Open this photo in gallery In Mozambique's Cabo Delgado province, as in other parts of Southern Africa, extreme weather threatens to disrupt the supply and price of produce for millions who already struggle with extreme poverty and economic inequality. Miriam Mannak/The Globe and Mail

Eight months after the cyclone, Oscar Eugenio is still on the precarious edge of disaster. “Some days we have food,” he says. “And some days we do not.”

His small farm in northern Mozambique was among the thousands destroyed by the two devastating cyclones that hammered the country within the space of a few weeks – an unprecedented phenomenon that has been blamed on climate change.

“We lost everything,” he says. “Our crops were destroyed. Our family grew hungry.”

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Now he is among the estimated 45 million people in Southern Africa who will face severe food shortages over the next few months as a result of extreme weather: drought, flooding, fierce storms, late rainfall, rising food prices and other threats.

More than 11 million people are already suffering emergency levels of food shortages in nine Southern African countries, according to data from United Nations food agencies. Many regions of those countries are enduring their worst drought in 35 years, the organizations say.

Open this photo in gallery Farmer Oscar Eugenio and his family's crops were destroyed by two successive cyclones eight months ago in Mozambique, one of several African nations soon to face severe food shortages. Miriam Mannak/The Globe and Mail



FOOD SECURITY IN SOUTHERN AFRICA SEVERITY OF FOOD EMERGENCY 1: Minimal 2: Stressed 3: Crisis 4: Emergency 5: Catastrophe/Famine Not classified /no data available TANZANIA ZAMBIA MALAWI ANGOLA MOZAMBIQUE ZIMBABWE NAMIBIA MADAGASCAR BOTSWANA ESWATINI SOUTH AFRICA LESOTHO SOURCE: UNITED NATIONS OFFICE FOR THE COORDINATION OF HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS FOOD SECURITY IN SOUTHERN AFRICA SEVERITY OF FOOD EMERGENCY 1: Minimal 2: Stressed 3: Crisis 4: Emergency 5: Catastrophe/Famine Not classified /no data available TANZANIA ZAMBIA MALAWI ANGOLA MOZAMBIQUE ZIMBABWE NAMIBIA MADAGASCAR BOTSWANA ESWATINI SOUTH AFRICA LESOTHO SOURCE: UNITED NATIONS OFFICE FOR THE COORDINATION OF HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS FOOD SECURITY IN SOUTHERN AFRICA DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO TANZANIA MALAWI ANGOLA 1.1m ZAMBIA COMOROS 1.1m 2.2m MOZAMBIQUE MADAGASCAR ZIMBABWE 2.0m 3.6m NAMIBIA 916k 38k BOTSWANA 290k ESWATINI 232k SEVERITY OF FOOD EMERGENCY SOUTH AFRICA 1: Minimal 2: Stressed LESOTHO 3: Crisis 433k 4: Emergency 5: Catastrophe/Famine Not classified /no data available Number of food insecure people XX SOURCE: UNITED NATIONS OFFICE FOR THE COORDINATION OF HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS

The crisis in Southern Africa is just one of several emergencies across the continent. Countries such as Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia and South Sudan have been hit by the double disaster of drought and flooding. In South Sudan, about 5.5 million people – nearly half of the population – are forecast to be facing hunger and the risk of famine in early 2020 as a result of flooding and drought, UN agencies say.

Southern Africa is going through some of the worst climate shocks on the continent. Severe drought, the second in three years, is hitting much of the region. The drought, combined with hyperinflation and economic mismanagement, has pushed Zimbabwe toward the risk of “man-made starvation,” a UN investigator has warned. Water levels in the Kariba Dam have sunk to such dangerously low levels that Zambia has been forced to impose power cuts. Cattle herds – along with elephants and other wild animals – have been dying in huge numbers in Namibia.

“This year’s drought is unprecedented, causing food shortages on a scale we have never seen here before,” said a statement by Michael Charles, head of the International Red Cross Federation in Southern Africa.

“We are seeing people going two to three days without food, entire herds of livestock wiped out by drought and small-scale farmers with no means to earn money to tide them over a lean season.”

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Open this photo in gallery This is what one community in Cabo Delgado's Macomia district looked like on April 27 after a cyclone hit. OCHA/Saviano Abreu/via REUTERS

Open this photo in gallery Farmers in Cabo Delgado, like many across Southern Africa, have had mostly lean harvests since 2012. Climate change has already altered rainfall patterns across the region. Miriam Mannak/The Globe and Mail

As the drought expands, the link to climate change has become increasingly clear. Southern Africa’s temperatures are rising at twice the global average, the UN says, and the region includes many of the African countries that are considered to be the most vulnerable to climate change. Since 2012, the region has had only two favourable harvests. Rainfall is projected to be below-average over the next three months.

“With the region so prone to shocks and afflicted by high rates of chronic hunger, inequality and structural poverty, climate change is an existential emergency which must be tackled with utmost urgency,” said a statement by Robson Mutandi, the Southern Africa director for the International Fund for Agricultural Development, a UN agency.

In Mozambique, one of the countries at greatest risk from climate change, nearly two million people will need food assistance over the next several months, the government says.

Cabo Delgado, the northeastern province of Mozambique, was hit last April by Cyclone Kenneth – the strongest cyclone ever to hit the African continent, with wind gusts of up to 220 kilometres an hour.

But the province is also in the grip of a violent insurgency that has killed hundreds of people and forced about 65,000 people to flee their homes.

“People have the double impact of the armed violence and the cyclone,” said Patricia Danzi, the Africa regional director for the International Committee of the Red Cross. “They have to rebuild their lives twice.”

Open this photo in gallery A bed lies in a destroyed house after an attack on the village of Aldeia da Paz outside Macomia, on Aug. 24. For nearly two years, a faceless Islamist group that has been sowing death and terror throughout the north of the country. MARCO LONGARI/AFP/Getty Images

Open this photo in gallery The insurgency and the prospect of future droughts weigh heavily on the farmers of Cabo Delgado. Miriam Mannak/The Globe and Mail

Mr. Eugenio is rebuilding the mud-walled buildings on his farm in Cabo Delgado, but the biggest blow was the loss of his cash crop, sesame, which he would normally sell to generate income for his family. Without any sesame crop, he survives by doing part-time labour on nearby farms, in exchange for a few kilograms of maize and beans.

But it’s not enough. On some days, he and his wife and four children have only cassava to eat, a low-protein food that has to be stretched out over the whole day.

He managed to get a small harvest from a few fields in October, but he can’t even estimate its size. “Every day we had to eat some of it,” he says.

“We haven’t recovered from the cyclone. We are still suffering today.”

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