Report reveals 1.5million Kenyans are facing hunger as locusts, Covid bites

Geza Ulole

JF-Expert Member
Oct 31, 2009
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Global Hunger Report says 23 per cent of the population in Kenya is under nourished?. [Courtesy]

Some 1.5 million Kenyans are facing an acute food shortage that has been exacerbated by Covid-19, climate change and locust invasion, a new report says.

The Global Hunger Report gives Kenya a score of 23.7, which lists it among 40 countries with a serious risk of hunger. The scores range between 0-100, with countries with lower figures having low levels of hunger.

By that score, Kenya, and much of the world is behind the aspiration to eradicate hunger by 2030, said Kelvin Shingles, the Country Director of Welthungerhilfe (WHH), the organisation that produces the annual reports.
As per the 2020 Global Hunger Index, 2020, Kenya is ranked 84th out of 107, behind Algeria, Egypt, South Africa, Ghana, Senegal, Gambia, Gabon, Namibia, and Cameroon that have moderate levels of hunger while Eswatini, Mali, Malawi, Botswana, and Benin have a serious level of hunger but better scores than Kenya.

In Africa, only Algeria is listed as having a low level of hunger.

The organisation gives a score based on data on child mortality, child under nutrition, and inadequate food supply to assess progress and setbacks in combating hunger.

The lesser the score, the lower the hunger levels are in the country. At 23.7, Kenya’s level of hunger score is above the global average of 18.2.

Child mortality looks at the percentage of children who die before the age of five, while under nutrition figures show the percentage of children under five who suffer from wasting or low weight for height and percentage of children under five who suffer from stunting or low height for age.

The hunger level in the country increased in 2020 from 23.2 in 2019, which the report attributes to conspiratorial factors of Covid-19 and locust invasion.

Access to inputs
In Kenya, the report states that 23 per cent of the population is under nourished. The figure has reduced from 3.4 in the past two decades.

According to the report launched in Nairobi yesterday, child mortality rate is decreasing and is now at 4.1 per cent.

Globally, almost half of the children who die before their fifth birthday are affected by malnutrition, Shingles said.

The report shows that Kitui and West Pokot counties have high pockets of children who are stunted.

Some 31.3 per cent of children under five years in Kenya are stunted, according to the Global Hunger Index.

Further, the report says chronic child under nutrition - which develops slowly over an extended period of time - is pronounced in Kenya.

More than 50 countries are facing severe hunger. Hunger is at alarming levels in 11 countries while 40 countries, Kenya included, have serious levels of hunger.

“The outlook was bad even before Covid-19 but now we have a triple threat in Kenya, including the locust outbreak, the increasing frequency of crisis due to climate change,” Shingles said.

WHH says increasing support for smallholder farmers to become more sustainable, improving access to agricultural inputs and extension services, strengthening local and regional markets will boost food security.


Agriculture and Food Crops Principal Secretary Hamadi Boga and representatives of food security lobby groups were at the launch of the report.
 
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Ruto anajali watu wa hali ya chini. Akiwa rais, atajitahidi kushughulikia hili.
 
By the time Mkapa finished his second term in 2005 hunger was made history in Tanzania! I will always appreciate Mkapa for what he did in making Tanzania food secure as Kenya still languish in hunger 20 years after this report! He is the one that introduced warehouse receipt system that has done wonders in promoting farming by our farmers! May his soul eternal RIP!


Tanzania a food net exporter, is now busy dealing with food security related issues from bumper harvest
















N aside to her neighbors, WFP is helping the country to find ready market of her produce by allowing the country selling food to WFP!









NOW BACK TO KENYA













CC: Tony254
 
Nimesikia kuwa hawataki tena mahindi yetu, sijui watakula nini masikini jirani...
 

Red Cross appeals for Sh800 million to help starving Kenyans​

Kenya facing two natural disasters that essentially should be mutually exclusive – drought in one region and flooding in the other​

In Summary
• The society has already bought food for affected families but is unable to raise the entire amount needed.
• Dr Asha Mohammed said theirs is a direct response to the appeal made by the National Government through Spokesman Cyrus Oguna on April 1.

Kenya Red Cross Society secretary general Asha Mohammed when she flagged off foodstuff to vulnerable families hit by drought in Marsabit at the organisation's headquarters in South C, Nairobi, on April 16, 2021
HELP AT HAND: Kenya Red Cross Society secretary general Asha Mohammed when she flagged off foodstuff to vulnerable families hit by drought in Marsabit at the organisation's headquarters in South C, Nairobi, on April 16, 2021
Image: ANDREW KASUKU

Kenya Red Cross has appealed for Sh800 million to help more than 157,000 people facing hunger and those displaced by floods.
The society’s secretary General Asha Mohammed said while some parts of Kenya are being washed by floods, in arid areas thousands of people still have nothing to eat.


“What this means is that we are dealing with two natural disasters that essentially should be mutually exclusive—drought in one region and flooding in the other,” she told journalists in Nairobi on Friday.

The Kenya Meteorological Department says while western, Rift Valley, Coast and central Kenya will have enhanced rains this season, northern Kenya will have depressed rains.

Dr Mohammed said from the appeal, Sh483 million will go to flood victims while Sh315 million will buy food for drought victims.

The emergency situation is likely to continue until September, or end of the year depending on response.

She said the Sh800 million was based on projections made jointly by Red Cross, relief agencies and county governments in affected areas.
Dr Mohammed said the projections show between 15,000 to 30,000 families around Lake Victoria will be displaced by the ongoing heavy rains and will need shelter, food, clean water and basic health.

She said they are targeting 37,000 drought-hit people in Marsabit and 35,000 in Tana River with relief food.

“We are also expecting to reach 85,000 people in Mandera, Wajir and Turkana in the next phase of distribution,” she said.

The society will also transfer cash assistance of Sh5,400 per month for three months to each of 15,000 families in Mandera, Marsabit, Turkana, Wajir, Isiolo, Samburu and Garissa counties.

“Evidence has shown that cash assistance programmes can play a critical role in meeting immediate needs and enhancing economic recovery while promoting dignity,” she said.

Mohammed said theirs is a direct response to the appeal made by the National Government through Spokesman Cyrus Oguna on April 1.
Oguna said said 1.4 million Kenyans are threatened by drought and the situation may worsen.

“With the performance of the 2021 long-rains season forecasted to be poor, the situation is likely to dip a little, and the number of those in need of humanitarian support likely to increase towards August 2021,” he said.

Oguna said county governments, in collaboration with the national government, are distributing water to households in Turkana, Mandera, Garissa and Wajir counties.

“Other interventions include the provision of relief food in Turkana county by the county government, cash transfer under the Hunger Safety Net Program, which is currently in Phase 3. Every household receives Sh2,700 every two months, and targets over 101,800 households in the counties of Turkana, Mandera and Marsabit,” he said, adding that the government spends about Sh2 billion on the programme every year.

He said plans are underway to incorporate into the programme the counties of Wajir, Isiolo, Tana River, Garissa and Samburu.

 
mhcnalszqtynejkz6036c84c678a2.jpg

Global Hunger Report says 23 per cent of the population in Kenya is under nourished?. [Courtesy]

Some 1.5 million Kenyans are facing an acute food shortage that has been exacerbated by Covid-19, climate change and locust invasion, a new report says.

The Global Hunger Report gives Kenya a score of 23.7, which lists it among 40 countries with a serious risk of hunger. The scores range between 0-100, with countries with lower figures having low levels of hunger.

By that score, Kenya, and much of the world is behind the aspiration to eradicate hunger by 2030, said Kelvin Shingles, the Country Director of Welthungerhilfe (WHH), the organisation that produces the annual reports.
As per the 2020 Global Hunger Index, 2020, Kenya is ranked 84th out of 107, behind Algeria, Egypt, South Africa, Ghana, Senegal, Gambia, Gabon, Namibia, and Cameroon that have moderate levels of hunger while Eswatini, Mali, Malawi, Botswana, and Benin have a serious level of hunger but better scores than Kenya.

In Africa, only Algeria is listed as having a low level of hunger.

The organisation gives a score based on data on child mortality, child under nutrition, and inadequate food supply to assess progress and setbacks in combating hunger.

The lesser the score, the lower the hunger levels are in the country. At 23.7, Kenya’s level of hunger score is above the global average of 18.2.

Child mortality looks at the percentage of children who die before the age of five, while under nutrition figures show the percentage of children under five who suffer from wasting or low weight for height and percentage of children under five who suffer from stunting or low height for age.

The hunger level in the country increased in 2020 from 23.2 in 2019, which the report attributes to conspiratorial factors of Covid-19 and locust invasion.

Access to inputs
In Kenya, the report states that 23 per cent of the population is under nourished. The figure has reduced from 3.4 in the past two decades.

According to the report launched in Nairobi yesterday, child mortality rate is decreasing and is now at 4.1 per cent.

Globally, almost half of the children who die before their fifth birthday are affected by malnutrition, Shingles said.

The report shows that Kitui and West Pokot counties have high pockets of children who are stunted.

Some 31.3 per cent of children under five years in Kenya are stunted, according to the Global Hunger Index.

Further, the report says chronic child under nutrition - which develops slowly over an extended period of time - is pronounced in Kenya.

More than 50 countries are facing severe hunger. Hunger is at alarming levels in 11 countries while 40 countries, Kenya included, have serious levels of hunger.

“The outlook was bad even before Covid-19 but now we have a triple threat in Kenya, including the locust outbreak, the increasing frequency of crisis due to climate change,” Shingles said.

WHH says increasing support for smallholder farmers to become more sustainable, improving access to agricultural inputs and extension services, strengthening local and regional markets will boost food security.


Agriculture and Food Crops Principal Secretary Hamadi Boga and representatives of food security lobby groups were at the launch of the report.
Siku utajua kingereza utaacha kujiaibisha. Key word in this article is "facing", do you know what it means?
 
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