Food access is severely limited for pastoralists throughout Djibouti due to successive poor rainy seasons; a late start to the current
March‐May rains, further deteriorating already poor pasture and livestock body conditions; and high and increasing staple food prices.
Pastoral households rely on livestock sales for income to purchase food, and deteriorating terms of trade have caused many pastoral
households to become extremely food insecure. Around 80,000 people in pastoral areas require food aid. In addition, ongoing rapid food security assessments in some pastoral areas have
identified a large number of screened children as acutely malnourished. If the rainy season does not begin by late April, food security for pastoralists will deteriorate further, increasing food insecurity through at least the end of the year.
Fighters of the Sudan Liberation Army Abdel-Wahed faction gather for a meeting with UN and African Union officials in the mountainous area of Nertiti on the edge of Jebel Marra in ...