Thousands in dire need of food aid in Kilifi
Coast
By
Nehemiah Okwembah
| Dec 18, 2025
Thousands of families in some parts of Kilifi are facing starvation following a drought that has hit the county.
Most of the residents also have no water and are forced to travel for a long distance in search of the commodity, as water pans have completely dried up.
The most affected areas are Ganze, Magarini, and Kaloleni, among others, due to a shortage of rainfall this season.
A spot check at Karimani village revealed a dire situation where more than 600 families have been affected and came face to face with the effects of the disaster.
The area is completely dry; there is no water, as the pans dried up, and there are fears that if the situation persists, livestock will start to die.
READ MORE
Giant society turns to land lease to grow revenues
Flower growers halt expansion projects over tax refund delay
GDP to grow by 5.3pc this year, say Parliament think tank
Infrastructure fund will be well managed: Mbadi
Engineers told to uphold integrity amid graft concerns
Regional business lobby urges EAC countries to address emerging non-tariff barriers
Engineers warn Kenya is losing billions through raw mineral exports
Insurers keen to adopt AI, IoT in service delivery
Poor skills, financing sink MSMEs
From awareness to action: How e-commerce is transforming media advertising
The team from the Kenya Red Cross distributed relief food to 187 families, which was not enough compared to the families affected.
Margaret Kalama, Assistant Chief of Karimani Sub-Location, said that the situation was worsening each day and locals needed support.
She thanked the Kenya Red Cross for their help but called upon the government and other well-wishers to intervene before the situation gets out of hand.
“We have 600 households, but today we have received help for 187 families, and there is more to be done, and we also need help so that our animals can survive,” she said.
Residents interviewed said that the drought situation was bad, as it did not rain this season, adding that elephants were also contributing to the disaster.