AFRICA/LESOTHO - Food and Agriculture Organisation and World Food Programme warning: only a prompt intervention can save 400,000 people in Lesotho from famine

Thursday, 14 June 2007

Rome (Agenzia Fides)- Lesotho has urgent need of international aid to avoid a serious food shortage caused by rising cereals prices since the principal harvest was destroyed by one of the worst droughts in the past thirty years. This emerged from a report issued today by the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation FAO and the World Food Programme WFP. A copy of the report was sent to Fides News Agency.
About one fifth of the population of Lesotho, 400,000 people will suffer a shortage of food and need assistance at the height of the crisis in the first three months of 2008. The report speaks of a concerning food shortage will be seen already this July when 140,000 people will need food aid, mainly because of an increase in the price of cereal and lack of casual jobs due to a bad farming season. For many farmers the harvest has been very poor or nothing.
“The last thing Lesotho needed was another poor harvest since so many vulnerable people are already living on the edge, struggling to cope with the combined impact of successive crop failures, extreme poverty and HIV/AIDS,” said Amir Abdulla, WFP’s Regional Director for Southern Africa. “Rapidly rising cereal prices are going to exacerbate the situation, leaving even more people in need of assistance because they won’t be able to buy enough food for their families.”
Overall, national cereal production in 2007 is estimated at just 72,000 tonnes - 40 percent less than the already-low average of the previous five years. Lesotho’s estimated annual cereal requirements are 360,000 tonnes. Taking into consideration commercial imports and current food aid supplies, the report estimates that 30,000 tonnes of cereals and 6,700 tonnes of other foods, or the equivalent in cash, will be required to meet the minimum needs. While average yields decreased dramatically because of drought, there was also a 20 percent reduction in the area planted in cereals compared to the last five-year average. Increasing amounts of arable land have been left uncultivated in the past two years because of unpredictable weather, a lack of cash for inputs, and a shortage of farm labour due to the impact of HIV/AIDS.
The report noted that the HIV/AIDS pandemic, with infection rates running as high as an estimated 31 percent, is increasingly undermining economic resources in Lesotho, resulting in a visible lack of labour in rural areas. However, it added that the greatest concern was the loss of purchasing power because of a dramatic rise in maize prices. White maize prices in South Africa, the main supplier of maize in the region, have tripled in the last two years, and are currently over 50 percent higher than a year ago. Prices in Lesotho have also increased steeply.
“It is crucial that enough seeds, fertiliser, and credit facilities be available in time for the next cropping season to give Lesotho a chance to improve production in 2008, weather conditions permitting,” said Henri Josserand, Chief of FAO’s Global Information and Early Warning System.
. (L.M.) (Agenzia Fides 14/6/2007 righe 45 parole 548)


Share: