The US has boosted its emergency food aid to Ethiopia by nearly $100m
to combat one of the worst droughts in decades, the U.S. Agency for
International Development announced on Sunday.
The aid is urgently
needed to head off a humanitarian disaster brought on by the El Nino
climate phenomenon that has affected seasonal rains, said Usaid
administrator Gayle Smith.
"The funding for this is not where it
needs to be and we are up against very tight timelines," she said at a
briefing during the annual African Union summit.
"This is the worst El
Nino in history and it has affected the African continent in particular,
most dramatically in Ethiopia where 11 million people have been
affected."
The El Nino warming over the Pacific Ocean has been
particularly severe this year with spring and summer rains failing in
Ethiopia and causing crops to fail and killing livestock.
The
$97 million from Usaid will include about 176 000 metric tons of food
to be distributed to 4 million people. Since October 2014, the US has
given $532m in humanitarian aid to Ethiopia.
The UN has issued an
international appeal for $1.4bn in emergency funding for Ethiopia, of
which less than half has been met by donors. Smith said the US
will urge other international donors to step in and support Ethiopia's
efforts to deliver food aid and preserve the development gains of the
last two decades.
Donors have been distracted by crises in Syria, South
Sudan, Yemen and the European migration issue, she said. Ethiopia
was famously devastated by a drought in the 1980s exacerbated by a civil
war that killed hundreds of thousands.
Despite the severity of the
current drought, the existing government safety net is expected to
prevent another famine, according to aid officials.
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