- Title: [SW News] (IRIN)
Impoverished Groups Hit by Djibouti Border Closure
- Posted by/on:[AAJ][12 Jun 2001]
Impoverished Groups Hit by Djibouti Border Closure
Story Filed: Monday, June 11, 2001 7:20 PM EST
Jun 11, 2001 (UN Integrated Regional Information Network/All Africa Global Media via
COMTEX)-- There has been a slight recovery of the Somali currency following the
announcement by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) that it had lifted the ban on imported
livestock, imposed in September 2000 because of an outbreak of Rift Valley fever.
The joint FSAU (European Commission funded- and Food and Agriculture
Organisation-implemented Food Security Assessment Unit) and FEWS-NET (USAID-funded)
monthly Food Security Report for Somalia said in June that despite a slight recovery, the lifting
of the ban in May was expected to have a "limited impact on the food security
situation in northern Somalia", which had deteriorated since the Rift Valley fever
ban was imposed by the Arab states.
In normal circumstances, the UAE market accounted for only about 2 percent of the total
livestock exported from Somalia to Arab countries, the report said. Humanitarian sources
confirmed that following the lifting of the ban, about 6,000 sheep and goats and a small
number of cattle had left by boat from Bosaso, the commercial capital of the self-declared
autonomous region of Puntland, northeastern Somalia, on 29 May.
There had been further impoverishment of vulnerable groups in the north by the border
closure between Djibouti and the self-declared independent state of Somaliland,
northwestern Somalia, the report noted. It said in Awdal Region, near the
Djibouti and Ethiopian borders, the poor food-economy group, who rely on petty trade, had
felt the impact of the border closure, as all locally produced cereals and vegetables were
usually marketed in Djibouti.
Imported food commodity prices were expected to further increase in the coming months
because of the seasonal monsoon closure of the seaports in Somalia. Over the last six months, the price of fuel had dramatically increased,
especially diesel, which had affected mechanised agriculture, water pumping and transport.
Concern had been expressed "from many quarters" over poor crop condition,
especially in the northern production areas of Hiran, Gedo, Bay and Bakool, the
FSAU-FEWS-NET report said. The seasonal Gu cropping season had started late, and May
rainfall had not been as good as in 2000.
Rains had been well distributed in the Shabelle valley with the exception of Hiran,
southern Somalia, and weather conditions had been favourable to
agriculture from Lower Juba to southern Gedo.
However, conditions had been "abnormally dry" in most parts of Gedo, Bakool
and Bay, "seriously inhibiting crop establishment", the report warned. [For
further information on rainfall estimates through satellite imagery contact: somalia@fews.net]
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