Pasha 130: The Ethiopia and Tigray conflict is worsening hunger in the region

Daily News Egypt
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Pasha 130: The Ethiopia and Tigray conflict is worsening hunger in the region. shutterstock.

Ozayr Patel, The Conversation, Ethiopia and its northern region of Tigray have been in conflict for about a year now. The political power struggle that had been going on for decades escalated a year ago when Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed ordered a military offensive.

The conflict is putting hundreds of thousands of people in Tigray at risk of starvation and famine. Tigray is a dry place but farmers have long known how to manage the lands for production. The blockade on Tigray by the Ethiopian government, however, has meant that necessary equipment could not reach farmers. There have also been locust attacks which have significantly damaged crops.


Read more: How Ethiopia’s conflict has affected farming in Tigray


Our guest in this episode of Pasha is Emnet Negash, who is from Tigray. He is a PhD student at Ghent University and assistant professor at Mekelle University in Ethiopia. He and his team at Ghent compared the state of ploughing in Tigray before and during the conflict. They found that 20%-30% of the land has been left fallow (compared to 5% normally) and only 20%-50% of the land was expected to produce reasonable yields – which might then be threatened by locusts again.


Photo:
“Grain fields and farms in Ethiopia.” By hecke61 found on Shutterstock.

Music: “Happy African Village” by John Bartmann, found on FreeMusicArchive.org licensed under CC0 1.

“Ambient guitar X1 – Loop mode” by frankum, found on Freesound licensed under Attribution License.

Ozayr Patel, Digital Editor, The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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