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Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
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Climate Change
Emergencies
Emergency relief
Food Security
Fuelwood
Horn of Africa
Pastoral society
Rural communities
Rural environment
Soil degradation
Wood
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KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
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KENYA 2005. Drought in the Horn of Africa
11 May 2005, Arba Geramso - A nomadic pastoralist effected by the drought gathering fire wood to sell. Out of his 80 cows and 200 sheep only 20 sheep surivived the drought. Most pastoralists lost nearly 90 percent of their animals in the ongoing drought and 80 percent of the population relies on food aid for survival. During the past decade, the frequency of drought has been increasing with shorter recovery periods, having an intense impact on the pastoralists who are among the region's most vulnerable population. Of the more than 8 million people in need of humanitarian assistance in the Horn of Africa, 1.6 million are children below the age of five years, threatened mainly by malnutrition. The loss of the animals, a prime source of meat and milk and the main financial assets of the pastoralists, has created a continuous cycle of poverty and hunger.
05/11/2005
Credit
© FAO/Ami Vitale
Related URL
http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2006/1000206/index.html
File size
1.50 MB
Unique ID
UF11PBU
FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.