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President Ruto Holds Prayer Rally While Kenyans Suffer From Hunger

Kenyan president William Ruto and his deputy Rigathi Gachagua together with their wives attended the much-publicised prayer rally at Nyayo National stadium as the country is ravaged by lack of rain and hunger.

Although President Ruto had on Sunday invited Kenyans to the prayer rally, only a few Kenyans showed up.

William Ruto announced the plans for the country’s first-ever day of prayer on Sunday at a service in the drought-stricken city of Nakuru, some 100 miles from the capital Nairobi. It follows a joint call by the country’s spiritual leaders to dedicate an entire day to prayer to ease drought conditions in the nation.

Mr. Ruto’s own ambitious economic revival strategy for the country is also dependent on a successful rainy season, CS Monitor reports.

“As a government we have set out elaborate plans for food security, we have seeds, ample fertilizer, and water harvesting strategies including dams. We now need God to send us the rain,” Mr. Ruto said. “I urge all people from all faiths … to pray for our country.”

Kenya and other east African nations have been experiencing some of the worst drought conditions in decades, causing crop failure, loss of livestock, wildlife, biodiversity, and malnutrition. Domestic agriculture is a large part of Kenya’s economy.

The U.N. humanitarian agency has termed the ongoing drought in the region a “rapidly unfolding humanitarian catastrophe.”

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Meteorologists say human-caused climate change has been exacerbating the extreme conditions.

“It is time we started including climate change as a factor in our development plans,” Evans Mukolwe, former director of the Kenyan and U.N. weather agencies, told The Associated Press. “The current drought which we warned about some years ago has wider ramifications on the social economic conditions of the region including peace, security, and political stability.”

Mr. Mukolwe added that climate change has contributed to below-average rainy seasons in the region for about three decades.

The Intergovernmental Authority on Development’s climate center said that since 2020, five rainy seasons have failed, affecting over 50 million people. The center will release its projections for the long rains season, typically from March to May, later in February. Early projections from other meteorological groups are not optimistic.

Around the world, people from different faiths have often sought divine intervention for rain or other favorable weather. Last summer Milan’s Archbishop made a pilgrimage to three churches in hopes of ending the country’s dry spell and Utah’s governor called for citizens to pray for rain ahead of a weekend of extreme heat.

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