East African locust invasion
reaches Kenya
A local farmer runs through a swarm of desert locusts to chase them away, Kenya (ANSA) |
Swarms of crop-eating locusts are crossing through East
Africa, causing food insecurity and threatening livestock in the worst invasion
in decades.
By Francesca Merlo
After having wreaked havoc across Ethiopia and Somalia, the
swarms of locusts have reached Kenya, a country in which 10 million people
already face food insecurity (Kenya Agricultural Research Institute).
Some areas in Ethiopia and Somalia – countries that had not faced an
infestation of this scale for 25 years - saw the entirety of their crops
destroyed. The United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) fears
that by June, the swarms could grow 500 times, putting South Sudan and Uganda
at risk.
According to experts, the locust invasion currently striking
East Africa is caused by the extreme weather conditions that saw 2019 start
with a drought and end in one of the wettest rainy seasons in decades.
Today we can better understand the nature of the locust.
There can be up to 80 million locusts in one swarm, and one single locust can eat
its own body mass in food per day. Around one tonne of locusts (500,000), a
very small part of a swarm, can eat the same amount of food as 2,500 people in
one day.
The swarm that has just travelled through Somalia and
Ethiopia to reach Kenya is estimated, by the FAO, to contain around 200 billion
locusts – covering an area almost the size of Moscow.
The locust has often been a Biblical symbol of God’s anger.
In Hebrew, they were called 'the countless,' and in the Arab world, a swarm or
a cloud of locusts was referred to as 'the darkeners of the sun.'
If the locusts are not brought under control by the start of
the next planting and rainy season – typically around March – farmers could see
their crops decimated.
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