- Source: Kere (famine)
The Kere (also Kéré; from the Antandroy dialect of Malagasy, literally meaning 'starved to death') is a recurrent famine affecting Madagascar's Deep South. Since 1896, sixteen famines have been recorded. The average gap between Kere events is two years. The famine, affecting a region of approximately 50,000 square kilometres (19,000 sq mi) from the Mandrare River to the Onilahy River, kills thousands of people per year and contributes to the severe poverty of the region—97% of the territory of the Kere are classified as "very poor" by Madagascar's Institut national de la statistique. Though aid and interventions aimed at alleviating the Kere have taken place for decades, the famine has been resistant and is worsening. In the Kere zone, whose residents are called o'ndaty, non-Kere periods are called anjagne ('good' or 'peacetime').
Causes
= Raketa war and first great famine
=The cacti (Opuntia ficus-indica, O. tomentosa, O. robusta, O. monacantha, and O. vulgaris), introduced by a French count starting in 1769, had served as a famine food source and barrier to colonial control in southern Madagascar, enabling indigenous anti-colonial fighters (Sadiavahe, lit. 'loincloth made from wood-root') to resist the French for over two decades.
In the late 1920s, the spiny raketa (cactus) were decimated by cochineal insects (Dactylopius tomentosus). The cochineal effectively decimated the vegetation at a rate of 100 square kilometers per year, and by 1929 a French colonial report declared the "death of the raketa". Locals refer to the cochineal as pondifoty. Between 1930 and 1933 (or 1934), a famine unfolded that killed at least half a million people, marking the beginning of the Kere. The decimation of the raketa has been ascribed as the main cause of the famine.
It is believed that cochineal outbreak originated in November 1924, when French botanist Perrier de la Bâthie, with agreement from the governor-general Marcel Olivier, sent cochineal south to a French plantation owner to be used to clear cactus on cultivable land around Tulear which was a zone of French colonisation, but not to be used in the neighboring Androy region in the Deep South where the economy was based on indigenous subsistence. The cochineal had been introduced to the capital, Antananarivo, the year before to little effect. It is unknown whether Perrier de la Bâthie had anticipated that the cochineal would be so virulent and propagate to other regions and decimate the raketa.
According to some locals and several European writers, the French colonial authorities were actively complicit in the eradication of the raketa in the south. The accusations vary considerably. Some accuse the colonial authorities of having a lack of foresight that when the insects were released into the highlands where cactus wasn't important, they would spread south with disastrous and unforeseen consequences. On the other hand, others accuse the French colonial authorities of releasing modified cochineal insects into healthy raketa thickets in Tongobory in November 1924 as part of a broad campaign to eliminate the raketa vegetation of the Deep South to facilitate France's complete annexation of the island, and that the local administration mobilized to propagate the cochineal. Karen Middleton, writing in the Journal of Southern African Studies, states that "little if any evidence has been published to substantiate the charge". In the three decades after the famine up to independence, the colonial authorities organized the planting of Opuntia in the Deep South that was resistant to the cochineal.
The first Kere is called the Marotaolagne ('scattered human skeletons') or the Tsimivositse ('uncircumcised', since some tribal subgroups ceased the practice of circumcision to commemorate the tragedy). A 2022 study of the experiences of the people of the Kere territory quoted a participant on the legacy of the introduction of the pondifoty: "Raketa forest ... provides us with supplementary food, wood to cook and to build our house, and to feed our animals—thus, when the raketa forest died, part of us also died."
= Deforestation
=Slash-and-burn agriculture and overharvesting of charcoal and cooking wood have led to a serious crisis of deforestation in Madagascar. The land has become barren, making droughts worse and compounding seasonal famine conditions.
= Pests
=Periodic plagues of valala (Malagasy migratory locust, Locusta migratoria capito) damage crops that survive harsh climactic conditions, as do fall armyworms (Spodoptera frugiperda). Weevils and khapra beetles devastate stored food supplies and live crops.
Climate and demography
The Kere affects Madagascar's Deep South region—mostly the semiarid Mahafaly plateau, specifically the districts of Ampanihy and Betioky, and the arid sandy lands of Ambovombe, Bekily, Tsihombe, and Beloha. The affected territory experiences an annual temperature range of 22–35 °C (72–95 °F) and mean annual rainfall of 400 millimetres (16 in). Rainfall is seasonal, with up to 80 millimetres (3.1 in) a month in the rainy season of December to March, and no rainfall at all in the dry season (lasting from April to September). Dry periods that last for several years are called asaramaike ('dry rain-season').
The people living in the Kere territory are overwhelmingly poor, with 97% of the population being classified as "very poor" by Madagascar's Institut National de la Statistique. The affected region is inhabited mostly by the pastoralist Mahafaly and Antandroy peoples, as well as some Antanosy and Bara, among others. 94% of the people of the Deep South are pastoralists, mostly "subsistence peasants" who rely heavily on the forest for sustenance. Zebu cattle are highly important to the culture and economy of the region. During the Kere, cattle graze on cacti. The Kere-prone zones are hotbeds of violent crime and lawless rule by dahalo, cattle-rustling bandits.
Conditions and history
Residents of the Deep South describe the Kere as developing in four stages: the anjagne (peacetime); the period of scarcity of food for livestock and animals and abundance of food for humans; the period of scarcity of food for humans and abundance of food for livestock; the period of scarcity of food for both livestock and humans. The final stage is the deadliest form of Kere.
As people are starved by a Kere event, some may travel on foot to search for food to bring home to their families. Many of these do not return, and many who do return find their relatives deceased or their households empty. Kere survivors report walking for up to 25 kilometres (16 mi) to find water, and some, pressed by severe dehydration and desperation, drink seawater. Some consume dirty water from puddles and boreholes. Those who consume dirty water are at great risk of waterborne illness. During the first Kere, the tribal territories of the Mahafaly, Antandroy, and Antanosy peoples were filled with dead cacti, animals, and humans. Tamarind pulp mixed with ashes is a common famine food consumed during the Kere.
The durations of Kere events have varied. One event, called Baramino ('Digging Bar') in 1997, was felt for less than a year. Kere survivors divide historical Kere events into the categories of "ancient" (pre-1993) and recent (post-1993), with ancient Kere being generally considered more severe among locals. Kere have names; due to low rates of literacy in the region, these names are used instead of years.
= 2021–2022 Kere
=A Kere affecting the Deep South from 2021 to 2022 was Madagascar's worst drought in 40 years. In 2020, UNICEF had expressed early concerns about malnutrition in Madagascar, estimating that 42% of children under the age of five suffered from malnourishment. A World Food Programme (WFP) official said in June 2021 that the situation was the second-worst food crisis he had seen in his life after the 1998 famine in Bahr el Ghazal, in present-day South Sudan.
By late June 2021, the WFP reported that 75% of children had abandoned school and were begging or foraging for food. Intense dust storms were further aggravating the circumstances. Humanitarian agencies also warned of water shortages. A water pipeline opened in 2019 (a joint venture of UNICEF and the government of Madagascar) did not reach far enough to provide fresh water to some parts of the south, forcing residents (mainly women) to travel more than 15 kilometers to seek water.
The WFP reported on 23 June 2021 that people were eating mud and warned that millions would be affected by famine if action was not taken.
On 30 June 2021, the WFP warned that a "biblical" famine was approaching in several African countries, especially in Madagascar. Reports of people eating raw red cactus fruits, wild leaves and locusts for months also arose. In July 2021, UK-based organization SEED Madagascar reported that people were eating "cactuses, swamp plants, and insects", while also reporting that mothers were mixing clay and fruits to feed their families. Evidence of swollen stomachs and physically stunted children were also reported by the organization as symptoms of chronic malnutrition.
In July 2021, local media reported that out of the 2.5 million people who live in the southern districts of Madagascar, around 1.2 million were already suffering from food insecurity, while another 400,000, were in a critical situation of famine, citing concerns equal to international organizations such as climate change, COVID-19 and political instability in the country.
On 14 July 2021, a government report was issued, stating that the rate of chronic malnutrition was in decline. By late July 2021, however, the situation was described as "famine" by Al Jazeera and Time magazine.
Time magazine quoted executive director of the WFP David Beasley as describing the crisis as the first "climate change-caused" famine in modern history. In August 2021, the food crisis was declared by the WFP to be the first famine caused by climate change and not conflict, though this declaration was contradicted by a study released December 2021 by World Weather Attribution.
Impact
Each Kere event has killed thousands and sparked mass migrations out of the Deep South. In 1972, a "bloody secessionist rebellion" called the rotaka followed a Kere event in the south, in part due to perceived insensitivity and apathy from Madagascar's central government to the plight of the southerners. Residents of the Kere zone report a breakdown of the social fabric of their communities in times of Kere, pointing to increased youth banditry and sex work. Kere events are associated with mass migration as residents flee the famine and outbreaks of dahalo crime. The first Kere cut the population of the Deep South in half, and 15% of survivors migrated from the region.
Aid and response
The first emergency management response and international aid program for the Kere was prompted by the "SOS Sud" Kere event of 1993. The Malagasy government, led by then-president Albert Zafy, organized a telethon to bring aid to the starving. In late 2020 the Malagasy Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development and the United Nations Development Programme launched a Green Climate Fund–financed readiness program for climate change–influenced Kere conditions, called Medium term planning for adaptation in climate sensitive sectors in Madagascar. The program had a budget of $1.3 million.
= 2021–2022 famine
=In June 2021, UNICEF initiated a "Tosika Kere" cash transfer (fiavota) program to aid o’ndaty (inhabitants of the Deep South) affected by the 2021–2022 Kere.
The government of President Andry Rajoelina received backlash over the famine. Rajoelina called for a "radical and lasting change" during a summit of the International Development Association in Abidjan, in Ivory Coast. He criticized those who cause climate change by saying that "my compatriots in the South are suffering a heavy toll from the climate crisis in which they did not participate." He promised more help to the south and empowerment of women.
In late July 2021, the U.S. embassy further expanded its aid through USAID to more than 100,000 people in the south, providing food to children and pregnant women facing malnutrition. In late August 2021, United Nations coordinator Issa Sanogo warned that the situation was still critical and that a further 500,000 children are at risk in the near future. In October 2022, UNICEF contributed $23 million for children suffering from the famine.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kere (famine)
- 2021–2022 Madagascar famine
- Kere
- Androy
- List of famines
- Jainism in Karnataka
- List of famines in the 21st Century
- Puebloans
- Krishna Raja Sagara
- Sringeri