Locust Swarms Force Somalia To Declare A National Emergency




They're only between 0.5 to 3 inches long, but they have been wreaking havoc in East Africa, threatening the food supply and livelihood of one of the poorest regions in the world.

According to the BBC, millions of locusts have been ravaging East Africa, eating away at vegetation and destroying crops across the region.

Things have become so bad that Somalia recently declared a national emergency due to the swarms of insects.

Before the declaration, the country's Ministry of Agriculture announced that the swarms of locusts posed a "major threat to Somalia's fragile food security situation."

Locals have also said that some areas were so dense with flying insects that they could hardly see.

The United Nations said that the swarms in Somalia and nearby Ethiopia are the largest recorded in the last 25 years and if uncontrolled could 'provoke a humanitarian crisis'.

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