Wednesday May 25, 2022
Ali Hussein Yussuf’s last attempt at farming his three
hectares of land in central Somalia’s south Mudug resulted in the distressing
loss of the 25 kilograms he had planted of beans, maize, sesame, and
watermelons. All the plants shrivelled up in the drought-wracked soil.
Ali and his wife and 11 children are now squeezed into a
room in his uncle’s house in Amara, two kilometres away, where they fled after
abandoning the farm. He took his 30 goats with them, but they are all too thin
to either slaughter or sell.
He feeds his family with food that he takes on credit from a
local shop. His debt has now accumulated to $457. He fears he might be banned
from purchasing any more food. He tried to look for work but could not find a
job.
“We used to get seeds for planting from our farms, because
we divided the produce into two, one for sale and domestic use and the other
for planting. As we did not harvest anything in the last three seasons, we have
no seeds now for planting. We can’t afford to buy crops from the markets
because the prices have gone up,” Ali told Radio Ergo’s reporter.
“Only Allah can ease our situation if we don’t get help, I
can’t imagine what our situation will be in the coming days. Think of a person
whose crops have all died. This new life is too much for us.”
Last May, Ali requested the school management to allow his
children to continue their studies until he could settle his fee arrears, but
his three children in primary school were sent home in November.
The Amara area is controlled by Al-Shabab. There are no IDP
camps, so people moving in from the countryside have put up a home near their
relatives. Those without relatives have erected huts wherever they could find
an open space.
The lack of water and employment are the main reasons for abandoning
their farms. Yet they are also struggling in Amara as there are no jobs and the
local residents are in difficulties themselves.
According to the Amara village commissioner, there are a
total of 1,500 families in Amara now, including the farmers who moved from the
rural surroundings in the first two weeks of April, when the drought became
unbearable and there were no rains in sight.
Fatumo Muse Yasin, a widowed mother of 12, left her
two-hectare farm to come to the village, where she built a room made of
corrugated iron on land given by a relative. She feeds her family using dry
food she barters for the firewood that she and her three oldest children
collect from the forest. She cooks her children one meal a day.
“I make little money from the firewood, it buys me a quarter
of sugar and a cup of maize,” she said. “When I have cooked, I use cups to
measure out what each child gets to eat.”
Duran Adan Ali used to grow watermelon, beans, sorghum and
maize to sell in Galkayo, Adado and Bahdo towns. The farm produce was the only
source of income for his family. He abandoned his two hectares after three
failed rainy seasons and moved to Amara to work on building sites.
However, the economic impact of drought has made building
work hard to find. Duran lives with his wife and seven children in a room he
built on land owned by his mother.
“I have nothing except that which Allah gives us, and I have
nowhere to go,” a hopeless Duran told Radio Ergo’s local reporter.