Credit: Ben Curtis/AP
Credit: Ben Curtis/AP
The desert locusts are coming from Somalia looking for the vegetation coming to life with seasonal rains.
"Once they land in your garden they do total destruction. Some people will even tell you that the locusts are more destructive than the coronavirus. There are even some who don't believe that the virus will be here," Yoweri Aboket told the AP.
To try to scare away the insects, people in Aboket’s village near the Ugandan border with Kenya, are banging metal pans, blowing whistles or throwing stones to scare the locusts away.
At the same time, they’re all in lockdown because of the coronavirus pandemic, not permitted to gather outside their homes.
Locust swarms have been seen in Kenya, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Djibouti, Eritrea, Tanzania and Congo.
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization said the locust swarms are caused partially by climate change and are "an unprecedented threat" to food and livelihoods, the AP reported.
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