El Nino drought forces African children out of school and into child labour or early marriage
Child labour
A girl tries to collect water from a puddle in Nongoma, South Africa
Tens of thousands of children across southern Africa are being pushed out of school and into early marriage or child labour because of drought and hunger caused by the El Nino weather pattern, charities have said.
Southern Africa has been hard hit over the past year by anEl Nino-inspired drought that has wilted crops, slowed economicgrowth and driven food prices higher.
Increased numbers of children are trading sex and doingdomestic work to survive across nine countries, a said.
“El Nino’s impacts are worsening the lives of children in anumber of areas with many facing sexual exploitation, violence,child labour and psychosocial distress,” World Vision UK’s childrights expert Tracy Shields said in a statement.
Children have become separated from their families as theyleave home to find work or food, the report said.
Our report reveals “sting in the tail” of El Nino as school dropout rates soar Millions need help in coming months
— World Vision UK (@WorldVisionUK)
More than 60 million people, two-thirds of them in east andsouthern Africa, are facing food shortages because of droughtslinked to El Nino, a warming of sea-surface temperatures in thePacific Ocean, according to the United Nations.
The arrival of La Nina, a weather pattern which usuallybringing floods to southern Africa, could worsen the situation,the UN has said. Meteorologists predict a 50% to 75% chance of La Ninadeveloping in the second half of this year.
Lesotho, Malawi, Namibia, Swaziland and Zimbabwe havedeclared national drought emergencies.
South Africa has declared a drought emergency in eight ofthe country’s nine provinces, while Mozambique has declared analert for some southern and central areas.
Southern Africa has a three-month window of opportunitybefore the 2016-17 planting season, to take urgent measures toprevent millions of rural families becoming dependent onhumanitarian assistance in 2018, the UN has said.
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