ADVERTISEMENT

US sends elite disaster experts to respond to drought

"The worst impacts of this drought still lie ahead," USAID said in a statement. "The scale and severity of this crisis is expected to far outstrip available resources."

An elderly woman receives cooking oil at an emergency food aid distribution in the village of Estayish in Ethiopia's northern Amhara region, February 11, 2016. REUTERS/Katy Migiro

The United States is sending an elite team of disaster experts to respond to Ethiopia's worst drought in 50 years, it said on Thursday.

Around a dozen members of the U.S. Agency for International Development's (USAID) Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) have arrived in Ethiopia to coordinate the U.S. response to the drought.

They will be joined by DART logistics, nutrition, and water, sanitation and hygiene experts in the next few days.

USAID responds to around 65 disasters a year, including the recent Ebola outbreak in West Africa and last year's Nepal earthquakes.

ADVERTISEMENT

"With the announcement of the DART, we are acting to prevent a major humanitarian crisis and protect Ethiopia's hard-earned development progress," USAID's administrator Gayle Smith said in a statement.

U.S. President Barack Obama visited Ethiopia, a close U.S. ally, on his 2015 trip to the continent of his father's birth.

He has made food security a priority of his development agenda, saying in 2013 it was a "moral imperative" to end hunger on the world's poorest continent.

Ethiopia's government and the United Nations have asked for $1.4 billion to feed 10.2 million Ethiopians - the third largest appeal globally after Syria and Yemen.

An additional 7.9 million chronically food insecure people are receiving rations through the Ethiopian government's Productive Safety Net Programme, supported by the United States and other donors.

ADVERTISEMENT

Yet funding shortages mean food aid is in short supply and malnutrition will increase dramatically if donor money runs out in May, the United Nations has said.

Ethiopia's spring rains started in late February but many farmers do not have seeds.

USAID is providing almost $4 million of maize and wheat seeds for more than 200,000 families.

Ethiopia is one of the flagship countries for the U.S. government's global hunger initiative, Feed the Future, which seeks to boost small farmers' yields.

Some Feed the Future farmers are contributing maize to the disaster response, USAID said.

ADVERTISEMENT

"It is imperative ... to save lives and ensure that tens of millions of people aren't pushed back into extreme poverty," it said.

JOIN OUR PULSE COMMUNITY!

Unblock notifications in browser settings.
ADVERTISEMENT

Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:

Email: eyewitness@pulse.ng

Recommended articles

Ighodalo denies role in Shaibu's impeachment, claims tarnished reputation

Ighodalo denies role in Shaibu's impeachment, claims tarnished reputation

Government is ashamed of its citizens begging in other African countries

Government is ashamed of its citizens begging in other African countries

Linda Ikeji to pay NBM of Africa ₦30 million for character defamation

Linda Ikeji to pay NBM of Africa ₦30 million for character defamation

Gov Obaseki declares ₦70,000 minimum wage for Edo workers

Gov Obaseki declares ₦70,000 minimum wage for Edo workers

Newly constructed Ghanaian road with electric pole in the middle sparks concern

Newly constructed Ghanaian road with electric pole in the middle sparks concern

2 workers die after bridge under construction collapse in Ebonyi

2 workers die after bridge under construction collapse in Ebonyi

FCT experiences power outage, AEDC blames technical faults on feeders

FCT experiences power outage, AEDC blames technical faults on feeders

Ogun FRSC set to arrest motorists with petrol-filled jerry cans in vehicles

Ogun FRSC set to arrest motorists with petrol-filled jerry cans in vehicles

Fruit waste from Ketu market can generate power for homes, markets, industries

Fruit waste from Ketu market can generate power for homes, markets, industries

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT