climate are as plain to see as in turkana, in northern kenya. the land is so dry, some people are forced to spend their days simply searching for water. as world leaders prepare to meet in scotland next month to discuss climate change, the turkana community say they need help now. 0ur africa correspondent vivienne nunis reports. 0n the front line of climate change, a seven hour trek brings something to drink. this grandmother is part of the turkana community, people who have lived off this land for centuries. life here has never been easy but recent droughts have robbed these pastoralists of water, livestock and vegetation. now they are fighting to keep the only life they have ever known. translation: the | climate has changed. we don t get water from underground any more because the wells are dried. i had a number of goats but the drought hit them. i have nothing left.
covid tests and a simpler traffic light system. there are few places in the world where the consequences of a changing climate are as plain to see as in turkana, in northern kenya. the pastoralist communities who live there have been buffeted by recurring droughts as inadequate rainy seasons become a normal part of life. now the land is so dry, some people are forced to spend their days simply searching for water. as world leaders prepare to meet in scotland next month to discuss climate change, the turkana community say they need help now. our africa correspondent vivienne nunis reports. on the frontline of climate change, a seven hour trek brings something to drink. this grandmother is part of the turkana community. a million people who have lived of this
room they are allowed access to. she s off. i think that i m more safe to the residents than some of the staff, because they are young people. they want to go out at weekends, they want to go dancing, they want to go to nightclubs and football matches and stuff. i don t go anywhere. life may be returning to normal for many. not the relatives and residents of care homes. it s now time to live with it, manage it. that s what they ve got to do. there are few places in the world where the consequences of a changing climate are as plain to see as in turkana, in northern kenya. the land is so dry, some people are forced to spend their days simply searching for water. as world leaders prepare to meet in scotland next month to discuss climate change, the turkana community say they need help now. our africa correspondent
vivienne nunis reports. on the front line of climate change, a seven hour trek brings something to drink. this grandmother is part of the turkana community, people who have lived off this land for centuries. life here has never been easy but recent droughts have robbed these pastoralists of water, livestock and vegetation. now they are fighting to keep the only life they have ever known. translation: the | climate has changed. we don t get water from underground any more because the wells are dried. i had a number of goats but the drought hit them. i have nothing left. yet another desperate search where water used to be. not that long ago, this dam was an important water source for local villagers and their livestock. on any given day, you would see cattle, sheep and goats here. but as the rainy seasons became