In Pictures
In Pictures: India braces for worst locust invasion in decades
In the worst such attack since 1993, swarms of desert locusts devastate crops in the middle of the coronavirus lockdown.

Swarms of desert locusts have become the latestthreat faced by coronavirus-hit India, with states scrambling to spray pesticides to prevent crop damage from the worst such attack in almost 30 years.
Crops and vegetable plantations in several Indian states, includingRajasthan, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh are inthe path of the invading insects.
The government has stepped up its response with locust containmentmeasures and a pesticide-spraying campaign which includes the use ofdrones.
Operations are being conducted in more than 300 locations across several districts of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh,Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh and Punjab, agriculture ministry spokesmanPraveen Kavi said on Thursday.
Farms of vegetables, pulses and cotton crops have been attacked by the locusts which devour “any sort of vegetation orgreen”, a government official said.
This is the worst locust infestation India has seen since 1993, but swarms are not new to the country.
The insects arrive from Pakistanbetween July and October and mostly affect the northwesternRajasthan state, said KL Gurjar from India’s Locust WarningOrganisation.
Swarms of desert locusts have also been attacking entire areas ofEast Africa for months leading the UN’s Food and AgricultureOrganization to warn about threats to food security in the region.
The desert locust is among the most dangerous migratory pests in theworld. A square-kilometre swarm can consume the equivalent of foodfor 35,000 people in one day, the UN agencies have warned.






