Ethiopian News and Opinion Forum


Oxfam: Famine Stalking Southern Ethiopia

Postby revolutions » 11 Apr 2012, 03:41


Reducing the distance traveled for water in East Africa
Where there was once pasture, there in now only dust.

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In the Bale zone of Ethiopia, herders say their cows are collapsing in hunger.
Photo by Kenny Rae / Oxfam America.


April 9th, 2012 | by Kenny Rae

Kenny Rae traveled to Ethiopia in March to support relief efforts for communities in the Bale zone who are struggling to overcome the East Africa drought and food crisis.

Every morning Yenee leaves her two children in the care of her sister and ventures off to collect water for her family. After walking for two hours she arrives at the spring–the only source of water for miles around.

She is not alone. In Laga Hidha, a remote district in southeast Ethiopia which hasn’t seen rain for over a year, collecting water for drinking, cooking and bathing can be an all day affair–every day. At mid-morning at the spring there can sometimes be more than 100 women, some of whom have walked for more than seven miles. She will wait patiently in line for another two hours to fill her jerrycans. She then returns home, carrying 30 liters (66 pounds weight) of water on her back.

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In some parts of Ethiopia, women like Yenee walk several miles to collect water for their families and livestock. Photo by Kenny Rae / Oxfam America.

It wasn’t always like this. Nine years ago a well equipped with a hand pump was installed in her village which provided water for all. Twice yearly rains would replenish the open wells and ponds that provided water for livestock, for bathing and for laundering clothes.

The hand pump has been broken for over a year, and a promise to replace it by an aid agency has yet to be fulfilled. The prolonged drought has caused the open wells and ponds to dry up, and the cattle and goats that benefited from them have been sold off or have perished. Where there was once pasture, there in now only dust. Those determined to hold on to a couple of animals for milk must venture further and further from home to find food for their animals.

In Hidha Hunda village, an elder told us that one of the few remaining cows had, the day before been taken in search of food and water and, miles away, had collapsed from hunger. Its owner left it where it lay and returned home. In every village we visited here, and in the neighboring district of Sawena we learned of the hardships that people are dealing with.

In Gale village all the livestock has been sold. Families were unable to keep one or two animals for milk as the surrounding pasture is long depleted. No crops have been cultivated for over a year. Collecting honey used to provide additional income for the villagers but, without water and flowers, the bees are gone.

While the first rains will be welcomed, there is a real concern in these communities that when even when it arrives, their problems will not be over. As an old man told us “Even if the rain comes now there is no pasture left to water.”

With their animals gone and with their grain stores consumed, Oxfam is supporting 1,600 families in Sawena and Laga Hidha with emergency cash and food distributions. For a few days per month, those that are physically able, undertake work such as rehabilitating traditional wells and ponds in preparation for when the rains finally arrive, hopefully to provide enough water to meet needs for a sustained period. To ease the burden of collecting water in the short term, Oxfam is rehabilitating water systems including replacing broken pumps to reduce the distances traveled.

http://firstperson.oxfamamerica.org/ind ... st-africa/



Re: Oxfam: Famine Stalking Southern Ethiopia

Postby revolutions » 11 Apr 2012, 15:27



A hand pump only costs $60.

Hundreds of villagers are suffering because a hand pump is broken and it can only be fixed or replaced by government and foreign aid agencies. The $100 million dollars the woyane regime had spent on buying 100 battle tanks from the Ukraine could have purchased 2 million hand pumps, or dig over 100,000 new water wells throughout Ethiopia.


Image



Re: Oxfam: Famine Stalking Southern Ethiopia

Postby Yakume » 11 Apr 2012, 19:13


Borana of Oromiya and also Ogaden and Afar have a same situation!
Attachments
Borana.jpg
Borana drought



Re: Oxfam: Famine Stalking Southern Ethiopia

Postby revolutions » 11 Apr 2012, 19:37


"Ethiopia is poor, hungry, ill and illiterate because she is poorly governed and not free!"
(Professor Alemayehu G. Mariam)

Image
Caption: Dasanech boy at school. South Ethiopia. Photographer: Jesús Jaime Mota.
http://www.agefotostock.com/en/Stock-Im ... C91-667058



Re: Oxfam: Famine Stalking Southern Ethiopia

Postby Yakume » 11 Apr 2012, 19:42


Is this window or blackboard?



Re: Oxfam: Famine Stalking Southern Ethiopia

Postby Debtera » 11 Apr 2012, 20:15


revolutions wrote:
"Ethiopia is poor, hungry, ill and illiterate because she is poorly governed and not free!"
(Professor Alemayehu G. Mariam)

Image
Caption: Dasanech boy at school. South Ethiopia. Photographer: Jesús Jaime Mota.
http://www.agefotostock.com/en/Stock-Im ... C91-667058



ከመናደድና ከመቃጠልም በላይ፣ የደም እንባህን ይሚኣስርግፍ ፍቶ !!



Re: Oxfam: Famine Stalking Southern Ethiopia

Postby revolutions » 11 Apr 2012, 21:15


Yakume wrote:Is this window or blackboard?


It's a blackboard and it offers a window into the abject poverty under woyane's apartheid rule in Ethiopia. But the photo also portrays a dedicated Ethiopian teacher, despite having meager resources at his disposal, he's determined to pass on his own hard-won knowledge to the emaciated child so he could have a better life than what he had growing up.
Last edited by revolutions on 12 Apr 2012, 10:28, edited 1 time in total.



Re: Oxfam: Famine Stalking Southern Ethiopia

Postby Gurezza » 11 Apr 2012, 21:27


YEBANDALUTE,
Where is the money, your homo-sexual partner donated to you?



Re: Oxfam: Famine Stalking Southern Ethiopia

Postby Yakume » 12 Apr 2012, 10:03


YEBANDALUTE; are you talking with the Woyane leaders or Gurage people? make this point clear for the readers and say your idea about the harsh living conditions of our people in the SNNP.



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