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24 May 2012
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Eritrea's secret hunger crisis

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05 September 2011
 

Despite government denials, mounting evidence shows that up to two-thirds of Eritrea's population may be facing hunger. Low food production and lack of humanitarian access to this closed nation is causing food shortages like elsewhere in the Horn of Africa.

The drought and famine that is devastating the Horn of Africa is affecting more than 12 million people.

Yet one country in the region, Eritrea, says it has escaped the crisis, reaping a bumper harvest earlier this year.

eritrea-famine.jpg
Eritreans risk all to cross their heavily mined and guarded border to seek sanctuary in Ethiopia/ Photo credit: AP

But evidence is now mounting that the real situation in the secretive country may be rather different, with up to two in three Eritreans going hungry.

In the last decade Eritrea has become one of the world's most closed nations with no free press and no opposition.

So its been difficult to verify the Eritrean government's claims that the population has the food it needs.

But it has now been possible to piece together an alternative picture from a variety of sources.

There is an increasing trend of acute malnutrition in children under five in many areas.

Satellite imagery from weather monitoring group the Famine Early Warning System shows below average rainfall from June to September.

This is the main rainy season for Eritrea and comes after years of severe drought in consecutive years.

The human impact is to be found in northern Ethiopia.

Emaciated Eritreans are crossing the heavily militarised border at the rate of 900 a month, according to journalists in the region.

They tell tales of crops that have failed and homes without food.

"There's a clear cut denial of access by the government of Eritrea of food and other humanitarian support"

Susan Rice US Ambassador to the UN

The American ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice, recently described Eritrea as a black hole in terms of independent information.

The Eritrean people "most likely are suffering the very same food shortages that we're seeing throughout the region (and) are being left to starve because there is not access, there's a clear-cut denial of access by the government of Eritrea of food and other humanitarian support for its people," Ms Rice said.

Most UN agencies have been refused access to Eritrea and most aid agencies have been expelled.

Even accredited ambassadors have the greatest difficulty in moving freely about the country, to assess the seriousness of the situation.

 
Source : BBC
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