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Locusts threaten Eritrea, Sudan, Somaliland

ISSUE 271
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EU Delegation Secures The Release Of Haatuf Journalists

Noteworthy Historical Facts Challenging Blair’s Perception Of So-Called ‘Somali Territorial Integrity’

Ethiopian Helicopter Shot Down In Mogadishu

SOPRI Press Release: 2006 Somaliland Conference In Arlington Now Available In DVD

Somali Clan Releases Prisoners In Peace Gesture

Illegal arms trafficking deepens Kenyan fears of insecurity

Congo struggles to emerge from free fall

Young Mujahideen Movement in Somalia Issues Statement and Video of Suicide Bombing in Mogadishu in Revenge for Somali Muslim Woman

Mission Report on the Trial Observation of Detained Human Rights Defenders
in Somaliland

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U.S. Citizen Imprisoned Without Charges In Ethiopia Says He Was In An Al Qaida Camp In Somalia, But Was Never A Fighter

De-Traumatizing The Mind

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Blair sharpens tone over 15 Britons held in Iran

200th Anniversary Of Slave Trade Abolition

Swedish Girl Released After Somali War Arrest

Salvaging Security in Somalia

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Abdillahi Yusuf Fulfills The Age Old
Ethiopian Grandiose Strategy Against Somalia

Simple Dreams For Somali Teen

Ink in His Veins and Somalia in His Heart

Analysis: Clan Rivalry Threatens Somali Reconciliation Efforts

Finding their footing in a new land

Uganda Commander in Somalia Urges Speedy Deployment of More Troops

Food for thought

Opinions

Re-Integrating Somaliland & Somalia In The Community Of Nations

Imagine Somaliland As Offshoot Republic Of China In Africa!

Somaliland May Be Teetering Toward Failure

Following The Barre’s Footprints

Freedom Is In Jail, Not The Haatuf Journalists

Mr President, thank you for heeding nation's concerns

Petition For Impeachment Of Dahir Rayale Kahin

 

23 March - Eritrea, Sudan and Somaliland are strongly advised to carefully monitor "a developing and potentially dangerous situation" arising from second-generation locust infestations that are now developing, according to the latest UN update on of the crop-devouring insects.

"There have been several new developments in the past few days in three key areas," UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said, noting that the second-generation infestations from an outbreak in Eritrea in December are now concentrating in a 60 kilometres by 60 kilometres area on the Red Sea coast straddling the Sudanese-Eritrean border.

Late instar hopper bands and newly fledged adults are present in pearl millet crops in wadis - dry river beds - and in natural vegetation on the coastal plains. "Within a week, the majority of these populations will become adults and form small immature swarms," FAO warns.

As vegetation is drying out on the Red Sea coast, the swarms were likely to move further north along the coast in Sudan as well as west into the Eritrean highlands, the UN agency warned.

Ground control operations were in progress in both countries and were to be supplemented by aerial operations, expected to start this week, "to try to reduce the scale of the expected migration," according to FAO.

As a result of good rainfall and breeding during the past few months, small hopper bands are also present in the Silil area in the Awdal region of Somaliland near Djibouti. Somaliland is a self-declared independent republic in what used to be north-western Somalia.

According to FAO, "a few small immature swarms have already formed and more are expected in the coming weeks." The UN agency especially sees Somaliland threatened by a possible locust infection.

"These swarms could move in any direction – up the escarpment towards the Ethiopian border, northwest towards the Eritrean highlands, east along the coast, across the Gulf of Aden to southern Yemen, or simply stay on the coast and eventually breed once the long rains commence," FAO added.

"Vigilance is critical, particularly on the Red Sea coastal plains," FAO already warned in end-February. When vegetation begins to dry out, these locusts may form hopper bands and swarms that could move to neighbouring countries," FAO expert Keith Cressman explained. Since then, little more than vigilance by FAO experts has been done, leaving the locusts to develop into a threat.

Source: afrol News

 


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