New Locust Wave Adds To Food Security Woes

Locust swarms have swept over farms in central, southern and eastern parts of Yemen, ravaging crops and stoking fears of food insecurity.

Residents and farmers in the provinces of Marib, Hadramout, Mahra and Abyan said that billions of locusts had invaded farms, cities and villages, devouring important seasonal crops such as dates and causing heavy losses, reports Arab News.

Images and videos posted on social media showed layers of creeping locusts laying waste to lemon farms in Marb, dates and alfalfa farms in Hadramout and flying swarms plunging cities into darkness. “The locusts have eaten all kinds of green trees, including the sesban tree. The losses are huge,” Abu Baker added.

Read Today’s ePaper

Heavy rains and flash floods have hit several Yemeni provinces over the last couple of months, creating proper conditions for locusts to reproduce. Farmers complained that locusts had wiped out entire seasonal crops that are grown after rains.

Last year, the UN said that the war in Yemen had disrupted vital monitoring and control efforts and several waves of locusts to hit neighbouring countries had originated from Yemen.

Yemeni government officials, responsible for battling the spread of locusts, have complained that fighting and a lack of funding have obstructed vital operations for combating the insects.

Also Read: Nations Hit By Locusts Join Hands

Ashor Al-Zubairi, the director of the Locust Control Unit at the Ministry of Agriculture in Hadramout’s Seiyun city, said that the ministry was carrying out a combat operation funded by the Food and Agriculture Organization in Hadramout and Mahra, but complained that the operation might fall short of its target due to a lack of funding and equipment.

The widespread locust invasion comes as the World Food Programme (WFP) on July 10 sent an appeal for urgent funds for its programs in Yemen, warning that people would face starvation otherwise.

“There are 10 million people who are facing (an) acute food shortage, and we are ringing the alarm bell for these people because their situation is deteriorating because of escalation and because of the lockdowns, the constraints and the social-economic impact of the coronavirus,” WFP spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs told reporters in Geneva.

Locust swarms, being generated in the Horn of Africa region is ravaging through various Middle East nations. The insects travel through the region and have even managed to reach South Asian nations like Pakistan, India, and Nepal. Various governments have come together to fight the menace, which does not seem to subside in the near future.

Also Read: Saudi’s Fight On Locusts Still On

Advertisements
[soliloquy id="31272"]
Advertisements
[soliloquy id="31269"]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *