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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Sahel food crisis to remain critical in coming months: UN
by Staff Writers
Dakar (AFP) May 24, 2012


UN aid chief Valerie Amos said Thursday that a humanitarian crisis arising from food shortages in the drought-stricken Sahel would remain critical in the next few months.

"The humanitarian situation is expected to remain critical at least until the main harvest this autumn," around September, said Amos.

The humanitarian chief met with President Macky Sall in Senegal and Blaise Compaore in Burkina Faso on a four-day trip to west Africa to examine the impact of the food crisis.

"We can do more to avoid the crisis from becoming a catastrophe in the region but to save more lives we need strong leadership ... and continued generosity from the regional and humanitarian community," she said.

Some 800,000 people in northern Senegal are going hungry this year, while 2.8 million in Burkina Faso "need urgent help", Amos said.

Burkina Faso also has 60,000 refugees from neighbouring Mali living in refugee camps which has compounded the food crisis.

Crops failed across eight countries after late and erratic rains in 2011, affecting 18 million people, and aid agencies have raised the spectre of a food crisis bigger than the one which left millions starving in 2010.

This is the third drought in the Sahel in a decade, and while the previous ones were felt mostly in Niger and parts of Chad, this year it has unfolded even in more developed countries such as Senegal.

"We know that drought will happen, we cannot avoid it so if it's going to happen how can we help communities to withstand the shock when that deep drought happens?" Amos told journalists in Dakar.

She said that to boost resilience, communities needed to be taught how to manage water more effectively and improve agricultural production.

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Mali army chiefs hold security talks with Algeria
Bamako (AFP) May 24, 2012 - Two northern Mali army chiefs met with Algerian authorities this week to discuss the deteriorating security situation in the zone occupied by Islamist and Tuareg rebels, security sources said Thursday.

"Colonel-Majors Alaji Ag Gamou and Abderahmane Ould Meydou met with the Algerian authorities to discuss security problems in northern Mali," a Malian security source told AFP.

Ag Gamou and Ould Meydou are both pillars of the Malian army, which was pushed out of the north as rebels seized the main cities following a March 22 coup in Bamako.

Lieutenant Ali Ag Inane, an ally of Ag Gamou who has taken refuge in Niger to escape the rebels, said the talks centred on "what can be done so that peace returns to northern Mali."

Observers say that Algeria, which has a powerful regional military presence, is showing increasing concern over the situation in its neighbour.

"Algeria is getting more involved than ever before," said Malian journalist Tiegoum Boubeye Maiga.

"By meeting with Gamou and Ould Meydou, who are not angels, Algeria is sending a clear message: 'If we must take up arms for peace to return to northern Mali, we will do it with our allies.'"



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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Cattle dying, fields scorched as drought strikes Senegal
Wodobere, Senegal (AFP) May 18, 2012
In the northeastern nook of Senegal, one of the most stable and developed nations in the drought-hit Sahel region, carcasses of cattle lie in the sun, the fields have withered and food depleted. As scanty rains wreaked havoc across the belt, hitting drought-weary Chad, Niger, Mali and other countries, this west African hub is struggling to provide food to its people and entire villages are g ... read more


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