UNITED NATIONS
|
Introduction
South Welo Zone, in the eastern part of Amhara Region, is among those
areas in Ethiopia where agricultural production from the short belg
season contributes significantly to the local food economy. On average,
the belg season’s output makes up to 25 per cent of the total annual
production in the zone. In certain highland areas however, dependency on
belg production can reach as much as 70 to 90 percent. A harvest
failure or a major yield reduction has therefore a severe impact on the
food security in these belg areas, particularly if activities such
as livestock keeping and marketing, labour and trade are rather limited.
How people try to cope with situations of food stress has been described
in an earlier UNDP-EUE report (After the failed belg,
how do people cope? Observations from South Welo – Field Report 18 – 23
August 1997).
While in a few areas the belg harvest (mainly barley) was just
about to start, the objective of the EUE mission at this time was to get
a quick impression on the current season’s outlook. Included in the field
visit were the weredas of Kutaber, Desezurya, Legambo and Tenta which comprise
some of the major belg growing areas.
Overall poor expectations in central weredas
In all four weredas visited representatives of the respective Bureaux
of Agriculture were, to various degrees, pessimistic on the performance
of the current belg season. Unfavourable rains (insufficient amount
and erratic distribution) followed by infestation by pests (aphids) and
fungal diseases (rust) are the main factors leading to a rather bleak outlook.
None of the weredas expect a normal season. Yield estimates show figures
much below average.
Fruit trees to improve food and income diversification
Kutaber, for instance, is expecting the "second worst belg season of the last five years", according to local agriculture experts. Under good conditions the wereda can reap a belg harvest of 4,000 tons (major crops: barley, wheat and oats). Whereas the last season, the belg 1997, yielded some 2,900 tons, this year "only something between 1,200 and 2,000 tons" can be expected, according to the wereda Bureau of Agriculture. While rain-fed agriculture continues to prevail, the wereda tries to counter soil degradation and deforestation. Through 25 extension centers farmers are supported in using fertilisers and improved seeds. Furthermore, near Kutaber town a nursery is producing Eucalyptus and Juniper seedlings. Located adjacent to the nursery is the "Highland Fruit Trees Trial and Seed Multiplication Center" which was established in January 1987 and recently expanded at a more significant scale to provide members of the local population with seedlings of apple, pear and plum varieties originating from Italy and Japan. Aiming at delivering fruit seedlings also to other highland weredas in the zone and the region, Kutaber officials see the Fruit Tree Center ("the one and only of its kind in Ethiopia") as a token of rural development, contributing to food and income diversification and eventually helping to reduce vulnerability. Kutaber extension experts are optimistic in trying to raise the people’s awareness about the nutrional value of these fruits hoping also that local demands will increase and marketing possibilities develop. Reportedly, already now some farmers, owning three to four plum trees, earn 400 to 500 Birr cash in a year by selling fruits.
Desperate farmers in Desezurya
Driving south-west out of Dessie, the zonal capital, the mission spoke in Desezurya wereda to a farmer who was ploughing his land prior to planting teff and wheat for the long meher season. As generally usual in these areas, he had sown belg-barley in January. However, due to rain shortages and leaf-rust, the crop was lost. Rather desperately the farmer said: "For me, the last belg season was already poor and also the last meher season was a failure. But this belg is the worst in the last five years – a complete loss." For this farmer the current situation means also a loss of cash since he had invested on loan 175 Birr in fertilisers and selected seeds. Since he did not get any yield, he sold one ox to pay back his debts and to buy food grain on the market with the rest of the money. Because he is still left with one cow, which he will sell eventually, he was not eligible to benefit from the last relief food distribution, which took place in this kebele (some 14 kilometers from Dessie at an altitude of 2400 meters) in early May and during which "only the poorest of the poor, about 1000 people" were given a one month ration. "I give it a last try", the farmer says pointing at the pair of plough oxen he borrowed from a richer farmer, "when the next meher also fails, I give everything up and do what many people in this kebele and in other kebeles around are doing: I will leave and look for work in Dubti [Afar Region, cotton plantations] or Jimma [Oromyia Region, coffee plantations]. I don’t want to suffer the same fate as other farmers who end up in jail because they cannot pay back their fertiliser loans."
At another location (23 kilometers west from Dessie at an altitude of 2,750 meters) the situation looked only slightly better. In this area, nearly entirely belg dependent, some farmers were harvesting barley. Whereas last year they were able to harvest 5 or 6 quintals per hectare (one quintal = 100 kg), this season they expect a yield of "maybe 2 quintals". These farmers also complain that the current belg season "is the worst of the last five years", pointing out that from year to year the yields were decreasing due to a combination of unfavourable rain and progressing soil degradation. Accordingly, "every year more and more strong young men are leaving their families to look for work in other parts of the country", they say.
While the farmers at two locations of Desezurya cannot be representative
for the entire wereda, the wereda’s Bureau of Agriculture confirms a generally
alarming tendency for the current season. Referring to the main belg
crop only, to barley (crops of secondary importance include wheat,
teff and pulses), the bureau quotes as a good normal yield 11 quintals
per hectare as a wereda average. For the two previous years the bureau’s
records show a wereda barley-yield average of 10 and 10.6 quintals per
hectare respectively for the 1996 and the 1997 belg seasons. For
the current season, however, the bureau anticipates due to shortage of
rain, rust damage and infestation by aphids a very meagre yield of 1.5
quintal per hectare. While 65 percent of the overall annual production
of Desezurya wereda is attributed to the meher season and 35 per
cent to the belg season, it is obvious that those communities located
at high altitudes and therefore depending entirely on belg production
are highly vulnerable and likely to be in need of significant relief support
if final harvest results confirm the currently bleak outlook. "Already
now", says a wereda official, "the poorest people in highland kebeles like
Harabolo and Atari Mesk are selling their homes and leaving the area."
Situation looking better in Legambo
Reflecting the erratic rainfall patterns, some areas are also enjoying positive crop developments. In Legambo wereda, near Gimba (some 65 kilometers from Dessie at an altitude of 3200 meters), the mission met a landless farmer weeding the barley field owned by a female-headed household. Working the field from land preparation in January throughout to the harvest expected in mid-June, his salary consists of 50 percent of the yield. "This belg season we are lucky in this area," he says. "In a good, average year a yield of 9 to 10 quintals of barley per hectare can be expected. Last year we harvested 5 to 6 quintals but this year could be better than that – I think we get more than 6 quintals per hectare." Good and bad conditions are sometimes in close vicinity. As this farmer put it: "On the other side of the hill over there the situation is very different. Hardly any rain went down and I don’t think people there can enjoy any yield." Similar statements could be heard from other farmers in the eastern part of Legambo wereda.
Between Gimba and Akesta, the capital town of Legambo wereda located
97 kilometers from Dessie at an altitude of 3000 meters, stretches a large
high plateau grass plain, locally called "Chiro", which is providing good
grazing land for livestock. Mostly sheep roam around here but also some
cattle and equines can be seen. According to information obtained from
the wereda’s Bureau of Agriculture in Akesta, livestock ownership is concentrated
in rather few hands: "Few local individuals own large numbers of animals",
says an expert at the bureau, pointing out that the vast majority of people
are depending on crop production having "only few animals or no animals
at all". On average, the total annual production of the wereda is to 65
per cent derived from the belg season while the remaining 35 per
cent is provided by the meher season, according to the bureau. Also
in this wereda, barley is the most important belg crop (followed
by some pulses) cultivated mainly in the agroclimatic altitude zones of
dega and wurch. Local agriculture experts reported that the
onset of the belg rains was timely in January, though later from
February onwards interruptions and shortages occurred here and there. Most
farmers sowed immediately with the first rains and are now looking forward
to a decent harvest, according to the bureau. Taking as a reference the
main crop, barley, with normal conditions Legambo could expect a yield
of up to 8 to 9 quintals per hectare. According to the bureau’s available
records, the yield was 7 quintals per hectare in 1996 and (due to rain
shortages) 5 quintals in 1997. For the current belg season local
experts anticipate on an area of 13,790 hectares planted with barley an
average yield of 5.5 quintals per hectare.
Disastrous harvest anticipated in Tenta wereda
Driving from the Dessie – Akesta road 40 kilometers north from the
intersection to Ajibar, the capital town of Tenta wereda, the mission noted
only in the south-eastern part of the wereda promising yellow barley crops
approaching harvest with heavy panicles. A few kilometers further north
an entirely different picture could be seen: Stunted green stems with hardly
any panicles at all. "We have lost completely the belg crops", farmers
in the area between Fito and Amba Maryiam say. Some farmers, after having
cut the stunted barley plants as animal feed, were ploughing their land
anew hoping for the meher season’s wheat and teff cultivation. Rain
shortages followed by infestation of aphids, called "cish-cish" in
Amharic, were mentioned as the main reasons for the belg failure.
On the southern outskirts of Fito village a young farmer, married with
two children, complains that after the 1997 belg season had failed
also the last meher season had been meagre. To feed his family,
he sold his few sheep to buy food grain. Once these supplies are consumed,
he would sell-off his last remaining animal, a cow. After that, eventually,
he might become eligible to receive food relief support.
In Ajibar, experts of the wereda’s Bureau of Agriculture estimate that Tenta’s overall annual production is derived to 65 per cent from the meher output and to 35 per cent from the belg. They emphasise, however, that in the central and southern parts of the wereda dependency on belg production is much higher. While the planning figure for a normal average belg-barley yield is 9 quintals per hectare, the bureau’s records show a yield of 7.5 quintals per hectare in 1995, of 9.5 quintals in 1996 and of 4.5 in 1997. This season the bureau, which is "assessing the crop development in the field twice a month", expects on a total area of 8,208 hectares planted with barley only a yield of 1.4 quintals per hectare. Very late onset, insufficient amount and uneven distribution of rains are the main reasons for this pessimistic anticipation. As a secondary detrimental effect pest infestation (aphids and later lady bird beetles) was mentioned. The bureau confirmed that only in the south-eastern areas of the wereda along the boundary with neighbouring Legambo crops are performing well while in the majority of the other belg areas farmers have nothing to harvest.
Pointing at the population pressure - currently about 150,000 people are living in Tenta – local experts say that even in years with both satisfactory belg and meher seasons the wereda was hardly in the position to feed its people. An agronomist: "90 to 95 per cent of our population depend on crop cultivation for their livelihood. Now this year, after a modest meher and facing a very bad belg season many people will suffer from food shortages. Relief needs will see a big increase but resources are scarce."
A road rehabilitation project was until recently providing labour opportunities
to some members of the population. But soon, with works progressing northbound
out of the wereda, this local labour opportunity will cease to be available.
In order to reduce the chronic vulnerability, the wereda needs, as mid-
and long-term perspectives, "more agricultural infrastructure inputs",
local experts recommend: "We need projects like dams for irrigation, animal
husbandry support, bee-keeping programmes and the like in order to diversify
and secure the livelihoods of the population."
Toxic Grass Pea leading to crippling effects
How dangerously unhealthy life in parts of Tenta wereda currently is,
was illustrated during a visit to Amba Maryiam where the mission met with
farmers in the field. Focusing on their "complete harvest loss", the farmers
said most people around the locality were already now suffering severe
food shortages. While reportedly some people were migrating out of the
area, those remaining have forcibly to reduce their number and quality
of meals. In April, they say, a distribution of relief food was carried
out in Amba Maryiam but only "very few people, those having absolutely
nothing and being to weak to walk properly" received a one month ration.
Meanwhile, according to the farmers, more and more people started to eat
Grass Pea (also called Chickling Pea or Vetch – Lathyrus sativus),
a plant which is called Guaya in Amharic. Because of its drought
resistance and relatively high yield, apparently many farmers cultivate
this potentially poisonous plant which, if consumed excessively and not
carefully prepared, leads to neurotoxic disorders with finally irreversible
crippling effects (Lathyrism). UNDP-EUE has mentioned this plant
as an indicator for serious food stress in an earlier report
(Beneficiary numbers to be increased: Amhara Region after the failed
Belg – Field Report July 1997).
Farmers spoken to said that in and around Amba Maryiam some 90 people became recently crippled after over consuming Grass Pea. In one family alone both parents and two children had suffered polio-like symptoms, they reported. Furthermore, since leftovers of the plant were used as fodder, animals were also being affected. The mission returned to Amba Maryiam town to get this information confirmed at the local clinic. The health assistant present was well aware of the problem but unable to provide figures on people actually affected by Lathyrism. "Once people become crippled, they hide at home and they don’t come to the clinic because they know that there is no cure." Out of the 4,166 households of the Amba Maryiam kebele, the health assistant estimates that 75 per cent are consuming Guaya. According to his informal information, also in other kebeles of the wereda the toxic plant is being consumed. Furthermore, the health assistant told the mission that 10 per cent of all children under five seen at the clinic were suffering from moderate malnutrition. "The trend is increasing", he concluded.
Reportedly Guaya consumption affecting human and animal health
is also taking place in other areas of South Welo since two or three years.
This year, however, the problem seems to spread. For Desezurya wereda the
respective Bureau of Agriculture confirmed the occurrence of the problem
in two peasant associations: Abaso Kotu (No. 04) and Asgido (No. 06). Apparently
many people, although aware of the toxic effects, don’t remove the husks
from the Grass Pea seeds and, furthermore, consume them raw rather than
boiling first. As one official in Dessie put it: "Some of the poorest people,
trying to fill their stomachs with just something, make the maximum use
of the plant – and become crippled."
Conclusion: Lack of relief resources posing serious problems
In Dessie, the zonal Disaster Prevention and Preparedness Bureau (DPPB)
announced that a pre-harvest belg assessment covering the zone was
scheduled to take place around the end of May. The Bureau, however, confirmed
that based on preliminary reports after an insufficient meher also
this year’s belg season in South Welo Zone "looks overall not good".
This view is generally shared by Save the Children (SCF/UK) which is currently
preparing a report on the zone. Beyond the weredas visited by the EUE mission,
reportedly also other weredas, partly being located in lowland areas and
meher dependant, such as Kalu, Werebabu and Ambassel are facing
severe problems affecting the food security of the population. Preliminary
findings of SCF/UK indicate that in the eastern areas affected by major
meher shortcomings the nutrional status of people is deteriorating
significantly. From western weredas like Sayint and Mekdela the DPPB obtained
indications that – while the actual scale is not known - "entire families"
were migrating. Other sources point at major price increases on cereals.
One of the main problems of the DPPB is the lack of relief resources.
Except for some small amounts in Sayint, no relief stocks are currently
available or prepositioned in the zone. So far this year, the zone received
minimal relief resources sufficient for a one month distribution to a very
limited number of beneficiaries only. While "people are suffering" as the
early warning department said, the bureau was, due to lack of resources,
forced to review downwards the numbers of relief beneficiaries. While the
central DPPC’s "Relief Plan of Operation for 1998" indicated – not yet
taking into account the possible outcome of the current belg season
– a beneficiary number of 616,486 for South Welo this year, the zonal DPPB
came under pressure in April to cut that figure down almost by half. Subsequently,
the bureau, refusing to comply with that radical demand, submitted to the
regional authorities a revised figure of a total of 511,404 beneficiaries
for all of the zone’s 15 weredas. The zonal bureau feels that the minimised
figure is likely to be increased again after the full impact of the current
belg season becomes to be felt.
Whichever figure might finally be officially valid: A general scepticism
prevails in Dessie whether available relief resources can adequately address
the actual needs. Like last year, the current constraints force very strict
criteria upon those in charge (ultimately at kebele-level) of determining
the eligibility of potential relief beneficiaries. Given the very limited
resources, only the poorest of the poor can get relief food – with the
exception of some kebeles, where local bias and kinship might lead to irregularities.
Generally, anybody owning any animals is not eligible. This forces many
farmers in need to sell living farm assets in order to buy market grain.
The DPPB acknowledges that this is initiating a vicious circle, where agricultural
productivity, already hampered by unfavourable rains, soil degradation
and pest infestation, is further lowered in many cases by lack of one own’s
draught animals which have to be rented - if cultivation is to continue
at all. Generally, the erosion of productive
assets is a serious problem further aggravating the vulnerability
of low income population groups. Equally, the DPPB is well aware of the
problem that more and more people are consuming the toxic Guaya,
pointing at neighbouring North Welo where last year reportedly some 1,000
people were crippled. "How can we stop this", says the head of the DPPB,
"if we don’t get sufficient relief resources?"
DISCLAIMER
The designations employed
and the presentation of material in this document do not imply the expression
of any opinion whatsoever of the UN concerning the legal status of any
country, territory, city or area of its authorities, or concerning the
delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
1 June, 1998
UN-EUE | Tel.: (251) (1) 51-10-28/29 |
PO Box : 5580 | Fax: (251) (1) 51-12-92 |
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Email: undp-eue@telecom.net.et |