They prayed for rain at two ecumenical
church services in Wagga Wagga last week, but the only response
was isolated showers.
The people who farm in that region of south-western New
South Wales are accustomed to drought. There are good years
and bad years that cancel each other out. But the last five
years have brought only bad times.
Australia is in the grip of its worst drought for a century.
With a long, hot southern hemisphere summer in prospect,
the reservoirs are already dry, the river beds are cracked
and empty, and farmers are in despair.
"We're in uncharted territory," said Bernard Whyte,
a grain and livestock farmer from 35 miles north of Wagga
Wagga. "I don't think anybody has a clue what to do."
Crops are failing and, with paddocks reduced to dust-bowls,
livestock are being sold in record numbers. Areas in southern
and south-eastern Australia have been worst hit, with pitifully
low rainfall. Now 92 per cent of New South Wales is in drought.
The Prime Minister, John Howard, has announced an extra
A$350m (£140m) in aid for farmers. A Mental health
group, Beyondblue, said a farmer is committing suicide every
four days.