend to jump on a first solution that comes to mind. But we all know that it won’t be a solution as along as the Woyanes are in power.
    3. The Woyanes spend a good chunk of our earned money on building the armed forces to fight meaningless wars after they have delivered Eritrea and the port of Assab on a silver platter without even a word of discussion on the matter. Why? Because they can. Many of us believe that most of the funds that are spent on defense will better serve the need s of our people if spent properly.

    I will write to you ad-infinitum on what the Woyanes do in our name, but we all know about it. Not only that, most of us did our bit parts by writing, discussing, demonstrating, etc against these atrocities. But the Woyanes for now have the upper hand, but our time will surely come. If noble ideas such as Mr. Tegga Lendado’s were a solution, the hundredths of NGO’s that have littered our nation would have taken care of our social problems long ago. But even those NGO’s that are operating in the nation are under the full control of the Woyane. (well, the government came out with a new set of rules to curb the activities of these organizations because in the eyes of the Woyanes, they have done too much for the welfare of the nation). In light of this, I am not sure how Mr. Lendado’s ideas could find the light of day in a place where the puppet-master rules supreme.

    I beg your forgiveness, Mr. Lendado, if I offended you in any way; but according to an anonymous writer, what we need right now is a dirtier fingernail and a cleaner mind. We need to think straight. We need to help the opposition, both legal and covert, become successful in their efforts to get rid of the Woyane. I understand that our country has myriads of problems that will takes years and decades to solve even after we got rid of the Woyane, but we should never loose sight of the real problem and a better solution.

  7. This is one of the greatest lie concoted against the Ethiopian people and the world into helping Ethiopia for the last 35 years.

    Ethiopia has been in severe hunger, sometimes the hunger can be described as “hunger biblical proportion.” This has been going on for many decades. No one wants to resolve the issue of hunger in Ethiopia, instead they are trying very hard to divert attention from the core problem. The core problem is lack of hard and protracted work, thet needs to be supported by government. Instread the governments in Ethiopia are engaged into un-necessary war one after another in hopes to acquire places that does not belong to Ethiopia. It is very saddening to see Meles and his TPLF organization had to be deceived into that lie created by unknown persons.

    Ethiopia had sever hunger in 1974, when the population was only 25 million, then in 1984 a biblical proportion hunger hits Ethiopia and lasts for three years, killing over a million people and dislocating nearly five million people driving them into major urban centers. If they wanted to resolve the issue, all they had to do was apply strikt population control while promoting agriculture and land distribution. Instead the Dergue regime engaged into a war that will eventually bankrupt the coutry. Now when we think we are out of that kind of idiocy and false thinking, we have an ethno-centric regime that is taking the country toward the same direction. How stupd is that???

    The hunger in these days are all the result of war promotion rather than focusing on the solution, CONTROLING STRICT POPULATION CONTROL and PROMOTING LAND REHABILITATION AND LAND REFOR AS WELL AS AGRICULTURE BASED ECONOMY.

    When countries have chronic hunger problems they focus in over producing and conquering the challenges for ones and for the last time. What do the Ethiopian regime does? It continues to goi into war and more militaristic adventure to please those that are promoting destability in the continent.

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