Madagascar: the Southeast affected by food insecurity after two devastating cyclones

Men try to clear the ruins of a house after Cyclone Batsirai hit Mananjary on February 9, 2022. AFP - RIJASOLO

Text by: RFI Follow

2 mins

The zone of the Great South-East of Madagascar is affected for the first time by food insecurity, a consequence of the hurricane season at the beginning of the year which caused 206 deaths and 460,000 victims.

In February, the passage of cyclones Batsirai and Emnati in the Southeast caused considerable damage to the livelihoods of the population.

638,000 people are in a situation of high acute food insecurity in this area.

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With our correspondent in Antananarivo,

Laëtitia Bezain

In the Atsimo Atsinanana, Vatovavy and Fitovinany regions, which make up the Greater South-East of Madagascar, the

effects of the hurricane season

are still very much present.

Food crops, such as rice and cassava, and cash crops, such as coffee, cloves, bananas, have been largely devastated.

Mialy Caren Ramanantoanina, communications officer at the International Federation of the Red Cross - Indian Ocean, explains: 

“ 

All the districts of the Greater South East, with the exception of Vangaindrano, are classified in the crisis phase, while we are in the harvest period.

This is the first time that there has been food insecurity in the Grand Sud-Est since this area is not as landlocked as the Grand-Sud area.

There is no permanent drought situation in this region, so there are normally harvests.

Communities are trying to recover.

We try to provide support in terms of reconstruction, improved constructions and the distribution of cash for basic needs.

A huge number of humanitarian actors responded to the emergency

after the passage of the cyclones

, but there are not really any interventions focused specifically on this aspect of food insecurity.

We need to mobilize more in this direction.

 »

In the district of Nosy Varika, the prices of foodstuffs are constantly rising and many households can no longer fully meet their food needs, testifies Gérard, one of the inhabitants: " 

There is no longer a lot of aid and everyone is in trouble here.

Some sold their small harvest of rice to buy salt and clothes, for example.

In the market, everything is expensive.

The rice timbale costs 800 ariary.

A hen cost 9,000 ariary before, now it's more than double.

All pepper and coffee crops were destroyed.

People can't get over what happened.

 »

Production losses and damage linked to the passage of cyclones are estimated at more than 160 million dollars, according to a report by the Food and Agriculture Organization published in June 2022.

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