The
prices of basic foodstuffs have increased around 40% since last
July. An Honduran Red Cross vounteer distributes goods in Choluteca.
(p7395).
The
slide in coffee prices has caused widespread unemployment. Honduran
farmers in El Paraiso line up to receive seeds for the coming
planting season.
(p7398)

More
than 7,700 families have been helped since the beginning of
the crisis.
(p7397)
|
Hunger deepens in the Honduran countryside
2 February 2002
By Raquel Delgado in Tegucigalpa, Honduras
The food crisis in the
Honduran departments worst affected by drought shows no sign of abating.
Now, predictably, in El Paraíso, Choluteca and Valle, the prices
of basic foodstuffs like beans and corn have gone up by some 40% since
the Honduran government declared a state of emergency in July 2001.
The Rome-based World Food Programme says more than 135,000 tonnes
of foodstuffs have been lost with the failure of the harvest, leaving
nearly 66,000 families in need. And with food shortages come health
problems.
A joint study last September by UNICEF, the Red Cross and other humanitarian
organizations showed that the level of acute malnutrition had increased
by three percentage points since the previous investigation last July,
now occurring in nearly 6% of people in communities in Choluteca and
El Paraíso.
No deaths have been reported so far. But the figures indicate that
more than six months after the crisis began, the nutritional state
of children particularly, in the worst affected communities, is giving
cause for concern because of the month on month increase in the level
of malnutrition.
If bean harvests are inadequate or fail altogether there is a knock-on
effect, reducing the amount that can be sown for the next crop. The
wet season in Honduras - the country worst affected by drought in
Central America - usually begins in late May, when subsistence farmers
plant their main yearly crop of staple corn and beans. Many try to
plant a second time in August, but last year farmers in eight provinces
were reported to have lost almost all their first harvest.
Results for the second harvest in 2001 varied dramatically from place
to place; although the rains eventually came, the ground was prepared
and seeds donated by the Honduran Red Cross sown, in some areas it
was too late. "There were instances of campesinos harvesting
14 quintales* of beans, and that's enough to see anyone through to
the next harvest in August and September this year," says Alonso
Sánchez, a farmer who received both seeds and fertilizer from
the HRC. "In other cases, people were lucky to come away with
three quintales of beans - and that's only enough food for three months."
The Honduran Red Cross rural programme has been helping more than
1500 farmers in Choluteca and El Paraíso. Accustomed though
the region is to disasters such as hurricanes and earthquakes, Central
America is not normally associated with widespread malnutrition. The
Red Cross is taking up the challenge and managed to assist nearly
2500 campesino families - an estimated 15,000 people - in the first
few months of the drought emergency last year.
The total number of families helped between the start of the crisis
and the end of last month now stands at 7,700 - or more than 46,000
people.
But from drought itself there is little relief in sight. The Honduran
national weather service has forecast that the el Niño phenomenon
will continue to play havoc with the timetable for seasonal rains,
and the result will be a "strong and prolonged drought"
that continues to threaten the harvests and kitchen gardens of people
in the countryside.
So Honduras enters 2002 having lost as much as a third of its agricultural
product.
And as if that were not enough, the country has also had to cope with
the collapse in the world price of one of its principle exports: coffee.
An excess of supply over demand has led to the lowest international
coffee prices for 30 years, with many producer countries now failing
even to cover production costs. For the past two years Honduran coffee
plantation workers have been laid off, increasing unemployment in
the countryside and reducing the country's foreign exchange reserves.
*1 quintal = 100 kilograms
|