Village Baseline Study: Site Analysis Report for Yabello–Borana, Ethiopia
Publication Date
2012Author
Leah Onyango, Joash Mango, S Desta, S Tezera, Zena Kurui, B Wamubeyi, A Mohammed, A Fatuma
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Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
The village baseline of Denbela Saden village in the CCAFS benchmark site of Yabello in Ethiopia
took place from 10th to 12th August 2011. Focus group discussions were conducted separately for men
and women.
Denbela Saden is a Borana pastoralist village located in a semi-arid area where the dominant
vegetation is grass, scrub and acacia trees. It faces inadequate and low quality pasture due to
encroachment by bushes, livestock overstocking, and human settlement, all related to a government
policy of encouraging permanent settlement of the pastoralists as opposed to the former system of
nomadism. The increasing population and the settlement of the community have amplified the need
for crop cultivation to complement weakened pastoral production. Cultivation is dependent on often
inadequate and unreliable rainfall, and takes place in the valley beds. Crop residues are not
incorporated into the soil but used to feed animals. Not surprisingly, yields are very low.
Government agricultural extension services do not add much value to cultivators because they focus
on livestock services in this area. Two parallel governance systems co-exist in Denbela Saden village,
namely the traditional customary system and the modern government system, and the challenge is to
create a win–win situation where the operations of these systems are synchronized.
The government describes the area as chronically food insecure, and it is not surprising that more than
half of the 16 groups/organisations working in the region address food security issue