Wednesday, 13 April 2016
Africa drought fears grip Malawi and Mozambique
The President of Malawi, Peter Mutharika, warned in a
statement some people needed aid for all of this year.
Mozambique raised alert levels for southern and central
regions.
Zimbabwe, Lesotho and Zambia are also suffering food
shortages, while South Africa says its drought is the worst in
a century.
Over 10 million people across the region will need food aid
in the coming year, according to the World Food Programme
(WFP).Malawi has suffered both flash floods and drought recently,
hitting the staple maize crop.
"It is very clear that we have [a] food shortage in the country
which will affect a considerable number of our fellow
citizens," Mr Mutharika said.
The WFP's David Orr told AFP news agency the worst was still
to come.
"It will take a long time before the situations improves," he
said. "Any improvement in the next months would be
negligible."
Malawi is considered the worst affected among several
counties in a struggling region:
In Zimbabwe, more than a quarter of the rural population -
about 2.8 million people - do not have enough to eat
South Africa, normally an exporter, has had to import grain
to cover its needs
Food prices in Zambia have sharply risen while low water
levels at the Kariba dam have hit hydro-electric energy
production
An unusually strong El Nino weather phenomenon has been
blamed for the drought, as well as extreme weather in
countries across the globe.
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