History repeats itself? The environmental effects of El Nino are expected to last until at least 2017, affecting the food security of 29 million people due to poor harvests, said the WFP report. |
The main street of this
dusty South African town is lined with empty buckets, marking each residents'
place in line as they wait for their daily water ration to be brought in by
unreliable trucks.
AP report continues:
Keeping
watch over her buckets, Pulaleng Chakela sleeps in a wheelbarrow on the side of
the road to save her spot in the line. The 30-year-old wraps herself in a
little blanket as temperatures drop overnight, and asks a male friend to sit
nearby for safety.
"If
I don't wait here all night, the water will be finished," she said.
A
flatbed truck carrying three 5,000-liter tanks arrived midmorning when
temperatures had already reached 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).
Murmurs of relief are soon replaced by angry shouts as residents learn they
have been further rationed from filling four buckets to just two. In the chaos,
Chakela slips two extra buckets in the line. The situation is so unfair that
she feels no guilt, she said.
Chakela
is joined by dozens more residents of Senekal, a small town in South Africa's
rural Free State province, one of four regions declared disaster areas as a drought
dries up South Africa's heartland — along with much of eastern and southern
Africa — bringing with it failed crops and acute water shortages.
The
drought is a sign of a changing climate the whole region must prepare for, say
experts. The El Nino weather phenomenon has returned to southern Africa, marked
by delayed rainfall and unusually high temperatures, according to the World
Food Program.
The
environmental effects of El Nino are expected to last until at least 2017,
affecting the food security of 29 million people due to poor harvests, said the
WFP report.
The
conditions in Senekal should serve as a warning to the rest of region to
prepare themselves for the dry years ahead, said Tshepiso Ramakarane, manager
of the Setsoto municipality, where Senekal is located.
"For
the next 10 to 15 years, the situation is likely to get worse," he warned,
adding that only days of sustained rainfall can solve the town's woes, despite
the occasional scattered shower. "We are in the middle of a crisis."
Other
towns in the district have even less water, but Senekal is in worse shape
because of its poor infrastructure and distance from the nearest dam, pointing
up the vulnerability of many places in the country to drought due to poor
sanitation and running water systems.
The
local municipality has now been forced to buy well water from surrounding farms
at 1 cent a liter, distributing about 50 liters of water to each of Senekal's
8,000 households at no cost.
Those
who can't wait up to ten hours in a line, however, have been forced to buy
water directly from the farmers at premium prices.
Makhantsi
Khantsi, a single mother of four who works as a security guard, said the
farmers are charging her nearly seven times as much as they make the
municipality pay and that's on top of the $10 she has to shell out for the 10
kilometer (6 mile) cab ride.
For
laundry, the options are even more grim, and Khantsi and a dozen others use the
stagnant, algae-ridden water collected in an abandoned sewage treatment tank to
wash their clothes.
"When
you are desperate, what must you do?" asks Refiloe Mangati, as she washes
her children's school shirts by hand, scrubbing with too much detergent and
rinsing quickly in the hope the algae — and the tadpoles — won't stain them.
On
the farms surrounding the town, hot gusts of wind pick up dust on empty fields
where there should be crops.
"We
have not planted a single seed," said Borrie Erasmus, who grew up on the
Biddulphsberg farm, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) outside Senekal. This is the
first time in the five decades he has worked his family farm that he has missed
the spring planting season.
If
it rains for a few days before autumn, he may still plant sunflowers, but that
won't offset the more than $60,000 Erasmus has already lost this season.
"One
bad crop can put you back three or four years and now we have no crops,"
said Erasmus. Even if the weather returns to normal, it will still take at
least five years for farmers to pay off the loans they've had to take out to
survive.
South
Africans, already facing a weak currency, will soon feel the effect of rising
food prices as the country may have to import corn, Agricultural Minister
Senzeni Zokwana warned on Monday.
Over
the Free State, the few clouds gathering in the distance may bring some
temporary relief, but farmers here say they need more certain intervention.
"We're hardy farmers,
we're used to getting by without much, but these are such extraordinary
circumstances that there is a need for government to help," said Erasmus.
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