Radio Ergo - Somali Humanitarian News and Information
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Latest Stories
    • IDPS/Refugees
    • Natural Disasters
    • Health
    • Social
    • Food Security
    • Education
    • Agriculture & Livestock
  • Programmes
    • Locust Programme
    • Farming Programme
    • Radio Doctor Programme
    • Women Programme
    • Entertainment Programme
  • About Radio Ergo
  • Contact Us
  • blankSomali
  • blankEnglish
No Result
View All Result
Radio Ergo - Somali Humanitarian News and Information
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Latest Stories
    • IDPS/Refugees
    • Natural Disasters
    • Health
    • Social
    • Food Security
    • Education
    • Agriculture & Livestock
  • Programmes
    • Locust Programme
    • Farming Programme
    • Radio Doctor Programme
    • Women Programme
    • Entertainment Programme
  • About Radio Ergo
  • Contact Us
  • blankSomali
  • blankEnglish
No Result
View All Result
Radio Ergo - Somali Humanitarian News and Information
Home LATEST STORIES

Somali farmers in Afmadow reduced by drought to menial jobs

Radio Ergo by Radio Ergo
September 18, 2019
in LATEST STORIES, SOCIAL
0
blank

File photo/Ergo

0
SHARES
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

(ERGO) – Ismail Mohamed Shangolow used to keep livestock and grow crops on his six-hectare farm in Afmadow, in southern Somalia’s Lower Juba region. But following consecutive failed rains, he has been reduced to working as a middleman in a local livestock market trying to scrape together a living for his family.

“I help relatives bringing their livestock to the market to make a sale. If they sell animals, I ask them to give me something. I have no livelihood any more to support my family,” Ismail told Radio Ergo.

If he is lucky, he can make $5-6 a day, which cannot compare to the earnings he made from his maize, millet, and beans when the rain-fed harvests were good.

He has felt the humiliation of losing his livelihood. In August, five of his children including one in secondary school were sent home because the school fees had not been paid. He could not raise the $57 a month for their education with such a menial job.

His pleas to the school administration to be able to pay later were not heeded. The family’s last 20 bags of beans and maize saved from the last harvest they had were finished in May.

“I have no more cattle and no relatives abroad. All I was depending on was what I got from my farm. In recent years, farm production has become very hard,” Ismail said.

Adar Hussein Ahmed, a mother of six, grew vegetables and other crops on her farm until last year when everything failed. The family is now living on the food they were given by a kind neighbour earlier this month.

“I received 25kg of sugar, rice, flour, and three litres of oil,” Adar said. “I used to grow my own green peppers, tomatoes, and maize during the rainy season. After harvesting we always had something to survive on, I used to sell some and keep some food for our own consumption.”

Khalif Ali Sahil, an agro-pastoralist, has only 40 goats left and fears he might have to sell them one by one to keep the family alive. Over the last month alone, he as sold five goats to support his family. He can no longer afford the school fees of $74 per month for his six children.

“When I harvested from my own farm, my children used to have three meals a day. Now they only get breakfast and supper,” Khalif said wistfully.

Raghe Mohamed Hassan, a representative of Jubbaland’s agriculture ministry in Afmadow, described farmers in the town as in a desperate situation after consecutive failed rains. A stream flowing from neighbouring Kenya has also dried up due to drought across the border.

“People planted their farms and when the crops were at mid-level, they shrivelled up becoming like dried grass. The farms failed and the farmers faced food shortage. People are turning to menial work like portering, some have started work on construction sites and others are jobless,” he said.

Raghe said the ministry has requested aid agencies to help with seeds for planting next season, as well as cash and agricultural inputs.

According to Afmadow Farmers’ Association, over 600 farmers in the town have been affected by the drought..

 

 

 

Previous Post

Girls outnumbering boys in some schools in central Somalia’s Mudug region

Next Post

Somalia’s regional states now issuing school certificates

Related Posts

Airstrikes wipe out livelihoods in Lower Shabelle farming village
FOOD SECURITY

Airstrikes wipe out livelihoods in Lower Shabelle farming village

April 17, 2026
Somalia live news, Somalia latest news, Mogadishu live news, Somali news
FF Feedback

Radio Ergo audience feedback report 9-15 March 2026

April 17, 2026
Hard-up Awdal farmers turn to gold digging
FOOD SECURITY

Jobless men turn to gold mining in Sanag region

April 16, 2026
Marginalised families in Puntland displacement camps face hunger, discrimination and neglect
FOOD SECURITY

Selling thatching grass in Bari valley provides new income for drought-hit families

April 15, 2026
School closes as UNICEF cuts funding leaving IDP children in Baidoa out of education
EDUCATION

Schools close across Galmudug due to drought

April 14, 2026
Drought-hit Lower Juba pastoralists flee towards the Somali-Kenyan border
IDPS/REFUGEES

Drought-hit Lower Juba pastoralists flee towards the Somali-Kenyan border

April 13, 2026
Next Post
Somalia’s regional states now issuing school certificates

Somalia’s regional states now issuing school certificates

FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK

DAILY PROGRAMMES

IDAACADDA 17-APR-2026

IDAACADDA 17-APR-2026 by Radio Ergo

IDAACADDA 17-APR-2026
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 17-APR-2026
April 17, 2026
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 16-APR-2026
April 16, 2026
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 15-APR-2026
April 15, 2026
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 14-APR-2026
April 14, 2026
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 13-APR-2026
April 13, 2026
Search Results placeholder
Radio Ergo Weekly Newsletter
We respect your privacy.
blank
blank
blank

© Copyright 2014 - 2024 Radio Ergo

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Latest Stories
    • IDPS/Refugees
    • Natural Disasters
    • Health
    • Social
    • Food Security
    • Education
    • Agriculture & Livestock
  • Programmes
    • Locust Programme
    • Farming Programme
    • Radio Doctor Programme
    • Women Programme
    • Entertainment Programme
  • About Radio Ergo
  • Contact Us
  • blankSomali
  • blankEnglish

© Copyright 2014 - 2024 Radio Ergo