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    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/system-of-rice-intensification-helps-families-climb-out-of-poverty">        <title>In Cambodia, System of Rice Intensification helps families climb out of poverty</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/system-of-rice-intensification-helps-families-climb-out-of-poverty</link>        <description>Low-cost agricultural techniques help a farmer achieve a six-fold increase in annual production in one small field, and become a leader in the community.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p>Next to the small home of Say Chhoun, 55, and his wife Yem Dieb, 51, is a small rice paddy. They say it is about a quarter of an acre, and it looks a little bigger than a regulation basketball court. “When I planted that area using conventional rice growing techniques, I got about one [50kg] bag of rice,” Chhoun says, looking out from inside his house, which is so small he can barely stand up inside. “Now I’m getting two bags, which is quite a difference.”</p>
<p>Chhoun says he is now using the <a href="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/press/pressreleases/groundbreaking-method-enables-small-farmers-to-grow-more-food-with-less-water/">System of Rice Intensification (SRI)</a> since he learned about it two years ago during training sessions with Oxfam’s partner, a local organization called Srer Khmer. <a href="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/publications/more-rice-for-people-more-water-for-the-planet/">SRI techniques involve cost-saving ways of planting rice</a>: farmers use less seed, water, fertilizer, and grow more rice. Farmers can follow as many as nine steps, ranging from seed selection to the way they transplant seedlings individually (instead of in clumps of five or more plants together). SRI techniques promote the growth of stronger roots, so each plant produces more grains of rice.</p>
<p>Since following SRI practices allows him to plant fewer seeds and use less water, Chhoun says it is helping him save money, grow more rice in the same area, and even increase the number of harvests per year. “The techniques we’ve learned have helped us feed the family better,” he says. “I plant three rice crops a year now. Here I’ve just harvested my rice, and then I transplanted again right away.”</p>
<p><b>Year-round cultivation</b></p>
<p>On a cool winter afternoon, Dieb and Chhoun and three of their children are across the narrow dirt road from their house, transplanting rice onto a rented field. Dieb is in the nursery, pulling the seedlings up by their roots.  She carries them a short distance to where Chhoun is planting them in a small area flooded with about six inches of water. He wades down a straight row, inserting each individual seedling about one inch deep and 18 inches from the next.</p>
<p>Chhoun and Dieb were the first family in their village, Anlong Hab, to grow three crops a year. That was three years ago. Last year there were three families doing it, now there are 10. “In the wet season everyone grows rice so it’s hard to find land to rent,” Chhoun says.  “Usually people don’t grow rice in the dry season, so it’s an opportunity for me to go rent their land.”</p>
<p>Chhoun says the added production is helping his family of nine eat better, but they still need to grow more.  So finding land he can plant is a priority. “I want others to grow three crops a year also because we’re all poor,” he says, wondering aloud if he will find enough land to rent if more farmers expand their growing season.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, Chhoun and Dieb feel they are making progress, and their status in the community is changing as others have learned from their experience.  Chhoun’s rice cultivation skills have established him as one of the most innovative farmers in the village. “I’m quite proud,” he says. “We’re poor, but people look at me and follow what I did. That’s what motivates me to do this work.”</p>]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Chris Hufstader</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Cambodia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>East Asia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>GROW</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>SRI</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>System of Rice Intensification</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>adaptation</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>farmers</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>livelihood</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>rural resilience</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2012-03-02T21:20:37Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfamexchange-winter-2012">        <title>OXFAMExchange, Winter 2012</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfamexchange-winter-2012</link>        <description>What if development took the kind of time and commitment it takes to raise a child? (It does.)</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p>Oxfam's work is about structural change—a long, slow process. How slow? Well, we generally think about our field programs as approximately 15-year investments. In other words, a development program requires almost as much time and commitment as it takes to raise a child.</p>
<p>A shorter commitment won't get the job done. It takes time to help people build skills and infrastructure, to get policies changed, and to ensure that governments spend their money more effectively.</p>
<p>Smart development demands monitoring and evaluation. Organizations should be accountable to report not only what they do, but also how they measure it. Don't believe stories that guarantee long-term impact after one or two years' investment; that's barely time to lay some groundwork.</p>
<p>We all crave the easy answer, the quick solution, but if eradicating poverty were simple, people living in poverty would have sorted it out long ago. They may lack resources like land, but they certainly don't lack intelligence or insight. Poverty is a global challenge—one that we can overcome together, but listening and learning from people living in poverty, and developing solutions with them, takes time and sustained effort.</p>
<p>This issue of <i>OXFAMExchange</i> includes inspiring stories, but they are just snapshots from a family album: moments in a long journey together. Each story is ultimately about perseverance and the need for long-term commitment.</p>
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</div>]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Oxfam America</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Caribbean</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>East Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Ethiopia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Haiti</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Horn of Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>aid reform</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>drought</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>farmers</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>humanitarian relief</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>livelihood</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2012-09-20T14:59:45Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Oxfam Exchange</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfamexchange-fall-2011">        <title>OXFAMExchange, Fall 2011</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfamexchange-fall-2011</link>        <description>Africa's last famine?</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p>This season the rains have failed throughout much of East Africa—in some areas, triggering the worst drought in 60 years. More than 13 million people are now at risk, 1.8 million Somalis alone have been displaced, and 750,000 people are facing starvation. The chronic cycle of drought and suffering prompts us to ask: What would it take to make this Africa's last famine?</p>
<p>Oxfam's work—whether helping Guatemalan women organize to fight gender violence, funding irrigation projects in Ethiopia, or standing with people in Darfur—is about building the resilience of local communities over the long haul. We cannot prevent shocks, but we can help our sisters and brothers access some of the same resources we have to cushion us when times are lean.</p>
<p>We cannot rush from crisis to crisis with short-term fixes. What more evidence do we need than what is happening in East Africa now? This is not the region's first famine, but imagine the headline: Africa's last famine.</p>
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</div>]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Oxfam America</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Darfur</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>East Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Ethiopia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>GROW</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Guatemala</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Sudan</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>equality for women</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>farmers</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>gender</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>humanitarian relief</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>oil, gas and mining</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>violence</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>women</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2012-02-13T17:20:33Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Oxfam Exchange</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/more-than-a-million-growers-are-now-embracing-innovative-approaches-to-producing-more-rice">        <title>More than 1 million growers are now embracing innovative approaches to producing more rice</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/more-than-a-million-growers-are-now-embracing-innovative-approaches-to-producing-more-rice</link>        <description>System of Rice Intensification helps small-scale farmers in Vietnam.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p>Over a million small-scale farmers in Vietnam have embraced a technique that grows more rice with less seed, fertilizer, water, and pesticides. It’s helping farmers reduce their costs and earn more, while adding about $23.5 million to the value of Vietnamese rice in just one crop season.</p>
<p>The agriculture ministry reported that there are now 1,070,384 farmers—about 70 percent of whom are women—applying the <a href="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/publications/more-rice-for-people-more-water-for-the-planet" class="external-link">System of Rice Intensification, or SRI</a>, on 185,065 hectares (457,110 acres) of their rice fields. The number of farmers using SRI practices in Vietnam has tripled since 2009.</p>
<p>SRI is a package of good agricultural techniques for hand-planted rice that helps farmers reduce their costs. And the innovative techniques are helping the poorest rice producers on the smallest rice paddy areas boost their rice yields: When compared to traditional rice growing techniques, SRI producers can increase rice production by as much as 500 kilos (more than 1,000 pounds) per hectare. (A hectare is about 2.5 acres.) This typically increases income by about $130 per hectare, enough money to cover food costs for a month for a family of four, or invest in five piglets to raise and sell.</p>
<p>“There is significant evidence that lives are changing at the village level,” said Le Minh, Oxfam Associate Country Director in Vietnam. “I give most of the credit to the collaboration amongst our farmers. When they are successful, they want to share their success with families and friends.”</p>
<h3><b>Less expense, more rice</b></h3>
<p>SRI farmers generally use less seed, sometimes as much as 70 percent less. They do this by transplanting fewer rice seedlings, and spacing them farther apart. This reduces competition for nutrients and allows the rice plants to have more room to grow stronger roots, which makes them more resistant to pests and diseases.</p>
<p>Inspired by their own success, farmers like <a href="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/more-than-a-million-growers-are-now-embracing-innovative-approaches-to-producing-more-rice/bold-commitment-to-innovation/" class="external-link">Le Ngoc Thach </a>are committed to help others. Thach attended an SRI training and visited a few demonstration fields. He gave SRI a try in 2006 and was convinced that these growing techniques would improve the lives of farmers in his cooperative. He started to spread the word. Now 2,000 families, his entire grower cooperative in northern Vietnam, are part of a network of over a million farmers who employ SRI and earn extra income.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/publications/oxfamexchange-winter-2011" class="external-link">Vuong Hoang Kim</a>, a cooperative member in Yen Bai province, has volunteered to teach other women farmers about using SRI. “We all are very happy to see our rice plants grow very quickly and we gain a lot of benefits from these simple techniques,” she said.</p>
<p>Oxfam has been working with several partner organizations to promote SRI to small-scale farmers as a means to help poor farmers in Vietnam. One partner is the Plant Protection Department in the Ministry of Rural Development, which has been training farmers in SRI techniques in northern provinces of Vietnam with support from Oxfam since 2007. SRI training is part of a larger effort to help build the ability and confidence of smallholder farmers to develop agricultural innovations as a way to earn more money. The program is especially important for women in rural areas, who normally depend on agriculture for income and food.</p>
<p>“It’s a great achievement for small farmers because they are the ones leading the SRI innovation,” said Ngo Tien Dung of the Agriculture Ministry’s Plant Protection Department. “We need to build momentum for SRI extension over the coming years. It’s a smart investment needed to lift people out of poverty and to boost the national economy.”</p>
<p>Vietnam is the second largest rice exporter and accounts for one fifth of global rice supply. In 2010 the country exported 6.6 million tons, worth about $2.8 billion. Oxfam’s collaboration with the Plant Protection Department is helping small-scale farmers, who are usually the poorest, to increase their share of this business. SRI farmers now represent about 10% of all rice growers in Vietnam.</p>]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Soleak Seang</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>GROW</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>SRI</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Vietnam</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>livelihood</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>natural resources</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>rural resilience</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2012-02-23T15:05:46Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/with-irrigation-herders-in-southern-ethiopia-turn-to-farming">        <title>With irrigation, herders in southern Ethiopia turn to farming</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/with-irrigation-herders-in-southern-ethiopia-turn-to-farming</link>        <description>A small-scale irrigation project along the banks of the Dawa River is helping some herders grow enough food to feed their families--even as drought ravages much of the southern Ethiopia region.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p>Driving south from Ethiopia’s capital of Addis Ababa toward the Kenyan border, the lush green fields that stretch to the horizon make it hard to believe there are about 4.5 million Ethiopians who need food assistance. But things change drastically as you approach Yabello. About 300 miles south of Addis, the vibrant green vegetation is replaced by bare red soil, dried corn field,s and emaciated cattle roaming listlessly in search of grass and water. The effects of the recent drought are visible everywhere.</p>
<p>It did not have to be this way.</p>
<p>About 190 miles east of Yabello in the Liben District of the Guji Zone, a group of people have managed to escape this horrible fate through a project that helped them create a new means of earning a living while maintaining their pastoralist way of life. A small-scale irrigation initiative, supported by Oxfam America and its partners, has allowed the dream of some of the people of Melka Guba and to become a reality: They are now growing enough food to ensure their families can eat.</p>
<p>Here, in late August, things look much different from the surrounding areas. Smiles brighten the faces of men, women and children, and healthy cattle graze on the dried corn stalks and leaves strewn across the fields from the recent harvest.</p>
<p>In response to a 2008 drought that hit this region hard, Oxfam America worked with a local partner and the regional government on an emergency and recovery project that helped link disaster relief to longer-term development. The first phase focused on saving lives and livelihoods. This was followed by steps that helped villagers analyze their situation and reorganize themselves with a goal of building their assets and strengthening their means of making a living. That is when the people of Melka Guba decided to diversify their livelihoods: In the face of a changing climate they determined to try farming with the help of the new small-scale irrigation network along the nearby Dawa River.</p>
<p>In spite of the fact that this herding community had little prior experience with irrigation, the 64 hectares of irrigated land have now become a life line for more than 201 households in the area.</p>
<p>Mero Abdo, a 30-year-old mother of three, said, “I thank the day I joined this irrigation project. We see how others are suffering everywhere, but my children go to sleep full. I feel really happy I can even help others who are not part of the irrigation community and are having a problem feeding their children.”</p>
<h3>More than just food</h3>
<p>Revered by her community, Abdo is a strong woman and one of the first 101 women selected to participate in the irrigation project.</p>
<p>“I was excited from the beginning since I used to hear about irrigation on the radio and I knew it would change our lives,” she said. Abdo not only serves as a member of the irrigation management committee as well as its treasurer, but she is one of the few women to take on all farming activity on her own.</p>
<p>For most of the participants, this third harvest was their best yet. Abdo managed to produce 14 quintals of corn on a quarter hectare of land (about .6 acres), more than from either of the previous two harvests.</p>
<p>“I used the line-sowing technique this year and produced more,” she said. “I plan to use seven quintals to feed my family and sell the rest to pay for my children’s school, buy cattle, or start a small trading business.”</p>
<p>Abdub Bora, a 40-year-old farmer and father of eight, proudly showed us his traditional storage silo filled to the brim with corn from his last harvest.</p>
<p>“This time I produced 15 quintals of corn on my quarter hectare of land,” said Bora. He told us he is planning to use eight quintals and sell the remaining seven quintals to meet the other needs of his family. “I have eight children and four are still in school. I will use the money to buy books and use some of it in case my family gets sick,” added Bora.</p>
<p>Bora’s wife lives in Melka Guba, about 10.5 miles from the irrigation site, where their children can attend school.</p>
<p>“We don’t mind the separation. The main thing is to have enough to eat and allow our children to finish school,” said Bora. “My wife brings me food I can easily cook here and she even comes and works with me during the busiest farming season.”</p>
<p>The reach of this irrigation project spans further than the community itself. Thanks to the river-fed harvest, the households participating in this project are one of the few sources of corn seed in the Liben District.</p>
<h3>Double blessings</h3>
<p>When the project started, each of the 201 households were allotted a quarter hectare of irrigable land in accordance with government regulations. But not everyone was convinced the irrigation would work and some abandoned their plots. To avoid wasting water, the irrigation management committee offered those plots to neighboring farmers who would be capable of using them.</p>
<p>Hussein Gufar, a 44-year-old father of six, was one of the lucky ones who received one of the adjacent parcels. During the most recent harvest, he produced 25 quintals of corn on a half hectare of land (about 1.2 acres).</p>
<p>“We said this could change our fate,” said Gufar, who is a member of a task force that ensures the daily operation of the irrigation system. “We were not sure at first but now we have more confidence and plan to work even harder.” A pile of corn sacks in the middle of his field is proof of his commitment and hard work.</p>
<p>Beyond the families the project has helped, it has also blessed the community’s most valuable asset—the cattle, which now feed on the stalks and leaves left after the harvest.</p>
<p>“We are not only able to feed our animals but we sell the rest of the maize residue to the surrounding community for additional income,” added Gufar. The price of that fodder has increased four times in one year which reflects the desperate situation most of the surrounding community is in.</p>
<h3>Ensuring sustainability and ownership</h3>
<p>The irrigation effort is not without challenges and does not address all of the community’s needs. Community members are aware they will have to work together to reap the maximum benefit of this investment. Some of the concerns they have expressed include the high cost of transportation, which limits farmers to growing only longer-lasting produce, such as onions; the rising cost of generator fuel; and minimal support from the government in terms of providing training and helping connect farmers with markets.</p>
<p>“We are now only producing onions and tomatoes for home consumption. If we could reach the right market and access reasonable transportation, we could earn more money and increase our income,” said Gufar.</p>
<p>During the last harvest, the irrigation participants contributed 10,700 birr ($629) of which 10,000 ($588) was used for generator fuel and to pay for the seeds some had borrowed.</p>
<p>Many efforts are underway to improve the quality of life in the area. Among other things, this project fostered the construction of a three-room school that is managed by the pastoralist commission. In addition, a health post is also being planned for the site.</p>
<h3>Food insecure no more</h3>
<p>Melka Guba farmers are eager to start the next planting season. To use the irrigation system efficiently, all their plots need to be ready for sowing at the same time—so water isn’t wasted. Farmers are now working on that coordination.</p>
<p>And along with the irrigation has come something else: peace of mind. Project participants can now have access to food all year round. They will no longer suffer the harsh consequences of drought nor be dependent on others to feed their families.</p>]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Selome Kebede</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Ethiopia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Horn of Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>drought</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>farmers</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2012-02-23T15:07:50Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/in-northern-ethiopia-weather-insurance-offers-a-buffer-against-drought">        <title>In northern Ethiopia, weather insurance offers a buffer against drought</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/in-northern-ethiopia-weather-insurance-offers-a-buffer-against-drought</link>        <description>A growing number of families have signed up for weather insurance to protect their crop investments from insufficient rainfall.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p>The rainy season has come to Adi Ha. Plastic sacks, doubling as raincoats and folded like origami crowns, sit at the ready on the heads of young herders.</p>
<p>Puddles swallow trucks to their underbellies. And everywhere, green sweeps the hillsides: delicate shoots of teff, so vibrant it looks lit from within, mix with fields of corn, the stalks thickening by the day and inching skywards.</p>
<p>But here in this village of about 1,100 households in Ethiopia’s northern region of Tigray, they’re holding their breath. Will the rain stay steady? Will it fall in enough abundance to fatten the grains and produce a bountiful harvest on which so many here depend?</p>
<p>At night, in my hotel room in Abi Adi, I listen as the rain pelts the metal roofs and pours into the courtyards and muddy streets below. I think about all the uncertainties farmers in Adi Ha face, and then I think about the south and what happens when those uncertainties become life-threatening. There, where southern Ethiopia, northern Kenya, and south-central Somalia meet, a <a href="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/east-africa-drought-and-food-crisis-q-and-a" class="internal-link" title="East Africa drought and food crisis Q and A">severe drought and food crisis</a> has snared almost 12 million people, farmers and herders both. The UN has already declared <a href="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/famine-in-somalia-causes-and-solutions" class="internal-link" title="Famine in Somalia: Causes and solutions">famine in two parts of Somalia</a>. And some areas of the region are the driest they have been in six decades.</p>
<p>Though the rain in Tigray brings hope, nothing is certain. Not when the weather has become increasingly erratic. And not when the vast majority of farmers rely on rain to feed their fields. Countless families here—like those now struggling in the south—have known the ravages of drought.</p>
<p>But in Adi Ha, and a growing number of communities in Tigray, farmers now have a means of managing some of that unpredictability: weather insurance for their crops.</p>
<p>Initiated in 2007 by Oxfam America and a host of partners, including the Relief Society of Tigray and Swiss Re, a new program has found a way for even the poorest farmers to afford insurance. Instead of cash, these farmers can pay for their premiums with labor, a resource they have in abundance. If insufficient rain falls during a critical period of the growing cycle, and their teff, wheat, or barley suffers, farmers will receive a payout—an infusion of cash that can help them cover their losses and weather the rough times.</p>
<p>“This insurance is very good,” said Selas Samson Biru, who paid 200 birr ($11.75) this year to cover half a hectare of teff—a tiny grain that is a staple of the Ethiopian diet. “The insurance is good because it’s saving our assets in a bad year.”</p>
<p>As she spoke, a heavy sky pressed down on the fields of Adi Ha. Nearby, farmers coaxed their oxen through rocky fields, hurrying to plow and plant. It felt like rain. But Biru was worried still. She expected her corn would be OK, but the teff?</p>
<p>“We have some doubt,” she said.</p>
<p>Readings at a small rain gauge across the river from one of Biru’s fields showed that, on the Ethiopian calendar for July, rain had fallen on only seven days until a thorough dousing on July 24, when 50 millimeters (2 inches) soaked the fields. Before then, the heaviest rain measured just 30 millimeters (1.2 inches).</p>
<p>With the green that rain has brought to Adi Ha, it’s hard to fathom just how dry the south is. And in fact Biru, far from any access to the Internet or TV, said she had not heard about the drought and suffering there.</p>
<p>“We are sorry about that news,” she said, worry creasing her brow. “We feel that type of drought might come to us.” And then she brightened.</p>
<p>“Have they bought insurance?” Biru asked. “This is one of the most important things that needs to be scaled up.”</p>
<p>That’s in the works. Through a new partnership, Oxfam America and the World Food Programme, together with Swiss Re, are helping to bring this insurance model—and a package of other resource-management techniques including savings, credit, and disaster risk reduction strategies—deeper into Ethiopia and across three new countries.</p>
<p>It won’t come in time to help families in the south, but the disaster there may finally spur some serious international interest in finding long-term solutions—like weather insurance—to the devastation drought brings.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Coco McCabe</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Ethiopia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Horn of Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>drought</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>farmers</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>livelihood</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>private sector engagement</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>weather insurance</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2012-05-16T15:41:27Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/press/pressreleases/interactive-map-reveals-201cpressure-points201d-of-food-price-spikes-on-poor-communities-around-the-world">        <title>Interactive map reveals “pressure points” of food price spikes on poor communities around the world</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/press/pressreleases/interactive-map-reveals-201cpressure-points201d-of-food-price-spikes-on-poor-communities-around-the-world</link>        <description></description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>A new interactive map published by Oxfam today shows how poor communities across the world are being hurt by high and volatile food prices. The <a href="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/press/articles/food-price-spikes" class="external-link">food price pressure points map</a> provides a global snapshot of the impacts of the global food price crisis.</p>
<p>High and volatile food prices are one of the biggest political issues of 2011. The pressure points map can be embedded directly into any website to give audiences an easy way to raise their voice and take action on the food price crisis. The tool is part of Oxfam’s global GROW campaign to fix the broken food system.</p>
<p>“The poorest people from Kansas to Yemen are suffering the impacts of high and volatile food prices,” said Raymond C. Offenheiser, President of Oxfam America. “Food price volatility has pushed tens of millions of people into poverty and contributed to violence and instability that is dangerous for global security and costly to American taxpayers. Meanwhile Congress has its head in the sand hoping for it all to go away.”</p>
<p>Food prices have hovered near an all time peak since late 2010 sending tens of millions of people into poverty. After decades of steady progress in the fight against hunger, the number of people without enough to eat is again rising and could soon again top one billion. Leaders from the US and other G-20 nations have delivered little more than band-aid solutions giving little hope to struggling communities.</p>
<p>The map displays countries that are highly vulnerable to price spikes, have seen price spikes contribute to violence or unrest, or have suffered extreme weather events that have contributed to price hikes. Some examples of the impacts the map reveals include:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Yemen:</strong> One-third of the population—7.2 million people—suffers from acute hunger. In the capital city, imported wheat flour prices were 117% higher in May of 2011 than the previous year contributing to unrest in the country.</li>
<li><strong>Tanzania:</strong> Despite a strong economic performance, more than half the population lives in extreme poverty and is vulnerable to increasing food prices.</li>
<li><strong>Mozambique:</strong> In 2010, after record harvests, Mozambique was still slated to import almost a quarter of its food. Food prices are volatile because of both domestic production and import dependence.</li>
<li><strong>Russia</strong>: In most of Russia’s regions, the price of the average food basket went up by 20-30 percent between July 2010 and March 2011. Russian food prices remained high even after the Russian government introduced a grain export ban that led to a surge in prices on the international markets.</li>
<li><strong>Guatemala:</strong> Nearly half of children under 5 in Guatemala are chronically undernourished, and the proportion of the population suffering from malnutrition has been rising. In rural areas, up to 70 percent of children are malnourished.</li></ul>
<p>/ENDS</p>
<h3>Notes to editors</h3>
<p>The map can be found here: <a class="external-link" href="/articles/food-price-spikes">http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/food-price-spikes</a></p>
<p>Copy and paste the following code to add the map directly on your website:</p>
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height="447" 
data="http://www.oxfam.org.uk/test/map/flash/map55-ENGLISH.swf"&gt;
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]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>bgrossmancohen</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>GROW</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>farmers</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>land</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2011-08-03T16:07:23Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Press Release</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/food-price-spikes">        <title>Food price spikes</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/food-price-spikes</link>        <description>After decades of progress, the number of people without enough to eat has reversed course and is increasing. It could soon top one billion. That's more than one in seven people going to bed hungry. Today. In the 21st century.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>In the last year, international food prices have reached record peaks. In many countries, high food prices have contributed to unrest, instability, violence and increasing inequality and poverty. While volatile food prices impact everyone, the impacts vary across the globe with the poorest and most vulnerable people often getting the shortest end of the stick.</p>
<p>To shed more light on the impacts of food price spikes, Oxfam has created an interactive map of <strong>Food Price Volatility Pressure Points</strong>. This map shows the impacts of price spikes in some of the countries where food prices have complicated the lives of poor people and offers a chance to take action on to help address price volatility.</p>
<p>The map shows are areas that are highly vulnerable to price spikes, countries that have had extreme weather events contribute to global price hikes and places that have seen price spikes contribute to violence or unrest that has shaken the foundation of global stability. While this map alone does not tell the full story of how price spikes have impacted our world, it offers a global snapshot to give us a better understanding of what is happening in communities near and far.</p>
<div>
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<h3>Put this map on your website or blog</h3>
<p>Copy and paste the code below to add this map to your own site.</p>
<code>&lt;object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="600" height="447" data="http://www.oxfam.org.uk/test/map/flash/map55-ENGLISH.swf"&gt;
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		&lt;!--[if !IE]&gt;--&gt;
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<h3>What causes food price spikes?</h3>
<p>Failed crops—often caused by our changing climate—hit food prices hard. So does the rising cost of oil—used to grow, fertilize and transport food.</p>
<p>Short-sighted biofuels strategies play a part too—taking food off of people's plates and putting it into car tanks. And dysfunctional commodities markets mean that food prices go up faster and higher than they should.</p>
<p>But despite all these complex causes, the effects on poor people are painfully simple. Parents choose between feeding their children and feeding themselves.</p>
<p>Whole communities face an uncertain future, because all anyone can think about is where their next meal will come from.</p>
<p>It's time to grow out of food price spikes.</p>
<h3>The way to grow</h3>
<p>Food price spikes happen because of things like climate change and rising oil prices—so a major part of the solution involves getting those root causes under control.</p>
<p>But what's also needed is more effective global handling of food price crises when they do happen. That way, the poorest families have somewhere to turn even when things do get desperate—and when they suddenly can't afford even the meager amount they could afford a week earlier.</p>
<p>For our world to grow together, we need to get food price spikes under control.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Ben Grossman-Cohen</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>GROW</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>farmers</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>land</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2011-08-03T14:31:45Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/women-living-with-uncertainty-and-high-food-prices">        <title>Women living with uncertainty and high food prices</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/women-living-with-uncertainty-and-high-food-prices</link>        <description>The constant rise in the price of staples affects women in El Salvador on a daily basis. With gardens, some women have found a way to ease the burden.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p>Although they are from different generations and live in different parts of the country, Toñita, Ana Elizabeth and Iris have a lot in common: they are women, the are Salvadoran, and their work helps their households stay afloat. It has always been a challenge to earn money to buy food for their children, and with the <a class="external-link" href="/campaigns/food-justice">constant rise in the price of staples</a> over the past year, the impact on all of them is the same: in order to eat, they must forgo other purchases, while not getting the same amount or quality of food as they did only a year ago.</p>
<h2>The difficult reality</h2>
<p>The macroeconomics of the rising price of staples are complex, but its effect on the lives of <a class="external-link" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P8jcIwYvyvk">three women interviewed by Oxfam America </a>is simple: they feel it every day.</p>
<p>For María Antonia León, or “Toñita”, life has never been easy. She remembers a time when she earned $3 to $4 a day selling tamales, pastries and snacks from her food cart and was able to buy weekly staples to feed her family of five. With this income, she could get six pounds of beans, half a pound of cheese, half a pound of cream, four pounds of rice, eggs, a chicken, and other basics.</p>
<p>“Before, with $20, I was able to fill a shopping cart. Now I can’t… I spend $40 and it’s not enough. I can’t even fill a shopping basket because everything is so expensive. Beans are $2.50, and cooking oil for 15 days is $2. We just can’t manage. This current crisis is really tough,” says Toñita. She doesn’t know how she will find the money to buy shoes or clothes.</p>
<h2>Alternatives that help</h2>
<p>But Toñita has now found a way to provide her family with nourishing food: Inspired by <a class="external-link" href="/articles/saving-for-change-members-celebrate-international-women2019s-day">Saving for Change</a>, she has started a garden and is raising chickens for their eggs. Saving for Change is an Oxfam program that encourages women to use the capital generated through their savings groups to participate in projects that help them achieve a sustainable livelihood. One such project seeks to promote women’s production capacity, entrepreneurial, and self-reliance skills by helping them establish vegetable gardens.</p>
<p>With her garden, Toñita has a new means to feed her family and avoid paying the high prices at the market. The cucumbers, radishes, tomatoes, peppers, cabbage, and mustard greens she is growing are providing her family with the vitamins and proteins they weren’t getting before. And now she is teaching other women in her community how to do the same thing. The best part is she sells her extra produce at below market prices to her neighbors facing similar difficulties.</p>
<h2>Health and other things pushed aside</h2>
<p>Ana Elizabeth Barrera works at a market in the city of Santa Tecla. She cooks and sells prepared foods, and therefore intimately knows the issue of rising food prices. Ana Elizabeth has seen the price of staples climb steadily over the past five years, but notes an accelerated rise of 60 to 70 percent in the past year, most notably with oil, rice, beans and sugar.</p>
<p>“Six to eight months ago I would invest $100 for oil, rice and other basics, and today I am spending between $150-160 which buys the same amount. Consequently, I have to raise my prices, which means that sales have gone down,” says Ana Elizabeth. She has lost 40 percent of her clientele and has had to let go one of her two employees.</p>
<p>Iris Madrid finds herself in a vulnerable position after losing her job a few weeks ago. Although her income was modest, it was stable and allowed her to buy basic items for her home and support her three children. Now, without a salary and facing rising food costs, she depends on her mother who sells beauty products via catalog.</p>
<p>“If there is detergent, then there is no soap. Or if we have soap, then we have no detergent. If we have beans, then we won’t be eating cheese. If we have cheese, we won’t be eating beans… It hurts because when you have children and they ask you for something, you can’t give it to them,” explains Iris. There are days when all they eat are the mangos from the tree outside her house.</p>
<p>Saving for Change is a program that is growing every day. Since its launch in 2005, it has grown to more than 488,000 members in five countries. The hope is that it will continue to grow and reach people like Ana Elizabeth and Iris, like it has reached Toñita.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Caterina Monti</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>El Salvador</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>GROW</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>community finance</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>equality for women</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>women</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2012-05-16T15:54:04Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/grow-food.-justice.-planet">        <title>GROW: Food. Justice. Planet.</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/grow-food.-justice.-planet</link>        <description>An overview of Oxfam's global GROW campaign</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[<p>Soon there'll be nine billion of us on the planet. All of us, our friends and our families, deserve enough to eat. The food, water, and land we all rely on could soon be used up. So more of the same is not enough. It's time to change the way we produce, consume, and share. GROW is the new campaign to do just that. Starting now. To grow for all. A better way of living. Shared solutions for a safer planet. So the next generation can join us at the table.</p>
<p> </p>
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</div>]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>mborum</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>GROW</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>aid reform</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>equality for women</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>farmers</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>land</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2012-10-03T14:46:51Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Campaign Publication</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/the-rains-have-come-but-food-crisis-continues-to-afflict-west-africa-hitting-chad-hard">        <title>The rains have come, but food crisis continues to afflict West Africa, hitting Chad hard</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/the-rains-have-come-but-food-crisis-continues-to-afflict-west-africa-hitting-chad-hard</link>        <description>With harvests still weeks away, Oxfam is increasingly concerned about the situation in western Chad.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>Though pastures are greening as the rains have come—sometimes with destructive force—many people in parts of West Africa’s Sahel region continue to face a food crisis, particularly in Chad, where a recent survey found that one in four children under the age of five is malnourished.</p>
<p>Millions of people in the region—including Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso-- have confronted food shortages as a consequence of erratic rains in 2008 and 2009 that led to poor harvests, withered pastures, and a lack of water. Widespread poverty has compounded those challenges.</p>
<p>For many, the difficulty in the weeks leading up to the this year’s harvest in October and November is particularly acute as they have exhausted not only their food supplies but have sold off assets, such as livestock, in an effort to feed their families.</p>
<p>While Niger has been at the epicenter of the crisis, with about seven million people facing hunger—almost half its population--forecasters are now predicting a solid harvest for the country, even as flooding wiped out some fields and killed many heads of livestock. And a good distribution of rains in Burkina Faso has meant the crops are growing well there, also.</p>
<p>But robust harvests won’t ease the strain for many families who have gone deep into debt trying to feed themselves. One good harvest will not be enough for them to recover.</p>
<p>Additionally, some families have not been able to plant at all: They had no choice but to eat the seeds they intended to sow.</p>
<p>For herders who rely mostly on their animals for food and income, the rains have restored the grass in their pastures, which in turn has improved the health of their livestock. As cattle and goats grow stronger again, their value goes up, giving owners more purchasing power in the local markets.</p>
<p>Families who earn their living from crops grown in rain-fed fields, however, continue to struggle.</p>
<p>“For non-pastoralist communities who depend on a good harvest, we have not yet seen the end,” said Oxfam’s West Africa emergency coordinator, Philippe Conraud, speaking to the IRIN news agency about Mali. “We are still in the peak of crisis, and emergency activities need to continue.”</p>
<h3>Trouble in Chad</h3>
<p>The problems in Chad are particularly worrisome. About 60 percent of the households, or 1.6 million people, in the western part of the country are grappling with a severe food crisis. For those suffering from malnutrition, access to care can be a challenge: Some patients have to travel more than 120 miles to reach health facilities.</p>
<p>The prices of basic commodities in the markets continue to rise and overall food prices are at least 35 percent higher than the five-year average. Additionally, with the arrival of the rainy season, floods have affected more than 100,000 people in nine regions of Chad, destroying homes and wrecking crops. And now there is a new threat: cholera. Hundreds of cases have been reported.</p>
<h3>Looking ahead</h3>
<p>Oxfam, which has helped more than 600,000 people snared by the crisis, is calling for a scaled-up response now—and over the long-term.</p>
<p>“Many people have lost everything due to the severity of the crisis. They have lost their livestock, their livelihoods and are now in excessive debt,” says Dawit Beyene, Oxfam America’s deputy director of humanitarian response. “We need flexible and predictable funding to support the development of national social protection systems and sustainable livelihoods, and to increase the provision of essential services to prevent future crises.”</p>
<p>In Chad, Oxfam has been helping people in the Sila and Guéra regions by distributing food and running agricultural and livelihood support projects. In Niger, the ganecy has organized the distribution of food and fodder, provided cereals at subsidized prices, distributed seeds, and bought weakened livestock from herders at above-market prices, distributing the meat for free to the poorest families. And in Mali Oxfam has been distributing food and animal feed as well.</p>
<p>&nbsp;“The situation in West Africa may seem impossibly complex and difficult to solve but if only the international community would invest in long-term predictable development work we could make sure families are a lot less vulnerable to shocks in the future,” says Raphael Sindaye, Oxfam’s deputy regional director in West Africa.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>cmccabe</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Chad</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>West Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2011-06-01T01:27:01Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/in-villages-of-niger-hunger-weakens-people-and-animals">        <title>In villages of Niger, hunger weakens people and animals</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/in-villages-of-niger-hunger-weakens-people-and-animals</link>        <description>Rains are desperately needed for farmers across the Sahel. But in some places, the rain will also make it very difficult to deliver vital aid.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p><em>Oxfam’s Kirsty Hughes, a policy and advocacy expert, reports from West Africa where a severe food crisis has gripped the Sahel. Across Niger, Mali, Chad, Burkina Faso, and northern Nigeria as many as 10 million people are now hungry or unable to get sufficient food. This is Hughes' account of what she saw in Niger, where more than half the people in the country are struggling.</em></p>
<p>We know some aid, including from Oxfam, has been getting through in recent weeks and months. But we also know the international aid effort has been too slow – funds from donors have been committed late, and aid on the ground isn’t coming through fast enough. As the people here face their toughest three months until harvest time in October, there’s a desperate need for international political engagement to ramp up the speed and the scale of the response.</p>
<p>In Niger’s capital Niamey, a gentle-seeming city of&nbsp; sandy-mud colored low houses and a population of around 800,000 people, there are few immediate signs of the food crisis. There are small food stalls along many of the tree-lined, dusty streets and the&nbsp; “petit marche” – or small market – is crammed with stalls selling food and other items. But even in the capital, many people are too poor to pay for sufficient food and the picture in the countryside is much much worse.</p>
<h3>Hunger in the countryside</h3>
<p>We&nbsp; drove two hours from Niamey, along a rough dirt track through the semi-arid, mostly flat and desolate landscape. It’s stony and sandy with a few short dry-looking trees and bushes, though some are turning green where a bit of rain has started to fall. We see painfully thin cattle, goats and donkeys, their ribs visible as we drive by. Men, women and children are hard at work in some patches of land, planting seeds by hand to take advantage of any rain that has fallen.&nbsp; It’s hard work, and often undone again by sudden harsh desert winds.</p>
<p>We stop briefly in the main town in the area, Ouallam, and talk to a serious, welcoming official there, who explains that more than 200 of the 300 or so villages in this area are facing severe food shortages. Due to the drought, thousands of animals have died or are too thin to be sold for a decent price or even to provide a good meal for the herders.</p>
<p>The situation is as bad as the deep crisis of 2005, our host tells us—and worse, even, because people have less money now than they did then. But at least speculators have not managed to drive the prices as high as they did five years ago. And, importantly, this time around the new Nigerien government has recognized the crisis and invited donors and aid organizations like Oxfam to support them in tackling the problem. Now, some aid has arrived – but much more will be needed in the coming months.</p>
<h3>Rains bring relief and new problems</h3>
<p>Driving on to the nearby village of Tondi Kiwindi, we find a small muddy river flooding the road into the village. Our driver wades across to make sure our vehicle won’t get stuck and we plow through. Tondi Kiwindi is a small community of mud-brick rectangular houses, quiet in the midday heat. The local village leader welcomes us and tells us about the difficulties here and in the surrounding villages.</p>
<p>He talks about how many animals have died, about how little food villagers have, about the difficulties of surviving the next three months until the harvest. The rains here are a month late, though further north they have started.</p>
<p>The village leader thanks us for the work we’ve done with a local aid group to buy sick and thin animals at better prices than villagers can get in the markets, and to provide animal feed and other support such as cash for work programs. He tells us that the women, especially,&nbsp; have taken advantage of the opportunity to earn some income through the programs as many of the men have migrated away to towns to look for work. They’ll return to till and plant the fields when the rains start.</p>
<p>But when the rain really comes, says our host, the river we crossed to get into the village will rise and there will be no access to the community. Can we help, he asks us.<br />&nbsp;<br />It’s a story across a lot of the region:&nbsp; rains are desperately needed to ensure a good harvest this year, but until October when the crops are ripe, rains can block access and make delivery of aid much harder or impossible. And the rains lower the temperature a little—bringing death to thousands of weakened animals.</p>
<h3>‘We are weak and dying like our animals’</h3>
<p>In a five-mile ride across the desert from Tondi Kiwindi, we come to a smaller village called Ko Kaina. The situation we find here is utterly desperate: The villagers talk to us of famine and question whether they can survive to the autumn.</p>
<p>We sit with four women who tell us they have nothing left to eat at all. They say that this year is especially bad. Last year at least the animals had enough to eat, but now the cows and goats are dead or dying. In hard times, their tradition is to share—neighbors helping neighbors—but&nbsp; now no one has anything to share.</p>
<p>“Everyone is down, down, down,” they say. “Our stomachs are empty.”</p>
<p>Their last source of food is a small, hard round green pea called&nbsp; “wanza.” It has a bitter taste, but villagers eat it when there is nothing else to consume. To find the wanza,&nbsp; the women set out from the village at 5 a.m. walking miles in their hunt. They ask me to taste one of the peas to see how bitter and sour it is; the unpleasant taste stays in my mouth for an hour. The peas first need drying in the sun then soaking several times in water before they become at all possible to digest.</p>
<p>They show us their only other food – a small bowl of cooked leaves from short small trees that grow in the dry earth nearer to the village. A woman puts a small amount in her mouth and mimics being sick, to show me how ill and malnourished they are on this diet. A short distance away, a small group of children stares at us hoping, I think, that we have brought relief. They are thin and listless.</p>
<p>The women explain that their animals have been weak and dying for months now and no longer produce milk. Some are even too thin to slaughter for food. A few days back, the women tell us, the villagers killed one weak calf before it died. They needed it for food. But four children became ill from eating the meat and had to be taken to a larger village nearby for medical attention. That cost money the families didn’t had and had to borrow—leaving them in debt, too.</p>
<p>People are so weak, the women explain to us, that after a few minutes working in the fields – vital work – they are already too tired to keep going.</p>
<p>“We are weak and dying like our animals,” they tell us.&nbsp; “If it goes on like this, some of us will die and some God will keep alive ‘til the next harvest.”<em><br /></em></p>
<p><em>Oxfam has launched an emergency program to provide support to 800,000 people across Niger, Mali, and Chad. In Niger, the organization is helping 400,000 people by distributing food and supplies to the poorest households. Oxfam is also buying weak livestock at above-market rates to help herders who need to sell some of their animals. Meat from the livestock is being distributed to some of the most vulnerable households. In Mali, the organization will help 200,000 people by distributing food as well as fodder for livestock.&nbsp; And in Chad, distributions of food and seeds are accompanying agriculture support projects, with a goal of helping 200,000 people.<br /></em></p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Kirsty Hughes</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Burkina Faso</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Chad</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Mali</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Niger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>livestock</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>water</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2010-10-01T14:25:42Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/the-tipping-point-in-guatemala">        <title>The tipping point in Guatemala</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/the-tipping-point-in-guatemala</link>        <description>In Baja Verapaz Oxfam and local partners are helping small farmers cope with a food crisis that could have been prevented.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>Siriaco Mejia is an optimist. His friend Gloria Gonzalez says he is always smiling, even when he is in trouble. He just has a positive outlook.</p>
<p>But even Mejia was unable to put a favorable spin on his situation at harvest time in late 2009: after he’d planted his corn and beans in his field high above the languid Chixoy River, now flowing at a very low level, his crops had failed, owing to lack of rain. Most years he can grow 22 quintales (about 2,200 pounds) of corn. This year, Mejia says he got about a tenth of that.</p>
<p>“We could see the corn cobs, but when we opened them up, many were totally empty,” Mejia says, standing in his field. “We got almost nothing this year.”</p>
<p>Mejia did everything he could short of making it rain, including fertilizing his field twice at great expense. But now that the 42-year-old farmer has harvested nearly everything, the field is overgrown with bright yellow weeds. Some call them flor de muerto (flower of death).</p>
<p>Mejia says at this point he is done trying to grow food and must wait for the next planting season in June 2010.</p>
<p>“We hope there will be rain,” he says. “Otherwise, we may die.”</p>
<h2>Chronic food shortage</h2>
<p>Guatemala has the highest rate of malnutrition among children under five in Latin America: nearly 50 percent, according to the World Food Program. For indigenous children the malnutrition rate is even higher: close to 70 percent. On a recent visit to Mejia’s area, Francisco Enriquez, a sustainable livelihood specialist for Oxfam in Guatemala, found that most of the families had lost between 80 and 100 percent of their crops.</p>
<p>The hills above the Chixoy River are gray and dry at harvest time, with dark rocks visible through thin soils on the exposed slopes. It’s a tough place to farm, and Mejia’s family is just one of about 350,000 families the government of Guatemala said are at risk when it declared a food emergency in September 2009. Most vulnerable are those in central Guatemela’s “dry corridor,” where Mejia lives in the department of Baja Verapaz. His village, Xinacati II, is just one of the hundreds of communities—many composed of indigenous people—that are struggling to grow enough food to survive.</p>
<p>This food shortage is occurring in a country of luxurious green that exports millions in sugar cane, pineapples, bananas, and coffee. Despite this abundance, poor Guatemalans, who are mostly indigenous Maya people, regularly face chronic food shortages. There is plenty of food in stores, but poor people can’t afford it.</p>
<p>Since the Spanish colonization of Central America, indigenous Maya people have been systematically moved off the most productive farmlands to arid areas and steep hillsides. In Mejia’s case, his community and several others were originally in the Chixoy River valley but were involuntarily relocated in the 1980s to make way for a hydroelectric dam. Most of the flattest, best land is used to grow export crops like coffee and sugar cane and, more recently, biofuel crops.</p>
<p>“The country is producing less and less corn and beans each year,” says Enriquez. He says the government “is not pushing for spending that will specifically benefit small farmers. … They need to invest in producing food; otherwise, when there is a drought or a flood, it becomes a dramatic crisis.”</p>
<p>The lack of rain in Baja Verapaz could be the type of dramatic crisis Enriquez fears.</p>
<h2>Creating options</h2>
<p>Most of the families with significant crop losses last fall have few options. In order to earn money to buy the food they need to survive, many men from communities like Xinacati II will migrate to distant coffee and sugar cane plantations, where they will work for a few months, returning occasionally to bring money to their families.</p>
<p>If things are really tough, entire families may relocate temporarily. Mejia says he can pick more coffee beans with the help of his wife and five kids than he could alone.</p>
<p>“We would like people to have more options than just migration,” says Gonzalez. Oxfam is working with the Association of Community Health Services, known by its Spanish initials ASECSA (where Gonzalez works), as well as the Training Institute for Sustainable Development, to help farmers survive the winter. They will provide seeds and tools to help families grow vegetables to improve their nutrition and they will help families with feed and veterinary care for small livestock like chickens, pigs, and ducks. Oxfam is also helping fund ASECSA’s network of health promoters to provide nutritional counseling for families with young children to reduce child malnutrition and death.</p>
<p>This project will also support a range of community improvements: paying local people to work on irrigation systems and other infrastructure to help farmers when they plant next spring; producing organic fertilizer and insecticide to save money and protect the soil; and teaching farmers about native seeds to reduce costs and increase production of corn, beans, and peanuts.</p>
<p>“These things will help people after our project is over,” says Enriquez, who has worked with the UN and Oxfam in Guatemala for 10 years. “They will be better positioned to survive another drought.” The agriculture assistance and community service activities will help nearly a thousand families. Oxfam has committed $266,000 to the project.</p>
<p>“We tried asking others for the money for this but did not get a positive response,” Gonzalez says in the ASECSA office in Rabinal, two hours by walking and driving from Xinacati II. “So it is perfect that Oxfam is working with us. We are concentrating on the worst-hit area, and if it works, we will replicate it in others.”</p>
<h2>A bad growing year</h2>
<p>Some of the factors contributing to the poor harvests in Guatemala in 2009:</p>
<ul><li>Erratic rains and higher temperatures (credited to the El Niño weather phenomenon) during the summer of 2009 reduced crop yields. </li><li>High prices for fertilizer in 2008 lowered yields, so many families ran out of food earlier in 2009. </li><li>Family members living outside the country reduced their remittances because of the global economic slowdown, so many families had less money to buy fertilizers and other inputs. </li><li>The government lacks effective policies that will help small-scale indigenous farmers improve their production. </li></ul>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>chufstader</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Guatemala</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2010-03-03T19:52:33Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfamexchange-fall-2009">        <title>OXFAMExchange Fall 2009</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/publications/oxfamexchange-fall-2009</link>        <description>Facing Down Hunger: The global food crisis one year later</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>Part of our role at Oxfam is to look hard at the face of poverty presented to the American public. Many of us were raised on images of hungry children with bellies distended by malnutrition, their eyes vast, hands extended. This was, we were told, the face of hunger.</p>
<p>But a hungry child exists in a larger context: if we nourish communities, they can nourish their own children.</p>
<p>The woman on our cover, Fatou Doumbia, and other women in her village in Mali, pooled their resources last year. They set aside nearly a ton of millet as a defense against the hunger they’d seen as food prices spiked. Hers is another face of hunger: determined, resourceful.</p>
<p>After the last harvest, Oxfam reached out to supporters to respond to the food crisis. We’ve devoted much of this issue to looking at what communities have done to avoid the kinds of hardships they confronted. When people living in poverty are hit by a food crisis or natural disaster, they lack resources to tide them over.</p>
<p>Oxfam works to help people build their resilience. Let respect and hope fuel your efforts to support women like Doumbia.</p>
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]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>csoares</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Ethiopia</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Ghana</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Horn of Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Mali</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>US Gulf Coast Recovery</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>United States</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>West Africa</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>climate change</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>community finance</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>natural resources</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>oil, gas and mining</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2010-05-17T16:33:10Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Oxfam Exchange</dc:type>    </item>
    <item rdf:about="http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/food-crisis-in-guatemala">        <title>Food crisis in Guatemala</title>        <link>http://www.oxfamamerica.org/articles/food-crisis-in-guatemala</link>        <description>Oxfam and local partners help farmers cope with crop failures, food shortages.</description>        <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>It is harvest time on the steep hills above the Chixoy river, but many families in the surrounding communities may not have enough food to last the winter.“We haven’t thought what we will do next month when we are out of food,” says Francisca Morente, 36. The family planted corn and beans twice, and both plantings largely failed, leaving her and her extended family with just a small amount of corn for the winter.</p>
<p>In a survey of the area in mid-October, Oxfam staff reported that many families had lost 80 to 100 percent of their harvest this year.</p>
<p>“There’s no food in this community,” Francisca’s aunt Margarita Rosales, 54, says.</p>
<h3>Chronic food shortage</h3>
<p>Lack of rain in Guatemala has reduced harvests this year, pushing up food prices in stores and creating a crisis in poor communities. The government declared a food emergency in September.</p>
<p>Malnutrition and chronic food shortages are not unusual in Guatemala. Lack of investment in small-scale agriculture has reduced food production over the years, and the country now has the highest rate of malnutrition among children under five in Latin America: nearly 50 percent, according to the <a class="external-link" href="http://www.wfp.org/countries/guatemala">World Food Programme</a>. The malnutrition rate for indigenous children is higher; close to 70 percent. The <a class="external-link" href="http://www.fews.net/pages/country.aspx?gb=gt&amp;l=en">Famine Early Warning System </a>warns that 350,000 families in Guatemala are at risk this year, especially in the south, east, and central regions of Guatemala’s “dry corridor."</p>
<p>Many men will finish their harvest and migrate to coffee- or sugar-cane producing parts of the country to work on large plantations to earn extra money. This year such income will be more crucial than ever, for farmers in Baja Verpaz, in central Guatemala.</p>
<p>“We would like people to have more options than just migration,” says Gloria Gonzalez, who works with the Association of Community Health Services, known by its Spanish initials ASECSA. Oxfam is working with ASECSA and the Training Institute for Sustainable Development (IEPADES) to help farmers in Baja Verapaz survive the coming winter. Oxfam is helping these organizations in the following areas.</p>
<ul><li>Family gardens: seeds and tools to help families grow winter vegetables to improve their nutrition.</li><li>Veterinary medicine and feed to raise chickens, pigs, and ducks.</li><li>Traditional agriculture: help farmers produce their own organic fertilizer and insecticides and select native seeds, to help reduce costs and increase production of corn, beans, peanuts, and other food crops.</li><li>Training health promoters to provide nutritional counseling for families with young children, to improve diets and reduce child mortality.</li><li>Community service: cash for work on local infrastructure like irrigation systems, production of organic fertilizer, and other ways to improve the community and increase the sustainability of local agriculture.</li></ul>
<p>Oxfam is committing $269,000 to the project, which will assist nearly one thousand families in Baja Verapaz.</p>
]]></content:encoded>        <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>        <dc:creator>Chris Hufstader</dc:creator>        <dc:rights></dc:rights>                    <dc:subject>Central America</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>Guatemala</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>agriculture</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>food security</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>global food crisis</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>humanitarian relief</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>hunger</dc:subject>                    <dc:subject>indigenous people</dc:subject>                <dc:date>2009-11-06T22:48:22Z</dc:date>        <dc:type>Feature Story</dc:type>    </item>



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