Why don’t have food: Africa’s growing humanitarian crisis
African leaders gathered for a summit Friday in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea, to address growing humanitarian needs on the continent, which is also facing increased violent activity, climate change challenges, and a run of military coups.
Leaders called for increased mobilization to resolve a humanitarian crisis that has left millions displaced and more than 280 million suffering from malnourishment.
For people in Djibo, a town in northern Burkina Faso near the border with Mali, any help cannot come soon enough.
The city in the Sahel region the large expanse below the Sahara Desert has been besieged since February by fighters who prevent people and goods from moving in or out and cut water supplies. Few truckers want to run the gauntlet of armed groups. Residents are suffering from no food or water, animals are dying and the price of grain has spiked.
The goods are not arriving anymore here. Animal and agricultural production is not possible because the people cannot go back to their villages, UN resident and humanitarian coordinator Barbara Manzi told The Associated Press from Djibo this week. Unless a solution is found, it’s going to be really a tragedy for the entire group of people that are here.
Djibo has been at the epicenter of the violence linked to al-Qaeda and the ISIL ISIS group that has killed thousands and displaced nearly two million people. While Djibo and Soum province where the town is located experienced periods of calm, such as during a makeshift ceasefire between fighters and the government surrounding the 2020 presidential election, the truce did not last.
Since November, insecurity in the region has increased. Armed groups have destroyed water infrastructure in the town and lined much of Djibo’s perimeter with explosives, blockading the city, say, locals.
The town’s population has swollen from 60,000 to 300,000 during the last few years as people flee the countryside to escape the violence.
Blockading cities is a tactic used by armed groups to assert dominance and could also be an attempt to get Burkina Faso’s new military government, which seized power in January, to backtrack on promises to eliminate the fighters, said Laith Alkhouri, CEO of Intelonyx Intelligence Advisory, a group that provides intelligence analysis.
Militants resort to blockading when they see an opportunity to gain incentives in negotiating with the government and simultaneously send a message to their base that they are in control. It’s a bargaining card and a winning one, he said.
A UN team flew in briefly to assess the situation. The AP wire service was the first foreign media to visit the town in more than a year.
Today, there is nothing to buy here. Even if you have cash, there is nothing to buy. We came here with four donkeys and goats and some of them died because of hunger. We were forced to sell the rest of the animals and unfortunately, prices of animals have decreased, said cattle owner Mamoudou Oumarou.
The 53-year-old father of 13 fled his village in February and said the blockade in Djibo has prevented people from coming to the market to buy and sell cattle, decreasing demand and lowering prices for the animals by half.
Before the violence, Djibo had one of the biggest and most vital cattle markets in the Sahel and was a bustling economic hub. Some 600 trucks used to enter Djibo monthly, now it’s less than 70, said Alpha Ousmane Dao, director of Seracom, a local aid group in Djibo.
Burkina Faso is facing its worst hunger crisis in six years, more than 630,000 people are on the brink of starvation, according to the UN.
As a result of Djibo’s blockade, the World Food Programme has been unable to deliver food to the town since December and stocks are running out, said Antoine Renard, country director for the World Food Programme in Burkina Faso.
Efforts to end the blockade through dialogue have had mixed results. At the end of April, the emir of Djibo met one of the leaders of an armed group in Burkina Faso, Jafar Dicko, to negotiate to lift the siege. However, little progress has been made since then.
Locals have said the armed groups have eased restrictions in some areas allowing freer movement, but that the army is now preventing people from bringing food out of Djibo to the surrounding villages for fear it will go to the fighters.
The army denied the allegations.
Meanwhile, residents in Djibo say they are risking their lives just trying to survive.
Dadou Sadou searches for wood and water in the middle of the night outside of Djibo, when she says the fighters are not around.
We no longer have animals, we don’t have food to buy in the market If you have children, you don’t have a choice, she said.