Kanma’s water supply is as sparse as its food. Mount Elimbari’s streams are drying up – and here, at the end of Gun-Beroma Road, a mere trickle piped out from a spring must provide for 270 people.
Villagers complain of “small red snakes” in the water and of sickness afflicting those who drink it.
A hundred metres east up the hill, the small village of Odinoma rests on a slope to the left of the road. On the lip of the bluff sits Gima Hebe with her two grandchildren.
She has been trying to sell fried flour balls to passersby since 7.00am, without luck.
Meteorologists are cautious not to link the drought to climate change, but while long temperature records for the Highlands don’t exist, some studies report they are one degree hotter than 30 years ago.
More compellingly, says Karl Braganza, manager of Climate Monitoring at Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology, the glaciers around Puncak Jaya in West Papua – part of the same mountain range that runs east-west across the island of New Guinea – are rapidly disappearing, a strong indicator of warming in the PNG Highlands more generally.
Temperature change in the Highlands is also visible as lower-altitude trees like coconuts bear fruit in places they didn’t before, and lower-altitude diseases, like malaria, become more prevalent.
The PNG government appears keen to control the response to this unfolding disaster, without outside help.
However, their controversial decision to place responsibility for drought relief with members of parliament has been criticised as a cynical ploy designed to curry voter favour before the 2017 election.
Some say the government’s effort has also been fraught with inefficiency, as competent assessments provided by the National Disaster Centre don’t always make it through the poor lines of communication between national, provincial and district governments.
Delivering food supplies out from main centres to the remote locations remains a costly challenge. And, ironically, it’s precisely when the rains begin that death rates soar.
“When the rains really start they wash a whole bunch of stuff into the rivers, which just really destroys the water quality,” says CARE’s emergency response coordinator Blossum Gilmour.
“As people get weaker, and their immune systems get weakened by the lack of food, they’re more vulnerable to things like diarrheal outbreaks.”
Everywhere there are signs that traditional mechanisms for coping are crumbling under some of the driest conditions in a hundred years.
Families struggling to look after immediate kin are leaving the elderly and infirm to fend for themselves.
Bulb onion farmer Henry Wai, from Maramun village, two kilometres east of Kanma, says that with the struggle to keep immediate family alive, widows, widowers, and childless adults like Kaupa Bani are left behind.
Wai, 32, belongs to a cooperative of 65 farmers that lost around 80 per cent of this year’s crop due to the drought.
“Every day it’s a nightmare for these people to put food on the table,” says Chris Suya, a post-harvest officer with the Fresh Produce Development Agency, whose job it was to oversee the farm-to-market distribution of this first bulb onion crop for the farmers.
Wai’s cousin, Max Soa, 43, also a member of the Maramun cooperative known as Yori Aura Model Farm, explains that they were relying on their first bulb onion crop as their other crops were “seared by the sun”.
In a desperate effort to save even 20 per cent of their crop, whole families – men, women and children – twice daily lugged water from Maramun’s last remaining water source, up a steep incline to the collective’s 44 plots.
For Soa, his wife, sons and daughter, this meant eight back-breaking trips with 20-litre water containers.
“We did not expect this sun,” says Soa. “We did not.”
Those bulb onion plots, in which the Yori Aura farmers invested so much hope, were often tended at the expense of their own food gardens.
The drought was a double whammy for these remote farmers trying to shift from subsistence farming to a more cash-focused economy.
“The way out of drought is to buy your way out,” says Kanua, the agronomist and soil scientist, “to have cash in the bank.”
At the opposite end of Maramun from the bulb onion farm, elderly widow Sarah Marome lives with her two farmer sons Gideon and Soa.
Gideon’s wife died in 2013, leaving behind four young children. Soa is crippled by constant leg pain and fits.
Not long after daybreak, Marome weeds the flourishing garden she painstakingly planted after rain six weeks ago.
She has bet on a single garden – the only garden that she has. Before she goes, she cooks a breakfast of small sweet potatoes for her grandchildren. But like so many mornings since the drought hit, she does not eat herself.
For the most vulnerable, like Marome in Maramun and Kaupa Bani in Kanma village, the wait for food security is a precarious one.
“I live as long as the day I live,” old Kaupa Bani says.
- SMH