A historic drought is wreaking havoc on communities in the Horn of Africa.
In countries in the region like Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia, four consecutive rainy seasons have failed in the last two years – killing crops and livestock and drying up water sources. Forecasts suggest the next rains are likely to fail too.
In September, I went to northern Kenya with UNICEF to meet the people suffering from this ongoing emergency. On my last morning in Lodwar, the capital of Turkana county, I met a child in a hospital where the very worst cases of malnutrition are referred and treated. Unfortunately, this child’s family was not able to access the proper services in time for him to receive the treatment that he needed. By the time the sun set that evening, sadly, he had passed away.
I find it very hard to talk about what I experienced that day. As an activist, you speak and write constantly about the injustice of the climate emergency — the fact that the people who have done the least to create the crisis are suffering the most — but you don’t always get such a personal, heartbreaking introduction to the stakes. Yet we must talk about these more difficult stories, too, because the stakes are life and death, and this boy is the face of the climate crisis.
Africa is responsible for less than 4% of historic carbon emissions, and yet so many Africans are among the worst affected by their consequences. UNICEF’s Children’s Climate Risk Index found 1 billion children — nearly half the world’s children — live in 33 countries that are at extremely high risk from the impacts of climate change. The top 10 countries are all in Africa.
And these people are not getting the attention they deserve. The mothers I met in northern Kenya are on the frontlines of this emergency, but they are not on the front pages of the world’s newspapers.
This must change.
Almost two million more children, like that little boy, are currently at risk of severe acute malnutrition in the Horn of Africa. In Uganda, where I am from, a combination of longer droughts, rising temperatures, and more severe flooding is destroying livelihoods and disrupting food supply. Malnutrition is also rising in Pakistan, following intense heatwaves and floods this year. None of these crises are getting the attention they deserve.
In our conversations about climate justice, we need to talk about nutrition, water insecurity and other consequences of climate change that are impacting communities now. And when we talk about these issues, the people on the frontlines must be given a seat at the table and a chance to be heard.
I have had firsthand experience of feeling like my nationality and the color of my skin meant that people weren’t listening to me. It’s a horrible feeling, and it’s counter-productive to our collective mission to resolve the climate crisis.
Every activist has a story to tell, every story has a solution to offer, and every solution has a life to change. That’s why I founded the Rise Up Movement to provide a platform for activists from Africa and it’s why I’m getting behind World Children’s Day — UNICEF’s global day of action for children, by children, celebrated every year on November 20. This year, World Children’s Day is focused on equality and inclusion.