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Left with "chocolate water", Madagascar's parched south grows hungrier

by Sally Hayden | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 5 January 2018 08:00 GMT

Aova Soatoatse, a 43-year-old mother with 13 children, in her one-room shack in southern Madagascar, November 8, 2017. She had to sell her family's house to buy food in the face of a drought, and her children are now surviving largely on cacti, she said. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Sally Hayden

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Climate change is helping drive a "silent crisis" as drought lingers, aid officials say

By Sally Hayden

ANKILIBEVAHAVOLA, Madagascar, Jan 5 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Every morning, residents of this village in southern Madagascar's Amboasary Sud district set off on an eight-hour round-trip journey to collect water from the nearest river.

Along the thirsty way, some give up and instead use plastic jerry cans to scoop up whatever they can find in potholes along the road – muddy liquid that aid workers jokingly call "chocolate water".

This region of Madagascar has been chronically poor for decades, but a series of droughts, which government officials say are driven by climate change, have left close to a million people struggling to cope in this southern African island nation.

Drought is increasing the risk of malnutrition and could cause deaths in children younger than five, half of whom already suffer from stunting, Norohasina Rakotoarison, a spokeswoman for Madagascar's Ministry of the Environment, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

In the south of the island, where many people farm for a living, the rainy season is getting shorter and shorter, they say. Rains that once stretched from October to March now fall only between December and February.

A recent El Nino event – a warming of sea surface temperatures in the Pacific that often causes drought in southern Africa – aggravated already dry conditions, driving hunger not only in Madagascar but across southern Africa.

That El Nino has now ended, but many families have not recovered, and harsh weather continues, they say.

"The air is more violent. The wind is very strong," Soja Voalahtsesylvain, the chief of AnkilibeVahavola, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Around the area, "there's no production because the land is very dry".

"It's our everyday life now," he said. "We wait for the rain because our main issue is lack of water. We don't know when it will come.

A view of a village in southern Madagascar's Ambovombe region, November 9, 2017. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Sally Hayden

DRY AND POOR

In Madagascar, nine in 10 people live on less than $2 a day, according to Unicef. Poverty is even worse in the dry south. Bumpy roads last paved in colonial days impede the delivery of aid, and mean even emergency transport is difficult.

Hoasie, a woman in her 40s who goes by one name, said she was forced to carry her 3-year-old son 20 kilometres to the nearest hospital in November, after large bumps broke out on his body.

It turned out he was suffering from acute malnutrition and a lack of protein. But the drought makes it difficult to feed him better, she said.

"We're farmers, so when there is no rain we have no crops," she said.

In September, construction began on a much-needed pipeline that will carry clean water much closer to 13 thirsty communities in this area of southern Madagascar.

The pipeline, funded by Madagascar's Ministry of Water and Unicef and expected to be working by March, will provide household water for about 46,000 people.

"It's an emergency to complete this pipeline," said Heriniaina Rakotomalala, a civil engineer who works with Unicef on the project.

For now, in AnkilibeVahavola, home to about 3,000 people, families are trying to get by using a traditional lending system, in which poor families borrow water or food from neighbours and eventually pay it back when the rains come.

But this year, it's been more difficult.

"Because of drought every livelihood has gone," said Aova Soatoatse, a 43-year-old with 13 children. She said her family are now eating wild cactus plants to provide the bulk of their diet.

Looking for cash to buy food, they sold their wooden shelter and moved into a smaller one – but the paltry money bought food only sufficient for two days.

"Then the money was finished," she said. Now they live crammed together into a one-bedroom wooden shack.

At the moment the family still has six chickens. But the small plot of land they own is steadily decreasing in size, as they sell off bits to buy more food.

The family isn't the only one facing hard times.

"There's no food and people are hungry. We only eat cactus seed and fruit. We cook it and boil it with water," said Rafoava Ravaonimira, 65, another resident of the village.

She said it was hardest to explain to the youngest children why they can only have one meal a day. "The older the kids grow, the more they understand. They start to understand aged six," she said.

Men work on a new water pipeline in southern Madagascar funded by Unicef and Madagascar's Ministry of Water, November 9, 2017. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Sally Hayden

'SILENT CRISIS'

Unicef officials say there are 850,000 people in need of humanitarian assistance in Madagascar, including 391,000 children.

Jean-Benoît Manhes, Unicef's deputy representative in Madagascar, called the situation a "silent crisis", which gets little attention because of the island's lack of geopolitical significance.

"(It's) a French-speaking island in an English-speaking region. With a (something like a) cyclone you can take nice before and after photos," he said.

But with drought, "it just gets a little bit dryer each year," he said.

He said it's important to understand that climate change is not the only threat to food security. Slash-and-burn agriculture techniques, particularly the burning of forests – which when left standing can stabilise rainfall – also are playing a role, he said.

"There's climate change, but human action reinforces it. In the south they burn forests for charcoal and agriculture. That reinforces climate change," he said.

A man walks in the Mandrare River, in the Amboasary Sud area of southern Madagascar. Many people in the area travel daily to the river to collect water for their families, November 8, 2017. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Sally Hayden

Meanwhile, many families in the impoverished south with large families are faced with a hard decision: which of their children to feed.

"Families may prioritise giving food to the children who can work to help, leaving less to the smallest children who are already malnourished," Manhes said.

(Reporting by Sally Hayden; editing by Laurie Goering :; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women's rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit http://news.trust.org/climate)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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