WhatsApp Logo Subscribe
For News Alert

News

UN warns ravenous locusts threatening East Africa

Recent weather conditions favour rapid reproduction of crop-devouring insects

January 23, 2020 08:15 PM


Twitter Share Facebook Share WhatsApp Share

"Ravenous swarms" of desert locusts in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia, already unprecedented in their size and destructive potential, threaten to ravage the entire East Africa subregion, the UN warned Monday.
Recent weather in the region has created conditions that favour rapid reproduction of the crop-devouring insects.
Left unchecked, their numbers could grow 500 times by June, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said.

"The speed of the pest's spread and the size of the infestations are so far beyond the norm that they have stretched the capacities of local and national authorities to the limit," the Rome-based agency said.

FAO head Qu Dongyu said the swarms threaten "the food security of the entire subregion", adding that FAO has activated a "fast-track mechanism... to support governments in mounting a collective campaign to deal with this crisis".
Efforts to control the voracious pests are already underway in the region, but financial donations from the international community for the emergency response are vital "in view of the scale and urgency of the threat", he said.
Swarms potentially containing hundreds of millions of individual desert locusts can move 150 kilometres (90 miles) a day, devastating rural livelihoods in their relentless drive to eat and reproduce, FAO said.
It said it needed $70 million (63 million euros) for urgent pest control and to help those whose livelihoods have been destroyed.
Locusts continue to pour into Kenya from Ethiopia and Somalia and are rapidly spreading to the centre of the country.
In Ethiopia, the insects are moving steadily south towards the Rift Valley, the country's breadbasket, the agency said.


"Ethiopia and Somalia have not seen desert locust swarms of this scale in 25 years, while Kenya has not faced a locust threat of this magnitude in 70 years," FAO said.

It said that while South Sudan and Uganda are not currently affected, they are at risk.
FAO said it was providing forecasts, early warning and alerts on the timing, scale and location of locust invasions.
It warned in particular of substantial locust breeding activity in India, Iran and Pakistan as well as Egypt, Eritrea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Yemen.



Most Read

  1. Lt Gen Akhtar Nawaz Satti named Chairman FPSC Lt Gen Akhtar Nawaz Satti named Chairman FPSC
  2. Inheritance issue: Three sons brutally murder father for property in Faisalabad  Inheritance issue: Three sons brutally murder father for property in Faisalabad 
  3. Appointment of permanent VCs in public universities challenged in LHC Appointment of permanent VCs in public universities challenged in LHC
  4. State Bank of Pakistan shortlists new designs for currency notes State Bank of Pakistan shortlists new designs for currency notes
  5. Currency exchange dealer, guard shot dead by rivals in Islamabad Currency exchange dealer, guard shot dead by rivals in Islamabad
  6. Pakistan requests a loan of $1.75bn from ITFC, IDB, and Standard Chartered Bank Pakistan requests a loan of $1.75bn from ITFC, IDB, and Standard Chartered Bank