Milk, meat and might: In Somalia, the camel is king
HARGEISA, Somalia-The nomad was thirsty, and the journey into the Somali desert would be long and taxing.
Turning to one of his beloved camels, Ali Abdi Elmi squeezed fresh milk into a wooden urn and took a deep drink.
"I have five children, and we all depend on camel milk to survive," said Elmi, passing the pot to one of his sons, who took a swig of the rich brew.
For many Somalis, the camel is a "gift from the god": A source of milk and meat, a beast of burden in the desert and-as climate change spurs extreme weather in the Horn of Africa-insurance in times of crisis.
An animal of haughty and cantankerous repute, the camel nevertheless enjoys a high standing in Somalia. It is celebrated in songs and folklore, a symbol of status and prosperity, and exchanged in marriages or to settle feuds.
In this overwhelmingly rural society of 15 million, the rearing of camels and other livestock underpins an economy devastated by war and natural disaster that ranks among the world's very poorest.
The livestock industry is the main contributor to economic growth in Somalia and in normal years accounts for 80 percent of exports, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization.
Camels are far outnumbered by sheep and goats, which wander Hargeisa in northern Somalia with their owner's phone numbers scrawled on their sides, should they get lost and need returning.
But at 7 million beasts, there are more camels in Somalia than almost anywhere else, and they don't just confer respect on their owners-they fetch much higher prices.
"We don't have crude oil in this country. Camels are our crude oil," said Abdi Rashid, a trader clad in aviator sunglasses and a tan safari suit at Hargeisa's biggest livestock market.
An impressive specimen can carry a $1,000 price tag, said Khosar Abdi Hussein, who oversees the market where camel milk is sold fresh and even camel urine-believed to have health benefits-is bottled.
A sale is made by locking hands under the checkered shawls carried by herders.
"Camels are important to Somali culture because one is always considered wealthy, or can rise in social status, by the number of camels they have," said Hussein, who stressed that he had nine of his own.
But in Somalia, where nearly 7 out of 10 live in poverty according to the World Bank, few can afford one camel, let alone many.
Camels still produce milk during drought, sating nomads who can go a month in the dry lands consuming nothing else.
The pastoral life is a difficult one, made more so by increasingly erratic rainfall over the Horn of Africa, a region US scientists say is drying faster now than at any other time in the past 2,000 years.
Agencies Via Xinhua
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