Drought In The Horn Of Africa Threatening Food Security (KFF)

"A drought in the Horn of Africa, triggered by the same La Nina episode that caused massive flooding in Australia last year, is plunging millions of pastoralists closer to food insecurity," Greenwire/New York Times reports in a story looking at how the drought is affecting several areas in the region. "Parts of Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia and eastern Uganda are most affected. ... The severity this year will depend on the rainy season between March and May," the news service writes. A total of 8.4 million people in the region currently need food aid, according to David Orr of the World Food Program (Vaidyanathan, 4/25).
"The current drought has the potential to be as devastating as that of 2009 if appropriate action is not taken immediately," according to a statement from the Consortium of British Humanitarian Agencies (CBHA), which has 15 members, including CARE and Oxfam and is hosted by Save the Children, AlertNet reports. "We know the lessons from previous disasters and we have a moral responsibility to act, but we are limited by this lack of funding at a critical time," said CBHA Director Sean Lowrie.
Poor rains in the Horn of Africa have resulted in failed harvests, severe water shortages and animal deaths. CBHA said thousands of people have already left their homes to search for water and grass for their livestock. The need for funding for emergencies in the region is competing for attention with the demands of the situations in Libya and Cote d'Ivoire, aid workers point out (Migiro, 4/27).
Food Security Research In Syria
In related news, Cosmos examines research taking place in Aleppo, Syria. "[B]uried within the hundreds of thousands of plants that our ancestors didn’t pick (for one reason or another) are genes that have helped these wild plants survive in one of the harshest regions on the planet, enduring droughts, salinity and temperatures ranging from –12˚C to 50˚C. These genes now hold the hopes of scientists around the world and may offer a way to boost the output of regular crops. But thanks to the increasing focus on fewer and fewer higher-yield plants in modern agriculture, these genes – which could well be our saviours in the decades ahead – are fading into the background" (MacDonald, March 2011).
Source: Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report

Egypt moves to mend ties with Ethiopia (Saturday Nation)

A 47-member Egyptian delegation has arrived in Addis Ababa to improve ties with Ethiopia after months of quarrelling over sharing of the Nile River water.
The delegation includes three presidential hopefuls and representatives of young people who helped topple president Hosni Mubarak.
Presidential hopefuls Hamdian Sabhy, Hisham Basetawsi and Bosayna Kamel, other key politicians and authors seek to convince Ethiopia to consider Egyptian interest in the Nile River.

Food crisis looms in Horn of Africa (UPI)

NAIROBI, Kenya, April 4 (UPI) -- The number of people who may need emergency food assistance in the Horn of Africa could grow if spring rains are low, the World Food Program warned.
"More and more people need help in the Horn (of Africa) and we're now on high alert over the impact of the March to May long rains," WFP Director Josette Sheeran said in a statement...Read more

Ethiopia minister says ready to send troops into Somalia if Asked

By: Abdalle Ahmed
Mogadishu (RBC) Ethiopia's State minister for foreign affairs Berhan Jipkirist
dismissed claims about Ethiopian forces fighting inside Somalia alongside with
the transitional federal government forces of Somalia. The minister interviewed
by Almasri Al-Yom newspaper has denied that any of Ethiopian forces entered into
the Somali border and took fighting against Al Shabab rebel group...Read More

China, Russia Lead UN Bid to Stabilize Somalia, Combat Piracy

According to Bloomberg, China and Russia are leading a new effort at the UN to
curb the threat of piracy off the coast of Somalia and defeat al-Qaeda-linked
terrorists fighting to seize control of the Horn of Africa nation...

I think this is a good move and hopefully will  succeed. Good luck to them.