Wednesday, 24 August 2011

Google Nairobi agree to support emergency veterinary campaign

The RVC has been working with Imperial College, Google. VetAid Kenya and the FAO on using mobile phones for disease surveillance in East Africa. Using an open source application,  EpiCollect, developed by Imperial College we have been able to accurately map where and when animals have been treated or vaccinated in the most remote areas. This allows accurate monitoring of the coverage of vaccination campaigns and helps in predicting future disease risks.

The current terrible drought in East Africa has not only affected millions of people but it has decimated livestock herds on which the pastoralists depend. In the face of this crisis, VetAid a small Kenyan veterinary NGO, has started to use mobiles in the field as part of their emergency response. This allows them to feed back to the coordinating centre what is happening in the field - this is important information for governments and donor agencies too. Significantly it is also possible for the general public and individual donors to log onto a Google map and see exactly where there funding is being used.

This exciting development is now being assisted by Google Kenya who yesterday offered logistical and training support for the deployment of the application and assistance with visualising data. Google.org have also been helping by encouraging Google staff to donate their old Android handsets which are then donated to vets in Kenya working in the field.

So perhaps something good can come out of all the current suffering in East Africa which will help future generations better prepare and respond to disasters.

Tuesday, 23 August 2011

FAO Media Centre: Rome emergency meeting rallies to aid Horn of Africa

The meeting agreed that governments of the six countries hit by the crisis would manage the response to the crisis, informed by the Inter-Agency Standing Committee's (IASC) Horn of Africa Plan of Action.

The meeting stressed that there is still a "window of opportunity" to support affected populations to resume their livelihoods and to enable farmers, fishers and herders to help themselves through these times of crisis within their own communities and emphasised that displacement of populations should be avoided as far as possible.

Specifically, support should be given to pastoralists and agropastoralists, who constitute a dynamic and sustainable livelihood system in the region, the meeting agreed
. At the same time, however, it was recognized that the mobility of pastoralists and their livestock within countries and across borders was essential for saving lives and preserving the foundations of food and nutrition security. 

FAO Media Centre: Rome emergency meeting rallies to aid Horn of Africa

Thursday, 11 August 2011

Photos of drought affected livestock

These photos were taken in the Tana River area by Vetaid in the last few days. They show some of the cattle that have moved down to this area from the North East of Kenya.

From the pictures it is possible to see that some grazing remains and recent rains mean that there will be food for these starving animals. However, the next risk they will face is diseases arising from the stress of trekking long distances in poor condition and then moving into areas where they have no immunity to the local diseases. This includes TseTse fly transmitted trypanosomiasis which is common in the delta, infectious epidemic diseases such as CBPP (cattle) and CCPP and PPR (small stock) and parasitic diseases such as liver fluke.






Drought in Kenya - Oxfam Report


Wednesday, 3 August 2011

VETAID East Africa: Drought Response Appeal; Web Review

Overview

  • More than 10 million people in East Africa are facing desperate food shortages following the worst drought in 60 years1
  • While there have been 28 droughts in the area over the past century, four have struck in the past decade alone, causing significant animal loss2  
  • As of the July 1st 2011  in some parts of Kenya and Ethiopia, at least 60 percent of the herds have perished3
  • Livestock prices have dropped from Ksh. 6110 in April 2011 to the current Ksh.5000 for a mature bull together with increased migration with over  50-60km covered against the pre-drought distance of 8-12kms4
  • In some areas of northern Kenya and southern Somalia, rainfall was less than 30 percent of the 1995-2010 average5
  • ‘30 per cent of the 600,000 cows in Garissa County have been swept by drought’ with goats and camels similarly affected, resulting in many of these former livestock owners roaming the streets of North Eastern urban areas.6
  • Pastoralists in Marsabit keep more than 2 million cows, camels, goats and sheep, worth an estimated $67m
  • Thomas Bett, district officer for Wajir East, talks of using solar and wind power to draw water for irrigation. "Lots of people have dropped out of pastoralism for good and there is nothing else for them to do in the settlements in the desert,"7
  • In East Africa in 2008 it was reported that pastoralists occupied 70% of the land in Kenya. Although numerically populations were small 1.5 Million of Kenya’s 30 million population.8
1. http://www.oxfam.org.uk/oxfam_in_action/emergencies/east-africa-drought-2011.html#
2.http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/jan/22/kenya-drought-insurance

Click Here For More Current Analysis and Background Data

Livestock Emergency Guidelines



3-minute introduction to the Livestock Emergency Guidelines and Standards

Tuesday, 2 August 2011

VETAID and RVC response to drought in East Africa


Context : The Regional Disaster

The drought situation in North Eastern Kenya and other marginal agriculture areas is becoming increasingly serious, with the poor 2010 short rains contributing to an acute food and livelihood crisis as early as January 2011. This situation has been further exacerbated by the poor performance of the long rains through April, May, June and July 2011 and, based on the seasonal forecast for August and beyond has now deteriorated into a humanitarian emergency way before the onset of the short rains (expected in October).

The President of Kenya declared the current drought a national disaster in his speech to the nation in late May 2011. This is in the midst of an inflation rate of 14% which is the highest in two years and likely to continue increasing (OCHA, May 2011). Food prices have shot up drastically to unprecedented levels with maize prices rising sharply to 30-60 percent above the 5 year average in the pastoral and agro-pastoral areas.

Most of the people worst affected by the drought are traditionally pastoralists who traditionally rely on keeping livestock for their livelihood. However their animals have also been badly hit by the disaster with starvation, disease and death commonplace. Many of their best breeding animals are dying and so regenerating the herds after the worst of the drought and restoring pastoral livelihoods will be impossible.

In the North Eastern Province, where the drought is most severe, the main coping mechanisms for pastoralists is to move their livestock southwards to the Tana River delta, Galana Ranch and Mwingi District and Tsavo East National Park. To date, over one million head of livestock have moved into the Tana River Country in search of better pastures whilst other herds have moved to the Galana Ranch and Tsavo East National Park.

Conflicts over access to grazing between the pastoral communities from the north and the resident farming communities along the river are on the rise. Livestock diseases such as Peste des Petits Ruminants (PPR), Contagious Caprine Pleuropneumonia (CCPP), Mange, Foot and Mouth Disease, and other notifiable diseases may occur, thus depleting further the pastoral assets and constraining their livelihoods. Note: a PPR outbreak has already been reported in Isiolo.


Response to Emergency 

Kenya has not seen an emergency of this magnitude before and the Government, NGOs and international agencies (including the UK Department for International Development and the Disaster Emergency Committee) have moved quickly to raise funds to provide food, water and shelter for those worst affected by the disaster. Whilst these short term measures are clearly a crucial initial response to save lives, there is a longer concern about whether people who have moved to the massive emergency refugees camps will ever be able to return to their pastoral livelihoods.

One area that Kenyan and international organisations have been struggling with is how to maintain a breeding nucleus of cattle and goats on an increasingly limited food resource. One response that the government and NGOs such as Oxfam is trying is de-stocking the livestock commercially and through slaughter for food/meat distribution. However, it has always been difficult to convince e pastoralists to give up their animals especially when they are little more than skin and bones with no monetary value.

One option that does offer some hope is to protect livestock herds that have moved into areas with better pastures still persist such as the South East of the country around the Tana River. By providing some grazing and additional forage supplies it may be possible to keep some of these animals alive until the new rains come further North. However, there are many challenges including the risk of disease outbreaks in animals which are already weak and whose immune status is poor and the movement and clustering of animals makes disease transmission more likely. In addition there are endemic diseases such as trypanosomiasis which incoming livestock will have no resistance to.

In order to try and assist the pastoralists who have managed to move their stock south, a number of organisations have set up an emergency veterinary response. One of these, VETAID Kenya, is a local East African NGO which has been working in the region for over 20 years providing veterinary support for pastoralists. As a Kenyan organisation Vetaid has the particular advantage that it is able to mobilise veterinary teams rapidly and deliver effective interventions in the field. It also works closely with the FAO, Ministry of Livestock and other veterinary partners (Veterinaires Sans Frontieres (VSF) - Belgium, VSF-Suisse, and VSF-Germany) to try and protect these herds.


Proposed intervention

VETAID Kenya is already working in the affected areas providing the following support for pastoralists and their livestock:

1. De-worming of stock within the Tana River delta to reduce parasite burdens and minimize nutritional stress

2. Vaccination against PPR, CCPP, sheep and goats pox, enterotoxaemia, Blackquarter, anthrax and CBPP

3. Providing pour-ons to control Tsetse flies and protect against Trypanosomiasis

4. Promoting de-stocking for food by purchasing livestock in good condition, slaughter and distribution of the meat to the communities

The approaches are already providing of benefit to the small number of pastoralists who have been reached. It is proposed to expand these activities to benefit a far larger number of livestock in the coming 6 months.

Further information

Local contact : Dr Gabriel Turhasa, Vetaid Kenya (vetaidtz@gmail.com)

UK contact : Nick Short, RVC, London (nshort@rvc.ac.uk)