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Hunger kills hundreds after US and UN pause food aid to Ethiopia's Tigray region, officials say

apnews.com Hunger kills hundreds after US and UN pause food aid to Ethiopia's Tigray region, officials say

Local officials and researchers say hunger has killed at least 700 people in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region in recent weeks after the United States and United Nations suspended food aid.

Hunger kills hundreds after US and UN pause food aid to Ethiopia's Tigray region, officials say

Local officials and researchers say hunger has killed at least 700 people in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region in recent weeks after the United States and United Nations suspended food aid.

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  • I wish we could donate directly to the people in need rather than to the corrupt government or the large humanitarian organisations willing to play along with that corruption.

  • The real question is was that funding paused because that money isn't actually being used to buy food for Ethiopians.

  • Hunger has killed at least 700 people in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region in recent weeks after the United States and the United Nations paused food aid, local officials and researchers say.

    The U.N. and the U.S. first suspended food aid to Tigray in March after the discovery of a scheme to steal donated wheat intended for needy people. They extended the pause to the rest of Ethiopia in early June, affecting 20 million people in need, or about one-sixth of the country’s population.

    Tigray’s Disaster Risk Management Commission has recorded 728 hunger-related deaths in three of the region’s seven zones since the food aid was suspended in March...

    The figure includes 350 hunger deaths in the northwest zone of Tigray, which hosts thousands of people displaced by a two-year conflict in the region that ended in November. In mid-March, U.S. aid officials found enough food aid for 134,000 people for sale in a local market in Shire, the zone’s biggest town.

    Separately, researchers at Mekele University in the regional capital have documented 165 hunger deaths in seven camps for internally displaced people in Tigray since the food aid suspension began. There are over 100 such camps across the region.

    The deaths were reported by camp coordinators to the researchers, who are studying people displaced by the recent war. Most of the deaths are of children, old people and people with underlying health conditions, said one researcher, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. He linked the deaths directly to the aid suspension.

    A U.N. update published on June 14 said the number of children admitted to hospitals in Tigray for malnutrition rose by 196% between April 2022 and April 2023.

    The recent war left 5.4 million out of 6 million people in Tigray reliant on food aid. During the conflict, both sides looted humanitarian supplies and the government restricted aid access, leading U.N. investigators to accuse it of “using starvation as a method of warfare.” A ceasefire signed in November had allowed aid deliveries to resume to the region.

    Aid workers have told The Associated Press, which first reported the food aid theft, that senior Ethiopian government officials were deeply involved. The U.S. is refusing to reinstate food aid until they are removed from the aid distribution process and stronger checks are introduced.

  • Maybe someone more knowledgeable than me can comment: is it true that the injera crop native to that region and planted predominantly has a much lower yield than other wheat? Is it even planted predominantly at this point?

    There has to be some way that 'plant a crop with higher yield and less people hunger' is not the solution, because if I can figure that out it would have been done already haha

    I remember hearing that once but I don't know of its true or by how much or what.

    • No, you're barking up the wrong tree here. Tigray normally grows diverse crops of sorghum, maize, teff, barley etc, fruits such as oranges.

      The famine in Tigray is entirely man-made. It's caused by widespread crop destruction, blockades of farming necessities, deliberate destruction of water infrastructure, farm implements etc.

      If you want to know more about agriculture in Tigray and the effects the war had on it, here's a really in-depth article.

    • injera is a type of flatbread that can be made from either wheat or teff, thought I think teff is more traditional - it's a sort of sourdough and it's really tasty with wat (traditional Ethiopian stew).

      not sure about the viability of the yield per acre when compared to wheat or oats. I dont feel like deep diving into which cereal is the most efficient for the horn of africa, but a few minutes of research indicates that teff "requires 1/2 to 2/3 the water other grains need", but that "pearl millet is one of the most drought-tolerant grains".

      • Interesting!

        It doesn't really matter what you are growing if government armies from two nations are deliberately laying waste to your crops and destroying your water infrastructure.

27 comments