Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Millions Starve as Ethiopia Rejects Aid Through Eritrean Ports
Thomas C. Mountain
06 Apr 2016
🖨️ Print Article

by Thomas C. Mountain

Ethiopians faces mass starvation. Drought is the immediate cause of the catastrophe, but the ruling minority regime has exacerbated the crisis by refusing to take up neighboring Eritrea’s offer of free use of its ports, to receive needed foodstuffs. “What kind of government sits back and allows tens if not hundreds of thousands of its own people to die of starvation because of some political dispute with its neighbor?”

Millions Starve as Ethiopia Rejects Aid Through Eritrean Ports

by Thomas C. Mountain

“Only Ethiopia is allowed to get away with deliberately starving its own citizens.”

As famine stalks millions of Ethiopians, and aid ships wait forever to unload at Ethiopia’s port of Djibouti, offers of free use of Eritrea’s Red Sea ports fall on deaf ears in Addis Ababa.

According to Oxfam between 50% to 90% of Ethiopia suffered all or major crop failure due to the latest, greatest drought (this is just a guess because Oxfam isn't allowed access to most of Ethiopia). Millions upon millions have now exhausted their food stocks and major starvation has begun.

Desperate for food aid to be unloaded, aid agencies are begging the Djibouti port authorities to work faster, but the port of Djibouti is small and creaky and completely unable to keep up with the desperate need.

Enter Eritrea, home to not one but two ports on the Red Sea, with the southern and larger of the two, Assab, having been given a major upgrade by the Emirates this past year.

All backlog of food aid would be cleared up quickly if Ethiopia will only use the Eritrean ports, an offer repeatedly made in the past during droughts to no avail.

“The port of Djibouti is small and creaky and completely unable to keep up with the desperate need.”

The question has to be asked, what kind of government sits back and allows tens if not hundreds of thousands of its own people to die of starvation because of some political dispute with its neighbor?

Only Ethiopia is allowed to get away with deliberately starving its own citizens, for there is supposed to be enough food aid in the pipeline to prevent the worst of the famine and only the shortage of port facilities in Djibouti is preventing its distribution.

Why isn't the USA and its lickspittles in the EU pressuring the Ethiopians, who are supposed to be under UN Article 7 Sanctions for their refusal to accept final and binding peace and border agreements, and entirely dependent on foreign loans to keep running ($11 billion in 2015)?

The politics of famine is what it’s all about as death from starvation stalks Ethiopia, again.

Thomas C. Mountain is an independent journalist living and reporting from Eritrea since 2006. He can be reached on Facebook at thomascmountain, on twitter @thomascmountain or thomascmountain at gmail dot com

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
    DEI (Drunk, Epicurean, Incompetent) War Criminals (Nod to Allen)
    02 Apr 2025
    "DEI (Drunk, Epicurean, Incompetent) War Criminals" is the latest from BAR's Poet-in-Residence.
  • Krys Cerisier
    U.S. Escalates Tension with Panama as the Panamanian Government Cracks Down on Domestic Protest
    02 Apr 2025
    U.S. influence over Panama has steadily increased over the years due to the active pressure from instruments like SOUTHCOM. The country seems to be headed toward a repeat of its colonial past as the…
  • Palestine Chronicle Staff
    ICRC, PRCS Condemn Israel’s Killing of Eight Medics, Five Rescuers in Gaza
    02 Apr 2025
    The medics who were killed were identified as Mustafa Khafaja, Ezzedine Sha’at, Saleh Moammar, Rifaat Radwan, Mohammad Behloul, Ashraf Abu Labda, Mohammad Al-Hila, and Raed Al-Sharif.
  • Adam Mahoney
    Natural Disasters Are Driving a School Crisis. Black Children Are Hit the Hardest
    02 Apr 2025
    Black students are losing classrooms, homes, and support systems after climate events.
  • Black Alliance for Peace US Out of Africa Network
    AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #55
    02 Apr 2025
    For nearly 50 years, the Sahrawi people have waged Africa’s longest anti-colonial struggle against the Moroccan occupation, which is backed by U.S. arms and AFRICOM’s military muscle. Their fight…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us