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Archive for June 15th, 2011

Food security?

Posted by African Press International on June 15, 2011

CONGO-SOUTH AFRICA: Land deals raise food security hopes

Hardly hi-tech… but the hope is investors will improve farming methods by introducing mechanisation

BRAZZAVILLE, 8 June 2011 (IRIN) – By handing over 80,000 hectares of untilled land to a few dozen South African farmers, authorities in the Republic of Congo are confident they will greatly improve domestic agricultural expertise and reduce the country’s chronic dependence on food imports.

“In terms of nutrition, we are in a constant state of need,” said Minister of Agriculture and Livestock Rigobert Maboundou. “This is why we are giving over these lands, to employ local labour and benefit from the South African expertise.” He said it was essential to surrender the farmland to those who could invest in it.

“Congo has been waiting for an investment initiative like this, the creation of thousands of jobs. More than anything else, the country is expecting abundant food since the South African farmers will produce crops and raise livestock,” said Minister of Land Affairs and Public Domain Pierre Mabiala.

The 40 farmers are leasing government-owned land for 30 years, with the provision to extend it for two terms. The farmlands include 63,000ha in Niari and 17,000ha in Bouenza, in the southwest.

There are 10 to 12 million hectares of land with agricultural potential in Congo, according to government data, but only 2 percent is farmed, mostly with rudimentary tools. “It’s difficult to achieve food self-sufficiency like this,” said Maboundou.

Wynand du Toit, vice-president of the Association of South African farmers who signed the deal, dismissed suggestions that it was really a covert land grab, with production aimed at the export market. “Our understanding with the government is that we are here to help the country’s food production – we plan to set up an agricultural college and train local farmers,” he said.

''Our priority is to help produce enough to feed the country – we are not looking at exports for at least two or three years''

“Our priority is to help produce enough to feed the country – we are not looking at exports for at least two or three years and then only if we produce a surplus which we cannot sell to the domestic market,” he said. “If we do end up producing more than we can sell here then we might consider selling to neighbouring Gabon and the Central African Republic.”

Du Toit said since not all of the land was arable, the farmers would receive about 1,000ha apiece. South African ambassador to the Congo, Genge Manelisi, said they would focus on raising livestock as well as rice and vegetables.

Congolese officials said the policy of granting land to investors was aimed not just at combating the food crisis, but also diversifying a national economy that was too dependent on oil, which contributes more than 80 percent of the state budget.

Concerns

Land concession agreements have proliferated across Africa and elsewhere, leading to concerns that the promised benefits for locals – especially jobs – are never realized, while potential environmental and political damages are undersold. A 2011 World Bank report studied the increasing number of land deals from the past two years and concluded that “the risks are often large”.

“Case studies demonstrate that even some of the profitable projects do not generate satisfactory local benefits, while, of course, none of the unprofitable or non-cooperational ones do.”

Du Toit said the farmers viewed the acquisition as a business venture, and a way of diversifying investments. “When Pick ‘n Pay [a South African retailer] opens a shop in Nigeria, no one raises an eyebrow, why so many questions about us?” He said the South African farmers were borrowing “millions of dollars” from international banks to fund the project. “We are making a big investment – we are taking in big pieces of machinery,” he said.

The farmers hope to begin growing maize in January 2012. Although there are no official production estimates, they plan to produce 30,000MT between June and July 2012, and grow staples such as rice, cassava and vegetables.

Food imports

The country relies heavily on imported food to feed its population. The Food and Agriculture Organization estimated that Congo spent 130 billion CFA (US$260 million) every year bringing in foodstuffs. In its 2010 report, the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) described food insecurity in Congo as “serious”, with 11.8 percent of children underweight, and about one in five Congolese undernourished.

However, at the beginning of the 1990s, 40 percent of Congolese were undernourished, it said.

The government announced plans to become food self-sufficient by the year 2000 in the 1980s, remembered Joseph Moutanda Kassao, president of a cooperative of 320 growers based in Brazzaville. “We did not get any of the results we hoped for,” he said.

The government announced in 2010 that it would invest 40 billion CFA ($80 million) a year for four years in the agricultural sector.

Congo has also been testing a policy of creating farming villages north of Brazzaville, with the input of Israeli technicians. Opened in October 2010, the “experimental” farming village of Nkouo, which is 83km from the capital and cost 13 billion CFA ($26 million), is able to produce two million kilogrammes of manioc.

Critics of the new land concession say bringing in foreign farmers is not the way to address food insecurity in the country. “We don’t actually need operators or farmers from elsewhere to nourish us. We have a clear problem: our authorities do not assist our own farmers as they should,” complained Dieudonné Mingui, head of the NGO Initiatives for Development and Progress. “Farmers right here don’t lack initiative, they lack the means to develop large projects,” he said.

Despite these sentiments, the project has not encountered resistance from local growers, who say they want to benefit from the experience of the South Africans.

“South Africa is the continent’s economic powerhouse. Its agriculture is strong, and powerful,” said Kassao. “If the South African farmers are really coming to produce and sell all the produce on the local market, it’s a good thing. But if they’re coming for their own interests, it will be a shame.”

“I think the project is just getting started,” said Kassao. “Let’s wait and see.”

lmm/jb/am/mw  source www.irinnews.org

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Education is a key challenge for Rohingya refugees

Posted by African Press International on June 15, 2011

MYANMAR: Rohingyas in Malaysia seek education, opportunities

Education is a key challenge for Rohingya refugees

KUALA LUMPUR,  – Graduating from primary school was just a dream for Rohingya teenager Ali Tofik, who, until 2010, lived in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine State, where access to education, particularly secondary education, is limited.

In recent decades, this ethnic and religious minority has been stripped of its citizenship and property rights by Myanmar’s military-dominated government, leading to human rights abuses and exploitation and resulting in mass exodus.

Some 200,000 fled to Bangladesh over the years, with smaller numbers to Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and elsewhere in the region by boat.

Now the 17-year-old is keen to get ahead, learning the Malay language with a group of younger students in the two-room Malaysian school. English, Malay, mathematics and science are taught on the second floor of a business block in the suburbs of Kuala Lumpur.

“I would like to become a teacher so that I can help my people and I can teach them and talk with the international community,” explains Tofik, who fled Myanmar with his family a year ago.

The local NGO-sponsored school, established in 2009, is accessible to Rohingya, but remains a rarity in Malaysia, with fewer than a dozen similar schools nationwide. Officially, Rohingya children in Malaysia cannot study in government schools without birth certificates or any other official documents.

“Most of the young children are actually born in Malaysia but can’t attend the public schools because refugees do not have access to the Malaysian education system, including primary schools,” Chris Lewa, coordinator of the Arakan Project, an advocacy organization for the Rohingya, told IRIN.

Illiteracy among the Rohingya is estimated at around 80 percent, with a higher percentage among women, according to the latest available data.

Without a proper education and work permits, job opportunities are severely limited for Rohingya, Lewa said.

But she has also witnessed some improvement in Malaysia’s handling of arrivals by providing them with access to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), as well as halting forcing them into unscrupulous hands along the Thai-Malaysian border.


Photo: Steve Sandford/IRIN
A group of Rohingya men sell vegetables in Kuala Lumpur

According to UNHCR, there are some 30,000 ethnic Rohingya seeking asylum in Malaysia today, including 20,800 registered with the agency.

“Based on information gathered from the refugee communities, it is estimated that there are about 10,000 more asylum-seekers who have not yet been registered,” Yante Ismail, an external relations officer with the agency, explained.

At the Rohingya Society in Malaysia (RSM), a community-based organization, deputy president Abdul Ghani and a small staff assist in registering asylum-seekers for UNHCR, which then determines their status.

It is a difficult process as most Rohingya arrivals are male and often seen by authorities as economic migrants.

But Ghani is quick to deny this. “Please don’t link Rohingyas to economic migrants. We Rohingya left our country because of harassment, because of torture, the confiscation of our land. That’s why we left our country to get protection from a third country. We ran away from the military regime’s harassment.”

Indeed, many at the RSM centre tell of the struggle to earn enough to survive and feed their families in Myanmar.

“It’s impossible to maintain a peaceful family life, so I had to flee,” said one young man, awaiting an interview. “Nasaka [paramilitary] forces would order us to work at their camps. If we don’t go, they come to our houses during the night and take us. They lock us up in the stockade and beat us.”

For many new arrivals, assimilation into Malaysia’s Muslim-dominated culture is easier than in their former homeland, but until solid legislature is implemented for proper work permits, the refugees are in limbo, say aid workers.

According to UNHCR, those Rohingya who are working are in the informal sector, including irregular, low-paying menial work in construction, domestic positions, or in the local markets.

ss/ds/mw source www.irinnews.org

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Clashes between government forces and the Taliban have displaced at least 12,000 people

Posted by African Press International on June 15, 2011

AFGHANISTAN: Clashes displace 12,000 in Faryab Province

Two IDP children from southern Helmand province standing behind their mud hut on the outskirts of Kabul

KABUL, 6 June 2011 (IRIN) – Clashes between government forces and the Taliban have displaced at least 12,000 people in Afghanistan’s remote northwestern province of Faryab, creating a dire need for water, sanitation and other essentials, the Afghan Red Crescent Society (ARCS) warns.

“These IDPs [internally displaced persons] have now sought refuge either with families and friends or have camped in the open in a miserable situation in some secure, but remote, villages with very limited or no access to safe drinking water, sanitation and other basic living facilities,” said Haji Khan Mirza, ARCS director in Faryab Province.

The IDPs were forced to flee around 20 villages in the province’s Qaysar District.

“We are facing too many problems… The weather is also very hot [so] we are afraid of possible disease outbreaks,” Abdul Samad, 39, a representative of the IDPs, told IRIN. He warned that diarrhoeal diseases could spread rapidly unless people were helped to resolve sanitation problems.

ARCS said there were basic healthcare facilities in Faryab, but they would not be able to cope if any major outbreak happened. There are also concerns about access to drinking water.

Diarrhoeal diseases, linked to poor hand-washing and hygiene practices, as well as inadequate sanitation, are a significant cause of death among children under five in Afghanistan. According to the health Ministry, around 50,000 under fives die every year due to pneumonia and diarrhoeal diseases.

“We are looking into this problem very seriously,” said Pablo Percelsi, head of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) sub-delegation in the north of Afghanistan.

The ICRC has delivered 200 tons of food and non-food aid to IDPs in Qaysar, but needs more. Many of the IDPs, it added, fled their homes with only the clothes on their backs and say they do not plan to return to their villages any time soon.

According to ICRC, displacement caused by military operations and localized fighting continues to affect communities in many parts of Afghanistan. Between January and April it assisted more than 51,000 IDPs, up 40 percent on the same period last year.

A separate study by UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and the World Bank estimates that about 433,066 persons remain internally displaced in Afghanistan. Of those, 226,682 were displaced by conflict between June 2009 and April 2011.

mp/eo/cb source www.irinnews.org

Posted in AA > News and News analysis | Leave a Comment »

 
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