Eighteen million people across the Horn of Africa are facing severe hunger as the worst drought in 40 years devastates the region.
Nine-hundred-and-fifty-thousand
children under five years and 134,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women in
Kenya's remote arid regions are acutely malnourished and need aid, according to
government figures from June.
In the
dust bowl of Kenya's drought-stricken north, the people of Purapul are edging
closer to starvation, surviving on nothing but wild berries as their children
waste away from hunger.
Loka Metir
knows the bitter fruits make her children sick, further weakening their frail
condition. But it hasn't rained properly in three years, and there's simply
nothing else to eat.
"This
is the only way to survive," the mother of five told AFP in Purapul, a
scattering of thatch huts a two-day walk from the nearest town in the bone-dry
Marsabit county.
Over four
million are in Kenya's often-forgotten north, a number that has climbed
steadily this year, as the crisis struggles to attract national attention in
the midst of a hard-fought -- and expensive -- election campaign.
Hunger in
the three hardest-hit counties, including Marsabit, borders on famine.
- 'Under
the carpet' -
The World
Bank forecast in June that the drought, coupled with economic disruption from
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, would drag on Kenya's recovery from the
coronavirus pandemic.
Yet it has
barely featured on the election agenda as Kenya's political giants have
criss-crossed the country drumming up votes.
In the
hustings, the soaring cost of living in East Africa's biggest economy has
overshadowed other concerns.
Protesters
in major cities have threatened to boycott the much-anticipated August 9 poll
if prices aren't lowered, chanting "no food, no election".
The plight
of northern Kenya has largely gone "under the carpet", said economist
Timothy Njagi from the Tegemeo Institute of Agricultural Policy and Development
in Nairobi.
"I
found it quite sad... Given that this was going to be an election year, we
would have imagined that it was going to be a key discussion point," he
told AFP.
Four
consecutive failed rainy seasons, made worse by a changing climate, have
created the driest conditions since the early 1980s.
Rivers and
wells have run dry, and grazing land has turned to dust, spurring the death of
more than 1.5 million livestock in Kenya alone.
Animal
carcasses litter the rocky plains around Purapul, where pastoral families have
struggled without milk or meat in their diets, or any means of trading for
food.
Iripiyo
Apothya watched her goats shrink and die. The skins she couldn't boil and eat
line the floor of her hut.
"Now
I eat what the monkeys eat," said the 73-year-old, clutching a handful of
the berries she boils into a bitter paste.
"But
even these are running out -- what can we do?"
The
village is isolated and like many across Kenya's chronically underfunded north,
has no school, road, shop or dispensary.
The
nearest town Loiyangalani is 60 kilometres (37 miles) away. Despite hosting
Africa's biggest wind farm, this dusty settlement on Lake Turkana is itself
without electricity.
Outside
town, children dig for water along the desolate shoreline of Turkana, an
enormous salt lake.
The two
main presidential aspirants, William Ruto and Raila Odinga, have helicoptered
into drought-affected regions, promising infrastructure and development in
brief campaign stops.
But this
is not vote-rich country to canvas and droughts generally don't win elections,
said Karuti Kanyinga from the Institute for Development Studies at the
University of Nairobi.
"It
is a lose-lose for anyone who raises it," said Kanyinga.
Claire
Nasike, from Greenpeace Africa, told AFP that pledges by both candidates to
invest in water and agriculture in drought-prone areas lacked important detail.
"The
nitty-gritties of how they are going to address the climate crises have not
been captured."
The
drought, which could stretch into 2023 if the next rains fail as predicted, has
also struggled for global attention in a crowded field.
An appeal
for Ukraine has raised $1.92 billion -- nearly 86 percent of its goal,
according to UN data.
Kenya's
much smaller drought appeal has reached just 17 percent of its target.
At the
same time, the cost of delivering aid has jumped as the war in Ukraine drives
up food and fuel prices.
Under an
acacia tree, a single doctor checks dozens of mothers and infants for
malnutrition during a twice-monthly visit to Purapul.
"The
kind of aid we give is just a drop in the ocean," said James Jarso from
World Vision, one of the few charities providing drought relief on the ground.
The
government says it has spent over 10 billion Kenyan shillings ($84.3 million)
since the drought was declared a national disaster in September.
"We
are going through tough economic times. We are doing everything possible within
the means of the government to support the communities," Steven Mavina,
the Deputy County Commissioner of Loiyangalani, told AFP.
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