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Viewing cable 06NAIROBI968, HORN OF AFRICA, STATE - USAID HUMANITARIAN UPDATE

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06NAIROBI968 2006-03-03 08:01 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Nairobi
VZCZCXYZ0028
OO RUEHWEB

DE RUEHNR #0968/01 0620801
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 030801Z MAR 06
FM AMEMBASSY NAIROBI
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 0016
RUEHDS/AMEMBASSY ADDIS ABABA IMMEDIATE 8247
RUEHDJ/AMEMBASSY DJIBOUTI IMMEDIATE 3994
INFO RHMFIUU/HQ USCENTCOM MACDILL AFB FL PRIORITY
RHMFISS/CJTF HOA  PRIORITY
RUEHC/DEPT OF INTERIOR WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEHRC/USDA FAS WASHDC PRIORITY 1233
RUEHXR/RWANDA COLLECTIVE
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA 3770
RUEAUSA/DEPT OF HHS WASHINGTON DC
RUEHPH/CDC ATLANTA GA 2541
UNCLAS NAIROBI 000968 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
AIDAC STATE FOR AF/E, AF/EPS, AF/PD, EB, PRM/AF, IO 
USAID FOR A/AID, AA/DCHA, DCHA/FFP, DCHA/OTI, AA/EGAT, OFDA 
USAID/DCHA FOR WGARVELINK, LROGERS, MHESS 
DCHA/OFDA FOR GGOTTLIEB, MMARX, IMACNAIRN, KCHANNELL 
DCHA/FFP FOR JDWORKEN, JDRUMMOND, TANDERSON, DNELSON, 
SBRADLEY 
USAID/EGAT FOR JTURK, JSCHAFER 
AFR/EA FOR JBORNS, SMCCLURE 
ADDIS ABABA FOR TIM STUFFT 
DJIBOUTI FOR JSCHULMAN 
ROME FOR FODAG 
GENEVA FOR NKYLOH 
BRUSSELS FOR PLERNER 
NSC FOR JMELINE 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: DY EAID ECO ET PHUM PREF EGAD CENTCOM PRES
SUBJECT:  HORN OF AFRICA, STATE - USAID HUMANITARIAN UPDATE 
 1 
 
REF:  STATE 27057 
 
------------ 
1.  Summary: 
------------ 
This is the first cable in response to reftel request for 
bi-weekly reports on the humanitarian situation in the Horn 
of Africa.  It is formatted according to reftel guidelines. 
USAID Missions in Ethiopia and Djibouti contributed to this 
report. 
 
A regional humanitarian crisis in Kenya, Djibouti, Ethiopia 
and Somalia, exacerbated by the failure of the short rains, 
has developed into a full-blown emergency. Pastoralist 
livelihoods across the region are severely threatened as 
livestock, the basis of their food security system, are 
dying in unprecedented numbers due to lack of water, forage 
and pasture.  Significant numbers of marginal agricultural 
and agro-pastoralist communities living in the arid and 
semi-arid areas of all four countries are also affected. 
The situation is exacerbated by limited purchasing power, 
political marginalization, conflict over natural resources 
(including water) and limited livelihood options. Normal 
coping mechanisms have been exhausted and pre-famine 
indicators have been reported, including rising 
malnutrition rates, irregular high livestock mortality, 
confused migration, rural exodus to urban centers and 
concentration at permanent water points. 
 
Since drought in this area is recurrent, historically 
requiring repeated emergency interventions, donors and 
governments are increasingly seeking solutions that 
decrease the vulnerability and increase resiliency of 
people and systems in this region. A regional approach to 
address this crisis is desirable to strengthen and augment 
in-country efforts, address trans-boundary issues and 
mitigate conflict issues across borders. USAID has formed a 
regional Pastoralist Working Group, which serves as an 
internal think tank to inform USAIDs approach to long-term 
response to the drought in the region. 
 
Country summaries: 
 
a. Kenya Summary: The northern and eastern pastoral 
districts are facing an emergency situation -- overall, 
about 3.5 million people require emergency humanitarian 
assistance in the next 12 months. Malnutrition rates are 
rising with a GAM of 18-30% in the worst affected 
districts.  Cattle and sheep mortality is estimated at 33% 
and expected to rise as the dry season advances. Livestock 
prices have dipped by 30-60%. Most pastoralist coping 
strategies are exhausted and households are using distress 
strategies. Agropastoral areas in the south and coastal 
areas are also highly food insecure due to crop failure. In 
Lake Basin areas HIV/AIDS is exacerbating food insecurity 
and large numbers of orphans and vulnerable children exist. 
AmEmbassy Nairobi has formed an Interagency Task Force for 
Kenya and Somalia which met for the first time on February 
27.  Additional information to be provided septel. 
 
b. Ethiopia Summary: The humanitarian situation in the 
Somali region and in the Borena zone of the Oromia region 
continues to deteriorate, as the region progresses further 
into the dry season (Jan-Mar).  The response from the UN, 
donors, and NGOs has been accelerating to meet the needs 
of the region, but gaps remain.  USAID Ethiopia is focusing 
on filling the most critical gaps through water and health 
 
programs. 
 
c. Somalia Summary: An estimated 1.7 million people in the 
North, central and Southern Regions of Somalia are facing 
conditions of Acute Food and Livelihood Crisis or 
Humanitarian Emergency at least until June 2006, and 
combined with 380,000 IDPS the total number of people in 
need of assistance throughout the country is 2.1 million 
people.  The crisis is especially severe in the Southern 
regions of Somalia, where an estimated 1.4 million people 
are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance.  Somalia is 
experiencing crop failure; considerable livestock deaths, 
rapidly increasing cereal prices, falling livestock prices, 
abnormal population movements and extreme shortages of and 
limited access to water and food. 
 
d. Djibouti Summary: Recent showers have brought some 
improvement to the humanitarian situation in the eastern 
part of the country. Livestock mortality has been reported 
throughout pastoral communities. 
 
-------------------------------------------- 
2.  Humanitarian Access/Security Incidents: 
-------------------------------------------- 
 
a. Regional:  Governments, humanitarian organizations and 
donors have mobilized emergency humanitarian assistance in 
all four countries.  Support includes food aid, emergency 
water trucking, livestock feed provision de-stocking, 
veterinary and human medicines provision. Somalia continues 
to be a challenge for both relief and development 
operations. 
 
Food insecurity is intensified by conflict, whose 
underlying cause is often competition over scarce 
resources.   Based on field assessment reports and partners 
working in the drought-affected pastoralist areas, there 
are signs that the current drought has exacerbated conflict 
in the area. 
 
Tensions between pastoralists are heightened due to the 
regional nature of the crisis as it affects transboundary 
migration (one of their traditional copying strategies) 
among the countries of Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya. In 
their search for water and pasture to keep animals alive, 
pastoralists are encroaching onto agricultural lands in 
search of grazing. This is affecting farmers land 
preparation activities for the March/April planting season. 
Cases of cross-border raids have been reported along the 
Ethiopia/Kenya, Sudan/Kenya and Somalia/Ethiopia borders. 
The following security incidents have occurred, by country: 
 
b. Kenya: Following clashes, pastoralists from Wajir 
District who had migrated to Isiolo lost their eight people 
and 600 animals. Over eight incidents of highway banditry 
have been reported over the last month.   The 
Isiolo/Marsabit/Moyale road and Wajir/Mandera road have 
witnessed increased banditry attacks. On the other hand, 
reports indicate that inter-clan conflicts in general have 
reduced due to the severity of the drought that left the 
people weak and resources completely depleted. 
 
c. Ethiopia: The GOEs Disaster Preparedness and Prevention 
Agency (DPPA) continues daily dispatches of food for some 
1.5 million people in Somali Region, and some 155,000 in 
Borena zone of Oromiya Region. The transport capacity for 
deliveries of relief food is limited.  In January, the 
 
 
total food dispatched was only 30% of the target amount for 
Somali region.  In order to increase the dispatch rate, 
DPPA has engaged their emergency transport fleet and the 
Road Transport Authority is coordinating the commercial 
transport fleet for priority loads to the drought-affected 
areas. For food dispatches to Somali Region, DPPA has now 
taken additional measures in order to ensure delivery of 
relief food to the intended beneficiaries. These measures 
include regular radio broadcasts informing beneficiaries of 
food allocations and their entitlements, deployment of DPPA 
monitoring teams to the worst drought-affected areas, 
deployment of military convoys to follow trucks carrying 
relief food to particular "hotspot" areas, and the 
establishment of committees at woreda level to control the 
receipt of food. WFP is also increasing its monitoring 
capacity in the areas, through hiring of new food aid 
monitors and field assistants. 
 
The measles response led by UNICEF with the Ministry of 
Health (MOH) has many gaps, making coverage extremely 
inadequate.  The already late campaign will be affected by 
insecurity in some parts of the Somali Region.  The 
campaign is also hindered in pastoralist areas by the lack 
of capacity of the MOH, and by the difficulties in reaching 
remote and mobile people.   NGO involvement in the past has 
helped to secure much better coverage rates for vaccination 
campaigns. 
 
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has 
reported two of their vehicles were hijacked by the 
Sheikash clan while attempting to deliver food to 4000 
displaced families in East Imi.  The hijacking was not done 
at gunpoint, and the ICRC does not consider this a 
noteworthy security incident.  The remainder of the ICRC 
trucks continued without incident.   GOAL has cancelled a 
nutritional assessment in Deghabur Zone of Somali Region 
after frequent stops by armed gunmen, and fear of Islamic 
fundamentalists.   Save the Children UK confirmed that they 
have withdrawn from food distribution to Fik Zone in Somali 
Region after the burning of two food aid trucks by armed 
gunmen a few weeks ago (the trucks were owned by highland 
Ethiopians.) 
 
d. Somalia: Fighting erupted in Mogadishu starting Feb 18 
and lasting several days between armed militia backed by 
business groups and those backed by the Islamic courts. 
Over 33 persons were killed, 150 wounded, and several 
thousand displaced.  Fighting was reportedly intense 
including the use of rocket-propelled grenades, heavy 
machineguns, small caliber guns and mortar shells.  The 
fighting did not disrupt deliveries to the Merka and El 
Maan ports which are utilized for food aid deliveries. 
Three persons were killed on Feb 27 outside the Parliament 
building in the autonomous Puntland  area of Somalia.  The 
attack pitted militia forces loyal to one government 
minister against security forces guarding the Parliament 
building.  Another vessel (a traditional dhow) was reported 
hijacked on Feb 27 with 25 crew members aboard. 
 
 
e. Djibouti: WFP EMOP programs currently carry a caseload 
of around 47,500 beneficiaries.  Due to the late arrival of 
food shipments, the operation has been extended for 3 
months and will end in March 2006.  WFP has so far 
distributed about 2,600 MT of mixed commodities over a 
three-phase distribution.  However, there is a shortfall of 
around 1,447 MT, starting from January, and there are no 
 
confirmed pledges to cover this gap.  September and October 
food distribution made possible through with loans from 
other programs.  There were no distributions in November, 
and distributions for December and January were combined. 
It is possible that distributions will be planned for March 
depending on confirmed pledges.  As the situation is 
deteriorated by the impact of the current drought 
prevailing in the region, WFP is planning to extend the 
current EMOP up to the end of the year according to 
findings from a government led multi-agency mission 
scheduled at the end of January. 
 
---------------------------------- 
3.  Political/Diplomatic Issues: 
---------------------------------- 
 
a. Kenya: The food crisis in marginal agricultural and Arid 
and Semi Arid Lands (ASAL) of Kenya is clearly much deeper 
than Emergency.  It is rather a fundamentally chronic 
poverty problem, necessitating strategies and policy 
reorientation to address the root causes of food 
insecurity.  Both the Government of Kenya (GOK) and donors 
are taking this crisis as an opportunity to improve 
understanding of the factors underlying repeated food 
crisis in the country and identifying new approaches to 
breaking the cycle of relief dependency. 
 
b. Ethiopia: The joint REDSO/USAID Ethiopia conflict 
assessment has been postponed to early April. 
 
c. Somalia:  On Feb 27, Somalias interim President opened 
the first ever Parliament meeting held inside Somalia in 
the Southern Somalia town of Baidoa. This meeting brings 
together feuding factions of the Transitional Federal 
Government (TFG) who are split between the town of Jowhar 
and Mogadishu. 
 
d. Djibouti: Reliable sources report the congregation of 
people in isolated areas around military posts in search of 
food and water.  The Government of Djibouti has launched an 
appeal for humanitarian assistance. 
 
 
--------------------------------------------- ---------- 
4.Action/Response to humanitarian; development conflict 
mitigation, political/diplomatic etc. programs): 
: 
--------------------------------------------- --------- 
a. Kenya: USAID/Kenya in partnership with its implementing 
partners has embarked on various interventions to prevent 
the situation from escalating into a complex humanitarian 
crisis.  Among others, conflict interventions focus on 
increasing dialogue between communities to help each other 
in times of disaster.  This effort has led to agreements 
being brokered on how to share the remaining pastures and 
water.  In one district (Mandera), private borehole owners 
have also been encouraged to share water with the affected 
communities.  Similarly, local partners have set up a rapid 
response team that will give direction and advice on areas 
of focus and interventions.  This set up will enable more 
frequent dialogue between communities as a means to diffuse 
tension and devise more appropriate resource sharing 
mechanisms. 
 
USAID/Kenya will continue to provide various short-term and 
long-term assistance that will enable better understanding 
of the linkages between drought and conflict in Kenya which 
 
could lead to enhanced preventive strategies. 
 
b. Ethiopia: UNICEF has agreed to use NGOs to assist in 
their measles campaign, which seems to have  worked well in 
Zones 1 and 5 in Afar (and worked well in the 2002-03 
emergency vaccination campaign in Afar and Somali). 
However, there are worries about high numbers of deaths 
already from measles (200 reported from Gewane in Afar, an 
area not yet covered by the emergency vaccination), as well 
as the highly vulnerable state of malnourished children in 
the most drought affected areas.   USAID is continuing to 
monitor the implementation of the vaccination campaign and 
is recommending inclusion of NGOs in the pastoralist areas 
to help ensure effective coverage. 
 
c.  Somalia: USAID/FFP has funded expanded food aid 
distributions in the most affected areas by both the World 
Food Program (WFP) and CARE International.  In total the 
two agencies have received over $59 million ($33,173,000 to 
o 
WFP and $26,211,800 to CARE) in FY 06 to cover emergency 
food needs through July 2006.  In addition, CARE is 
utilizing 11,927 MTs of carry-over commodities from FY 05 
valued at approximately $7.8 towards the crisis.  Should 
rains fail as currently forecast, needs will only expand as 
more household become destitute and coping strategies reach 
their breaking point. 
 
USAID/REDSO is expanding its Peace in East and Central 
Africa (PEACE) Program, complementing its current cross- 
border peacebuilding program in Mandera/Gedo Regions on the 
Somalia/Kenya border with additional activities into Wajir, 
Kenya and Lower Juba, Somalia.  Support will include local 
organizations in Afmadow and Bardeera districts in 
Somalia.  The initiative will promote joint economic and 
livelihoods development by peaceful means; facilitate 
practical problem-solving partnerships between local 
government and cross border community organizations to 
share basic services, and strengthen community structures 
and mechanisms for the management of cross border conflict 
and peace building. 
 
The lack of a functioning central government and continued 
insecurity limits the type of programming that can be 
undertaken as well as the ability of organizations to 
access areas for programming. 
 
Current funding for FEWS/Somalia, which is based in 
Nairobi, is insufficient.  Due to declining budgets for 
USAID/Somalia programs which in the past has supplemented 
the FEWS/Somalia budget, travel is limited to one trip per 
month and funding for 24 field monitors in Somalia, who 
measure market prices and rainfall data, will run out at 
the end of March. FEWS/Somalia has prepared a supplemental 
funding request valued at approximately $250,000 to enable 
additional travel, reporting and analysis, and funding for 
the Somalia field monitors but funding has not been 
identified yet.  [Note: It is ironic that the very entity 
charged with being a famine early warning system is facing 
reductions at a time when Somalia is exhibiting early 
warning signs of famine, USG travel into Somalia is 
restricted, and the USG is dramatically increasing 
emergency funding levels. End Note] 
 
-------------------------- 
5.  Donor Response Update: 
-------------------------- 
 
 
a. Regional: The USAID Pastoralist Working Group is 
preparing a concept paper to apply for Famine Funds. The 
proposed regional activity would complement and strengthen 
bilateral efforts and tackle some of the key transboundary 
issues to improve resiliency of the predominantly 
pastoralist populations in the region. 
 
b. Kenya: Based on the January interagency food security 
assessment, the GOK appealed for international assistance 
for approximately 395,000 mt emergency foods valued at 
Dols.221.5 million to meet immediate relief needs of 3.5 
million drought-affected people throughout Kenya.  In 
addition, Dols.21.7 million is required in non-food 
assistance. 
 
Existing food aid pipeline (including 40,000 mt of the 
GOKs recent pledge of 60,000 mt and USG additional 
contribution of 10,000 mt) will not go beyond end April 
2006.  According to the World Food Program, 25 to 30,000 mt 
of monthly ration is required to address immediate food 
needs of 3.5 million people through March 2007.  Shortly 
after the GOKs appeal for international assistance on 
February 8, 2006, a joint GOK/WFP press statement was 
issued, reiterating the need for donors immediate response 
to the appeal to respond to the urgent relief needs of 
approximately 3.5 million people. 
 
In FY 2006, the USG provided 12,000 mt of wheat, which was 
swapped for 14,400 mt of locally provided maize, and an 
additional 10,000 mt in assorted commodities.  USG is also 
considering additional contributions to avert a situation 
in which huge pipeline break occurs in the midst of 
immediate and significant needs.  In addition, the USG, 
through OFDA, is planning to contribute Dols.1.5 towards 
the non-food sector through UNICEF and various NGOs. 
 
. 
 
More recent non-USG contributions include Euro 5 million 
from EU/ECHO, GBP one million from the UK, Euro one million 
from France, Euro one million from Ireland, Dols.500,000 
from Italy and Dols.200,000 from Turkey.  Additional 
contributions are also expected from other donors. 
 
WFP Executive Director, James Morris, is in Kenya the week 
of February 27, 2006.  On March 5, 2006 Ambassador Bellamy 
will host a lunch for other Chiefs of Mission and GOK 
officials so that James Morris can provide an update on the 
East Africa drought and make a personal request for 
a timely response to the current appeal from the 
international community. 
 
c. Ethiopia: The UN Office for the Coordination of 
Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) has been encouraging DPPA to 
take the lead on theQesponse coordination.  In parallel, 
UNOCHA has been hosting donor and partner meetings bi- 
weekly to make sure there is no gap in information sharing. 
USAID Ethiopia has also been meeting with partners to keep 
abreast of the situation and to adjust response plans as 
necessary. 
 
UNOCHA is creating a Humanitarian Trust Fund for Ethiopia, 
that will be used to respond to the drought emergency this 
year, and as an early slush fund for future emergencies. 
The current request by OCHA is USD 12.9 million, with 
almost half focused on health and nutrition as UNICEF 
 
implements a massive measles campaign.  The UKs 
Department for International Development (DFID) has 
committed GBP 4 million to the fund with the EU appearing 
to be covering the rest (although no firm commitment has 
been made).  Furthermore, Sweden has committed USD 3 
million and Norway USD 680,000 to UNICEF, with Belgium 
committing USD 300,000 to FAO for livestock health and 
veterinary drugs. 
 
The Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) had 
been on the sidelines as they reevaluated direct budget 
support to the GOE and formulated policy through their 
recent elections at home.  CIDA just last week reentered 
the fray by committing USD 17 million to Ethiopia this year 
for drought response and country-wide health.  CIDA has not 
yet announced how the money will be divided between these 
two responses. 
 
ICRC has focused on water tankering to Afder zone, 
utilizing 9 water tankers supporting 15 locations and 
additional points along the road.  ICRC has been providing 
food for internally displaced populations in East Imi, and 
has made a limited response in improving access to human 
health and animal health care in Afder and Gode zones. 
WHO recently reported that the Austrian Development Agency 
donated 500,000 Euro to support the polio eradication 
program in Somali Region. The campaign, which plans to 
cover an estimated 900,000 children under five, was 
conducted in the 53 woredas including bordering areas, from 
20 23 February. The region is considered to be at high 
risk of importing the polio virus as it borders East 
Hararghe in Oromiya Region, where the three most recently 
confirmed wild polio virus cases were identified and due to 
the outbreak of the disease in neighboring Somalia. 
d. Somalia: Recent commitments to WFPs Emergency Operation 
include the EU ($6 million); DFID ($4.5 million); Ireland 
($1.2 million), and Austria ($200,000). 
 
e. Djibouti: WFP EMOP programs currently carry a caseload 
of around 47,500 beneficiaries.  Due to the late arrival of 
food shipments, the operation has been extended for 3 
months and will end in March 2006.  WFP has so far 
distributed about 2,600 MT of mixed commodities over a 
three-phase distribution.  However, there is a shortfall of 
around 1,447 MT, starting from January, and there are no 
confirmed pledges to cover this gap. 
--------------------- 
6.  FEWS/FSAU Update: 
--------------------- 
a.  Livestock: 
 
Kenya: Two years of successive drought has had an enormous 
detrimental impact on the livelihoods and household food 
security of the region, and has precipitated a growing 
chronic food security crisis.  The failure of short-rains 
in Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia resulted in severely 
depleted pasture, browse and water.  Livestock mortality is 
high  in Kenya, for example, it ranges between 5 percent 
among camels to 33 percent among cattle and sheep.  Many 
pastoralists depend on moving their livestock long 
distances and across national borders to find forage and 
water. Cattle and sheep are too weak to trek long distances 
and many have died. The trekking distances for livestock 
has extended beyond 20 miles, with watering intervals 
ranging between two days goats and up to five days for 
camels.   As conditions worsen in the entire pastoral 
livelihood zone, migration options are increasingly limited 
and conflict over resources is likely to heighten in scale 
and severity. 
 
Ethiopia: There are reports of disease outbreaks, 
particularly in the Afder and Liben zones of the Somali 
region.   UNOCHA reports that over 80,000 livestock have 
died in these two zones alone.  Vaccination and treatment 
campaigns have reached over 700,000 animals to combat the 
spread of diseases.  But, as the rains start, it is 
anticipated that many emaciated animals will die when they 
get wet and cold so death tolls will certainly increase 
significantly. 
 
USAID Ethiopia, through the Pastoralist Livelihood 
Initiative, has designated USD 2 million for emergency 
destocking.  Over the next month, PLI partners are planning 
on destocking over 130,000 animals, mainly goats, sheep, 
and camels.  Partners are also supplying emergency feed, 
water, vaccinations, and disease treatments. 
 
Somalia: Livestock body conditions, production and 
reproduction throughout most of the South extremely poor 
and severely stressed due to limited water and pasture. 
Cattle, the main livestock species in Gdeo, Juba Valley and 
parts of Bay and Bakool regions are the hardest hit by the 
drought and their survival over the current dry season 
(January-April) is precarious at best.  It is estimated 
that 20-30% of the cattle have already died in Gedo and 
parts of Juba Valley due to the lack of water, pasture and 
drought related diseases.  Preliminary estimates are that 
upwards to 80% of the cattle in Gedo could perish by April, 
before the next rains are expected.  Competition over 
rangeland resources and market opportunities is increasing 
resource based conflicts between farmers and herders.  The 
market value of livestock, especially cattle, has plummeted 
and will continue to fall. 
 
Djibouti: There were no rains recorded in December.  The 
volume of the Heys/Dada rains to date range from below 
normal to far below normal.  Grazing areas in all pastoral 
zones currently face a serious water deficit.  All water 
catchments are practically dry.  This situation has led to 
irregular movement of livestock, and the majority of the 
remaining weakened herds are currently concentrated around 
permanent water points.  An extensive water tankering 
scheme needs to be implemented soon.  Reports indicate high 
incidence rates of water borne diseases, contributing to 
high livestock mortality throughout the pastoral zones. 
b.  Market Prices/terms of trade: 
 
Kenya: Livestock prices have declined by margins ranging 
between 30-60 percent in Kenya.  The most significant 
prices decline is noted among cattle.  Low livestock 
prices, attributed to a glut in supply, have compounded the 
already low purchasing capacity.   In addition, a 
significant proportion of the livestock is unsellable due 
to poor body condition. 
 
Cereal prices in pastoral areas are over 50 percent higher 
than in markets outside the pastoral areas, further 
underlining the pressure on pastoralists terms of trade. 
Pastoralists terms of trade are compromised further by 
crop failure experienced across the cropping livelihood 
zones which have pushed up cereal prices. 
 
Ethiopia: The market price in Jijiga market has remained 
stable, despite the low demand in the market.  For example 
 
e 
364 sheep were offered, but only 71 were sold.  Because of 
the low demand, the price of shoats has decreased slightly, 
but remains higher than other regions.  Information 
gathered in Afder zone reveals that greater than 75% of the 
animals put up for sale have been sold, but at prices that 
were the lowest surveyed.  Similarly, Liben zone had a very 
high sell rate but instead with the highest prices 
surveyed.  In all regions, prices are decreasing as animals 
become leaner. 
 
c.  Rainfall/forecasting: 
 
Kenya: According to FEWS/NET, Kenya experiences mild 
cyclical drought events approximately every 3 - 5 years 
with more severe dry periods roughly in ten-year cycles. 
Since 1998, successive poor rainy seasons have limited the 
ability of poor households in parts of the ASAL (Arid and 
Semi-Arid Lands) to recover lost assets and employ 
traditional coping mechanisms.  An interagency food 
security assessment conducted between January 9  31, 2006 
in Kenya confirmed that short-rains season totally failed 
in much of eastern and northern pastoralist areas of Kenya. 
Where rains occurred, they began late, were poorly 
distributed, and ended early. 
 
The crises also affected significant number of marginal 
agricultural and agro-pastoralist communities living in 
Kenyas arid and semi arid areas.  For instance, out of the 
3 million persons targeted for general food distributions, 
approximately 2 million are classified as marginal crop 
producers and agro-pastoralists.  The drought is expected 
to persist through the next month and a half, until the 
onset of the long-rains season in early April, in 
pastoralist districts. 
 
A bi-annual climate outlook forum that brings together a 
diverse group of scientists and practitioners is taking 
place in Nairobi, Kenya from March 1 - 3, 2006.  The main 
objective of the forum is to develop a consensus climate 
outlook for the March to May 2006 rainfall season, and the 
associated food security outlook for the Greater Horn of 
Africa.  The forum will also discuss the potential impacts 
of the consensus climate outlook on other socio-economic 
sectors including water resources and hydropower management 
and health among others sectors. 
 
Ethiopia: The belg rains have started in some of the 
highland areas of Ethiopia, which is promising as they have 
arrived on time.  Current weather forecasts suggest, 
however, that the belg/gu rains have a 45 percent chance of 
being below normal in the east, where they are desperately 
needed.  Rains have already been reported twice in Borena 
zone, which is promising.  USAID will continue to monitor 
the performance of the rains and assess their impact on the 
humanitarian crisis in the region. 
 
Somalia:  The water situation in Southern Somalia is 
desperate.  Most open water sources have dried up and the 
bulk of deep well boreholes are non-functioning.  Oxfam 
reports that seven people have died from dehydration since 
mid-January and that households are surviving on the 
equivalent of three glass of water per person per day for 
drinking, cooking, and washing.  Even for this amount, some 
household are walking up to 45 miles to access water in 104 
degree Fahrenheit heat.  Reportedly, some households are 
drinking their own urine to survive. Further exacerbating 
 
an already dire situation are reports from both FEWS and 
FSAU that the Shabelle river which runs through Southern 
Somalia is at risk to dry up completely. 
 
Djibouti:  Rains in February, although two weeks late have 
essentially alleviated the threat in Eastern Djibouti. 
Rains in Western Djibouti are not normally expected until 
March, so the outcome is still pending. 
 
----------------- 
7. CONCLUSION 
----------------- 
 
Governments, humanitarian organizations and donors have 
mobilized emergency humanitarian assistance in all four 
countries.  Support includes food aid, emergency water 
trucking, livestock feed provision, de-stocking, and 
veterinary and human medicines provision.  However, the 
assistance is reportedly insufficient to stop the 
deteriorating situation.  Regional interventions are 
planned to complement bilateral efforts and address cross- 
border issues. 
 
The priority should be to save human lives as well as lives 
of reproductive, milking and pack animals.  More urgent and 
appropriate assistance is needed.  Additionally, 
contingency plans need to be drawn in the event that the 
expected long rains are either below normal or poor in 
these areas.  USG and donors are planning for longer-term 
interventions to address the recurrent livelihood failure 
sparked by recurrent drought. 
 
BELLAMY