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In Timor Leste, “hunger season” will be worse after El Niño

AndrewJin

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Hunger is a threat to many developing countries.
Global Hunger Index 2016 shows improvement but still alarming!


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https://www.irinnews.org/news/2016/10/12/timor-leste-“hunger-season”-will-be-worse-after-el-niño

By Wendy Levy
MANAHAT/TIMOR LESTE, 12 October 2016

Farmers in Timor Leste call the months from November to February “the hungry season”, and this year could be even worse than usual thanks to poor harvests related to the weather phenomena El Niño and La Niña.

By November, farming families in Timor Leste tend to have eaten or sold all their produce. They’ve planted new crops with the rains, but they must wait until the next harvest is ready in March or April.

Many of the country’s 1.2 million people are already chronically hungry. Timor Leste was ranked the second hungriest country in Asia by the International Food Policy Research Institute, which released its annual Global Hunger Index Tuesday. It was the ninth on the list globally, on par with war-torn Yemen and Afghanistan.

The problem will likely be worse this year, after El Niño hit the country in 2015 and 2016, bringing drought that killed crops. That weather phenomenon is often followed by La Niña, which can bring heavy rains and landslides, prevent planting and wash away crops before they have a chance to grow.

The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said in August there is a 40 percent chance that La Niña will hit Timor Leste next month.

That would be devastating for farmers like Herman Pereira, who is the chief of Manahat, a village of about 70 households on the western frontier with Indonesia. He pointed to the nearby mountains, and said that in good years villagers take their crops across the border to sell. But this year, there’s nothing left to peddle.

“Our cassava and corn did not grow well, the plants died from the top and the papaya leaves fell off,” said Pereira.

Constant hunger

Farmers throughout the country are facing the same difficulties, according to an El Niño assessment commissioned by the NGOs Plan, CARE, Oxfam, World Vision and Caritas.

Published in February, the assessment said that 70 percent of Timor Leste's citizens are subsistence farmers. Of those surveyed, 72 percent were experiencing a long dry season, 56 percent had delayed plating crops, 80 percent did not have water for their gardens, and 55 percent of families had reduced the number of meals they eat each day.

And while the past year has been tougher than most, food security is a constant issue for many Timorese.

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Elsa Da Arujo tends her crop at Hkhmor, Timor Leste

About half of the country's children under five have stunted growth, according to the Global Hunger Index.

Heather Grieve, a nutritionist with the Australian government’s aid program in the capital of Dili, told IRIN that children with stunted growth also suffer from developmental delays.

“It’s partly reflected in the diet,” she explained. “They don’t have the range of foods needed, no diversity. They eat lots of carbohydrates, rice, maize, small amounts of vegetables and very little protein.”

Stephen Kearney, country director of the UN’s World Food Programme in Timor Leste, said aid agencies are working with the government to change that.

"Our challenge with nutrition is how to get people to change their eating habits,” he said. “We need to get people to recognise that a diverse diet is good for them."

WFP is running supplementary feeding for the most vulnerable women and children in some areas, using a local soya bean product, Timor Vita.

Unrecognised crisis

Medium-to long term interventions, especially in nutrition-sensitive agriculture, are well underway. Aid agencies are working with the government to protect water sources, resupply farmers with seeds and improve market access, vaccinate livestock and poultry, and encourage more nutritious diets.

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Campaigns to raise awareness of the effects of El Nino included information boards in public spaces


But there is widespread concern among aid workers that the government is not doing enough to address the current crisis brought on by El Niño.

“In any other country, Timor’s anemia rates alone would suggest blanket supplementary feeding for women and children,” said one aid worker, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

Both President Taur Matan Ruak and Prime Minister Rui Maria de Araujo support “action for zero hunger”, a plan that includes campaigns for healthy eating, taking key messages to villages, and provides funding a nutrition prize.

But the government has stopped short of declaring a disaster, which could trigger the release of extra international funds for emergency support.

“It has not been declared a disaster here,” said another aid worker. “Everyone was thinking that the government was going to do something.”

IRIN’s attempts to get comment from National Disaster Management Office were unsuccessful. A representative did not show up for a planned interview or answer phone calls.

wl/jf/as

(TOP PHOTO: These farmers are part of a cooperative that won a nutrition award from the Timorese president. CREDIT: Wendy Levy)
 
Its not just the amount of food you grow but how you are able to store and distribute it efficiently.

A large component of hunger specific to children is also dependent on health and sanitation levels given a child suffering from persistent diarrhea is one that will not be nourished well, no matter the level of food provision.
 
Global Hunger Index: Welcome to India, world's hottest economy where 39% kids are stunted


http://www.firstpost.com/business/g...my-where-39-children-are-stunted-3046864.html



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Actually I thank you for posting the GHI 2015 data to compare with GHI 2016:

India has dropped from 29 in 2015 to 28.5 in 2016 score wise....means north korea is worse than us now.

A drop of 0.5 in one year is decent (though it can be better)..given Bangladesh improved by 0.2 and people are always trumpeting them as "great socioeconomic improvement compared to India"

http://ghi.ifpri.org/

Why not look how your best friend Pakistan doing btw?
 
given Bangladesh improved by 0.2 and people are always trumpeting them as "great socioeconomic improvement compared to India"

Arable land (hectares per person) of Bangladesh is only 0.05; the same indicator of India is 0.12. But Bangladesh still manages a lower hunger index. Anything wrong to call Bangladesh "great socioeconomic improvement compared to India"?
 
Arable land (hectares per person) of Bangladesh is only 0.05; the same indicator of India is 0.12. But Bangladesh still manages a lower hunger index. Anything wrong to call Bangladesh "great socioeconomic improvement compared to India"?

You dont take into account average fertility coefficient of that arable land.

Also read my earlier post, hunger index is not solely dependent on the amount of food you produce....especially when it comes to components regarding children nutrition.

Also, India is improving quite faster than BD now (as evidenced even more by the change in the recent one year timeframe), please read this post:

https://defence.pk/threads/banglade...lobal-hunger-index.455534/page-2#post-8807870

So no there is no "great" improvement compared to India....there was marginal improvement compared to India in earlier bloc years...but now that has reversed and accelerated somewhat. Neither is there a large difference in level now either, especially with India catching up and surpassing BD in about 4 years time if the current rates continue.

All these countries must do better, much scope for improvement. Long-drawn comparisons when the overall levels are quite similar and still too high is not very productive thing to do.

But large differences are appearing between India/BD improvement speed and overall level compared to say Pakistan. Pakistan's under 5yr old children stunting has actually increased sadly from 2008 level....from 41% to 45%.
 
Arable land (hectares per person) of Bangladesh is only 0.05; the same indicator of India is 0.12. But Bangladesh still manages a lower hunger index. Anything wrong to call Bangladesh "great socioeconomic improvement compared to India"?
They have bigger arable land than China, but yielding is quite small.
 
They have bigger arable land than China, but yielding is quite small.
Arable land (hectares per person) of China is 0.08, 1/3 smaller than India. But we still produced far more agricultural products than them (from rice, to cereal, to vegetables, to fruit, to all kinds of meat, or fish).

Agricultural is not just agricultural. It needs sufficient supplies of high quality seeds, fertilizer, irrigation system, electricity, agricultural equipment. The job is not easy!
 
NGOs Plan, CARE, Oxfam, World Vision and Caritas.
UN’s World Food Programme


Do these NGO's, UN WFP, have enough resources? Even if they are sufficiently funded, do they give East Timor enough priority, and not stretched thin over this world-wide problem? China, ASEAN and Australia should form a regional fund which has only one mandate: pull East Timor out of hunger. These three parties have agricultural techs, infra techs, public management expertise, and most importantly deep geo-economic knowledge of this region. There is no lack of resources, the only thing lacking is will.
 
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