Somaliland's Climate Timebomb

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When Hawo Mohamed woke one morning to find about a dozen of her goats dead, she knew her life as a herder was coming to an end.

Raised in a remote village in coastal Somaliland, in northeast Africa, Mohamed remembers taking her family's goats to feed on green pasture flanked by a sprinkling of trees.

But in time the trees began to die, she said, and then, about eight years ago, seasonal rains grew much more erratic, seemingly worsening each year.

Little by little, her animals, starved of enough forage and water, grew weaker too.

"One day I went to collect the animals as usual and brought them home but the next morning 10 to 12 of them were dead," Mohamed recalled, sitting in the sand nursing her newborn son outside a corrugated iron shelter in the coastal city of Berbera.

"When only a few of our animals were left, I saw my neighbours had already started to move and I went with them ... I knew nothing would be the same again."

Mohamed, 32, her husband Ahmed Ali, and their four children this year joined an estimated 600,000 people in Somaliland who have fled rural villages to seek new lives in cities, unable to cope after years of drought decimated their livestock and crops.

Somaliland, a self-declared republic of 4 million people in the Horn of Africa, is one of the world's most vulnerable places to climate change. Poor and drought-hit, and without legal status as a country, it is struggling to adapt for the future.

As the Syria-sized republic battles worsening weather crises and growing migration within and out of the region, it is racing to find ways to stem a tide of climate migrants, keep people on ever-less-productive land and create new jobs for the unemployed.

In particular, soaring youth employment, as destitute families leave farming but find nothing else to do, is creating a social and political "timebomb" in a region already struggling with migration and extremism, Somaliland representatives warn.

"It is a nation moving," Minister for the Environment and Rural Development Shukri Ismail Bandare said in an interview in her office in the capital Hargeisa, where goats roam the streets, some with their owners' phone numbers written in pen on their side.

"Climate change is real in Somaliland ... and it is becoming a disaster".

Director/Camera/Editor: Claudio Accheri
Reporter: Belinda Goldsmith



We make short documentaries, explainers and original series for people who care about the world’s biggest challenges. Context is anchored around three of the most significant and interdependent issues of our time: climate change, the impact of technology on society and inclusive economies. We contextualize how critical issues and events affect ordinary people, society and the environment.

Context is a media platform brought to you by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the corporate foundation of Thomson Reuters, the global news and information services company. Through journalism, media development, free legal assistance, and convening initiatives, we combine our unique services to drive systemic change.
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I am working on a documentary about the human toll of the climate crisis in Africa, and this report does a better job of conveying the beauty, grace and dignity of the African people than most. Wonderful journalism on a topic that needs far, far more exposure. Just right.

CJAfrica
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We really cannot turn a blind eye to the issue of climate change any longer. Thank you for making this short film and I hope the world really wakes up to this before it is too late. While some countries are experiencing drought on a unprecedented scale for a long period of time, some countries are witnessing raising sea levels and continue to sink. 💔

qlezkhk
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I have a plan to planting a trees from the rural areas so meantioned me.

abdikarimabdilahi
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Beyond tragic, money for everything else but the Earth..

jigold
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Dadku waxay uu bahanyahin inay diirta beeran oo qaado iyo wax soo sar halka beeraha ku da dalaan. Wa in biyo Xiidan iyo baarkado la qooda oo dadka sida biiyaha iyo beeraha loo soo saro la baraa. Illahay na loo duuceeya.

SOKilaasvidoes
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Deforestation God help us! These worries me we somalis depend on our herds, now they all lost everthing moved to the cities and they can't adapt to the city either so sad! We have yo do something climates change is real

regalsnow
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Somaliyay geedahan ad jaraysan joojiya biyaha qabta roobka dhiirna beera oromada geedaha madhisayna ka qabta dalkeena khatar weyn ba inagu soo wajahan

regalsnow
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Bad selective translation. I'm Somalian and speak both languages. Why cheap your audience?

gelleg