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 AGRICULTURE & LIVESTOCK

Locusts travel south to Somalia’s Gedo region leaving a trail of destroyed farms

Radio Ergo by Radio Ergo
January 28, 2020
in AGRICULTURE & LIVESTOCK, LATEST STORIES
0
Locusts travel south to Somalia’s Gedo region leaving a trail of destroyed farms

Sawir/Beerta Faadumo Jibriil ee deegaanka Durduri ee gobolka Sanaag/Ergo

0
SHARES
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Swarms of locusts have invaded farms and grazing land in 22 villages in southern Somalia’s Bardera district in Gedo, one of the latest regions of Somalia to be hit by the devastating insects that are still on the move.

Hassan Ali Hassan has a six-hectare farm in Laheleey village, 12 km away from Bardera, where he was just preparing to harvest his produce.

“I have planted sesame, tomatoes and onions. Millions of insects have descended on us from above and this has caused havoc in the area,” said Hassan.

Hassan relies on income from his farm to support his large family of two wives and nine children, including paying school fees for eight of his children. He fears his family might face food scarcity and his children could drop out of school.

Although aid organizations provided Hassan with sesame seeds and helped him fuel the tractors cultivating the fields, he took huge loans to advance his farm.

“I have borrowed a lot of money, around $6,000, which I used in cultivating the land, buying other seeds to plant, as well as paying the workers,” said Hassan.

Mohamed Abdirahim Gatow, the head of the farmers’ association in Bardera, said the locusts have destroyed 847 farms in the space of a week. One of the farms is his own.

Mohamed said that they have not had any help from the local administration, but the local farmers have been coming together in a desperate bid to drive away the locusts using crude methods.

“We have mobilized the local people and the youth to shoot in the air and use all means to drive them away. As the association of farmers, we have tried to help each other, we have even tried to contact other villages before the locusts reach them,” he explained.

The regional representative for agricultural affairs in Gedo region, Abdifatah Mohamed Adan, told Radio Ergo that they do not have the technical or financial capacity to control the locusts. However, he said the federal government has promised to give Gedo authority 10 tanks of pesticides to be used in Luq, Dollow and Beled-Hawo, which were the among the first hit areas in the region.

This means that Bardera, which was more recently hit, will have to wait to see if for more pesticides are made available to tackle the swarms of locusts.

Experts say this is the worst locust invasion in 60 years. Some advice given to farmers has been to dig trenches to catch and bury the crawling larvae that pose an ongoing threat as they hatch and grow.

According to FAO, 70,000 hectares of farms in Somalia and Ethiopia have been wiped off by locusts. FAO also warned that if the locusts are unchecked, their numbers across the region could multiply 500 times by June.

The locusts have invaded when people were preparing to harvest their produces after they received good rainfall in the Deyr rainy season. The farmers hope that they will recover from protracted drought.

Previous Post

Desperate Somali refugee families from Ethiopia struggle to survive in Luq

Next Post

Sand quarrying causes water crisis for Lasanod farmers and herders

Related Posts

Puntland families from remote pastoralist villages trek to Banderbeyla town seeking help
IDPS/REFUGEES

Hundreds of villagers are driven out as war in Galgadud eclipses the vulnerable

December 12, 2025
Somalia live news, Somalia latest news, Mogadishu live news, Somali news
FF Feedback

Radio Ergo audience feedback report 4-10 Dec 2025

December 12, 2025
Training and jobs in auto repairs in Baidoa help youth to escape the IDP camps
FOOD SECURITY

Training and jobs in auto repairs in Baidoa help youth to escape the IDP camps

December 10, 2025
Despair tightens grip on villagers in Togdher region as their livestock fall prey to drought
FOOD SECURITY

Despair tightens grip on villagers in Togdher region as their livestock fall prey to drought

December 9, 2025
Somali families who returned from Ethiopia face fallout from aid cuts in Gedo displacement camps
FOOD SECURITY

Somali families who returned from Ethiopia face fallout from aid cuts in Gedo displacement camps

December 8, 2025
Poor IDP women hit by ban on sale of scrap metal in Garowe
FOOD SECURITY

Poor IDP women hit by ban on sale of scrap metal in Garowe

December 6, 2025
Next Post
Sand quarrying causes water crisis for Lasanod farmers and herders

Sand quarrying causes water crisis for Lasanod farmers and herders

FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK

DAILY PROGRAMMES

IDAACADDA-19-DEC-2025

IDAACADDA-19-DEC-2025 by Radio Ergo

IDAACADDA-19-DEC-2025
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA-19-DEC-2025
December 19, 2025
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA-18-DEC-2025
December 18, 2025
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 17-DEC-2025
December 18, 2025
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 16-DEC-2025
December 16, 2025
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 15-DEC-2025
December 15, 2025
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