Fearing
disease, Kenyans burn animal carcasses as drought
deepens
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[March 23, 2017] By
Goran Tomasevic
LOIYANGALANI, Kenya (Reuters) - Villagers
in northern Kenya have begun to burn piles of animal carcases, hoping to
head off an outbreak of disease as their livestock starve to death in
the region's worst drought in five years.
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The smell of death hangs heavily over Lake Turkana and dried animal
corpses dot the cracked mud where the lake has receded, leaving
boats stranded on the dry land.
Nomadic communities store their savings in animals rather than banks
and each carcass is a major loss.
The Kenyan government said 2.7 million people are affected by the
drought. It estimates 20 percent of livestock has died in the arid
and semi-arid counties, an area comprising about 80 percent of
Kenya's landmass.
"It is the worst drought since 2011," said James Oduor, head of
Kenya's National Drought Management Authority.
The government is running a "destocking" program, which pays herders
for animals they would struggle to sell. It pays 2,000 Kenya
shillings ($20) for a goat or a sheep, and 15,000 Ksh for a cow.
That's half of the price of a healthy animal.
"If they are in good condition, they can be moved to graze
elsewhere. When they cannot be moved, the animal is slaughtered so
the community can benefit from more food," said Oduor.
Villager Lokuukwi Achembe said his village lost around 2,000 goats.
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"This is our food and our way of living," he said sadly.
On the southern short of Lake Turkana, famed for the harsh beauty of
its landscape, residents are burning carcasses to stop the bodies
from infecting water supplies if the rains come.
Village elder Lowake Alishu said, "We are collecting the goats
around the manyatta (group of thatched huts) to stop the spreading
of disease."
(Additional reporting by Katharine Houreld; Writing by Katharine
Houreld; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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