9.5 million people are still in urgent need of assistance in the Horn of Africa after the worst drought the region has seen for 60 years.
Join us in the "We Are Heroes" campaign and DC Entertainment will match the first $1 million given to Mercy Corps' continued work fighting hunger and building longterm solutions in the region.
To date Mercy Corps teams in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia have helped 1.5 million people caught in the grip of the crisis:
- We’ve given 42,000 children emergency food and medical care to keep them alive.
- We’ve given 472,500 people clean water when they needed it most.
- We’ve given 26,000 families cash to buy the food and essential supplies that are right for them.
- We’ve created temporary jobs repairing water storage points and clearing roads; run mobile medical clinics to reach those with no alternative; and helped to keep families in their own homes, so they don’t have to leave everything for life in tent camps.
But there’s still so much to do. While rains at the end of 2011 brought relief for some in the short term, it wasn’t enough to restore lost cropland and livestock, correct soaring food prices and shortages, or reverse the chronic malnourishment that so many are suffering from.
We’re on the ground doing everything we can, not just to help people survive in the short term, but also to help people build their resilience to future cycles of drought and food shortages—finding new ways to earn money and diversify their income, improve the health of their animals and better manage their water supplies.
Ethiopia May 8, 2012 7:59AM
Rebuilding a community water source
Online Content Manager
Emergency response program manager Kaja Wislinska speaks to community members who are repairing a pond too damaged to hold water. It is now a working water source for the 400 households in Ada Olaa village.
This cash-for-work project, which provided wages to 200 people, is part of Mercy Corps' work in the Horn of Africa, which historic drought triggered widespread famine last year. We are helping families survive ongoing hunger and strengthening communities against future drought by improving their capture, storage and distribution of water. Read more about our response to the hunger crisis in the Horn of Africa.
Ethiopia January 27, 2012 5:24PM
Grain storage bags make a big impact for Ethiopia's farmers
Video Editor
Our Ethiopia teams worked with local farmers to develop a simple solution to yield more from grain harvests: plastic coated bags to protect the grain from pests and mold during longterm storage underground.
Read more about this winner of Mercy Corps' 2012 Innovations & Impact Competition.
Ethiopia January 27, 2012 4:34PM
A simple solution makes a big impact for Ethiopia's farming families
Senior Media Communications Officer, European HQ
When drought hits and families are struggling to survive, the solutions don’t always have to be complicated or expensive. As I learnt from our team in Ethiopia last year, something as simple as a sack can mean the difference between hunger and happiness for a farming family.
Our team has been helping communities in Ethiopia since the first signs of drought began more than two years ago, bringing fresh water, food, medicine and supplies to those who need them most. But where a few crops can still grow, in the Oromia Region on the edge of the dry zone, our team has also found a straightforward way to increase harvests and give families more food to go around.
When maize and sorghum crops are harvested, farmers traditionally store them in pits dug below ground. The grains are used to make injera pancakes, the staple diet for most families in this part of Ethiopia, so it’s important that they last as long as possible. But drought makes for a meagre harvest to begin with, and pests, bugs and mould all take their toll, leaving up to 40 per cent of the harvest ruined.
Last year our local staff decided to find a way to stop so much of the harvest going to waste.
Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia January 26, 2012 11:59AM
Horn of Africa crisis update
Mercy Corps teams in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia have already helped more than 1.5 million people caught in the grip of drought and hunger. But six months after this emergency first hit international headlines, there’s still much more to do.
Hear from Mercy Corps team leaders on what the situation looks like on the ground now and the challenges our teams face as they help communities not only get through this current crisis, but find ways to reduce the impact of future drought too.
Find out more about the Horn of Africa and how we're helping on our Horn of Africa update page.
Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia January 23, 2012 10:53AM
Teaming up with DC Entertainment to launch “We Can Be Heroes”
Senior Communications Officer
Mercy Corps today announced that it will be one of the nonprofit partners of “We Can Be Heroes” – an unprecedented campaign launched by DC Entertainment to raise awareness and funds to fight the hunger crisis in the Horn of Africa.
January 23, 2012 10:40AM
'We Can Be Heroes' campaign for the Horn of Africa launches in New York City
Senior Communications Officer
Yesterday, entertainment executives and NGO leaders came together at Time Warner Center to bring attention back to the continuing drought and hunger crisis in the Horn of Africa. "We Can Be Heroes" is a two-year, multimillion dollar campaign created by DC Entertainment teaming up their iconic Justice League characters with Mercy Corps, Save the Children, and International Rescue Committee.
Ethiopia December 30, 2011 10:40AM
Just being women puts them at risk
Senior Writer/Editor
In many places around the world, women have less visibility, power and status in their communities than do men — an imbalance that makes women more vulnerable to threats, coercion and abuse. Violence against women can be sexual, physical, emotional or economic. Because it arises from power differences based on gender, it's called gender-based violence, or GBV. (Men and boys can be victims of GBV too, but the vast majority of victims are women and girls.)
The risk of GBV increases during conflicts, emergencies and natural disasters — the very environments in which Mercy Corps works — because these crises cause social structures to break down, making women even more vulnerable. Mercy Corps takes very seriously its responsibility to mitigate the risks of GBV and protect people in the communities we serve.
As part of our agency-wide effort to ensure that all our programmes carefully consider issues of power, vulnerability and GBV, we recently sent GBV specialist Kevin McNulty to observe our programmes in the Horn of Africa.
Kenya December 2, 2011 5:19PM
Protecting the children of Bililburbur
Emergency Team Member, Kenya
Bililburbur is a new community in Wajir, created over the past year as families who lost their herds of animals in the historic drought were forced to settle and search for other ways to survive.
Families here have no water supply or facilities, and their children have no school. When I visited, the children were learning under a tree, with no blackboard or any learning materials in sight.
After months of work providing water and emergency support to the community here, we’re now working with community elders and leaders in the village to create a child-friendly center where children can safely learn, play and spend time away from the difficulties they face every day.
“I am so thankful to Mercy Corps," said Boqor Ali, the village elder. "First they quenched our thirst for water and now they are building this center for our children, who were learning under a tree with no desk, blackboard or even any books or pencils. No child here has ever had access to these kinds of things."
Ethiopia, Kenya November 8, 2011 5:58PM
Responding to historic drought
Senior Writer/Editor
Here's a video report from my trip last month to the drought-stricken Horn of Africa. It focuses on Ethiopia, where Mercy Corps is providing medical care to malnourished children, restoring them to health using medicines, vitamins and food formulated especially for underfed infants.
Kenya October 27, 2011 11:14AM
We still need you to stretch out your hands
Senior Writer/Editor
Ibrahim Sirat, field supervisor for Mercy Corps' drought response programme in Wajir, NE Kenya. Photo: Bija Gutoff/Mercy Corps
Yesterday I wrote to our supporters about my recent trip to Kenya and Ethiopia, where people are suffering the terrible effects of the worst drought in 60 years. Soon after the email went out, I got this message from Ibrahim Sirat, field manager of Mercy Corps' drought response in the Wajir area of NE Kenya. Ibrahim and I worked together during my visit. His message reminds me that a crisis like this is never simple. Rain alone does not solve all the problems; in fact, it creates new ones.
Hi Bija,
Well it's great to hear from you! I personally thank you for your visit and for your witnessing of what Mercy Corps is doing in Wajir. Now it has rained and the sentiments of the communities have changed. They all say "Thanks God, bless you Mercy Corps! You brought us up to the rains! Now we still need you to stretch out your hands until we restart our life!"
Despite the rains, as you witnessed during your visit, the effects of the drought continue. There's no doubt it will take a while to return to normal. Right now the problem is not a lack of water, but other necessities of life -- including shelter. People who "dropped out" of the pastoral life [because their animals died] are living in temporary makeshift huts that offer very little protection against the rain. Children and the elderly are most affected by the heavy rains. All the water storage ponds are full now -- but remember, all the animal carcasses around the dams were washed into the pans. So the water is not clean and we fear the spread of disease.
Thanks, and best regards
Ibrahim Sirat, Field Supervisor, Mercy Corps Wajir



