As a pastoralist, Anfac’s main source of income and food for her family came from raising healthy livestock. However, three consecutive years of drought in Ethiopia completely upended her life, causing all of her livestock to perish and leaving her family without any food to eat.
“We were just pastoralists, and now we have nothing to live on,” says Anfac.
In East Africa, which is heavily dependent on agro-pastoral activities, the prolonged and severe drought has decimated livelihoods. 6.8 million livestock have died in Ethiopia alone, forcing people like Anfac and her family to leave their homes and seek food assistance.
Anfac and her family’s journey from the countryside to the Burdhubo camp for internally displaced people was difficult because they no longer had any livestock to help carry their belongings, as was customary in the past.
“When you are moving from the countryside, you usually have donkeys or camels to carry your things, but since they all died, we did not have the means to carry our things,” Anfac explains. “We carried everything by ourselves… We went back and forth and through a lot of suffering, we eventually brought our things [to Burdhubo camp].”
Climatic shocks, food insecurity, and conflict have all driven displacement in Ethiopia. At Burdhubo camp, Anfac discovered there were many people who were affected by the drought and experiencing hunger. She’s been grateful for the critical support they’ve received from the ̽ѡ, with funding from the European Union (EU).
Together with the EU, the ̽ѡ is providing emergency assistance to drought-affected individuals and families, so they have the basic items to survive and regain control of their lives. In addition to healthcare and clean water, ̽ѡ teams on the ground are distributing items like temporary shelter materials, blankets and sleeping mats, cookware sets, hygiene kits, and dignity kits for women and girls.
In addition, the people at the camp are receiving cash assistance, so they can buy their own food. As a secondary objective, the cash relief also allows pastoralists like Anfac to explore the possibility of resuming their agricultural practices.
As Anfac looks to the future, she hopes she and her family will be able to rebuild their lives and relocate to a place where her children can go to school. “We need to leave this place and go somewhere with access to education so that our children can be educated,” she shares. We need help with all of that.”
to provide life-saving support to people caught in conflict and disasters around the world. Our work funded by the EU enables people to survive, recover and rebuild their lives.