/ 3 April 2004

Food security depends on access to Western markets

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has renewed his appeal to the West to open up its markets to enable Africa to achieve food security.

”You cannot talk about total food security for Africa without talking about the need for Africa to gain access to rich Western countries’ agricultural markets. Can we have food security when we are competing on an unequal playing field with these nations? When they flood our markets with finished agricultural products that have been manufactured from our raw materials?” he asked delegates attending an international meeting on food security.

Organised by the Washington-based International Food Policy Research Institute (Ifpri), the three-day meeting — which opened in Kampala, the capital of Uganda, on April 1 — brought together about 500 delegates from 50 countries, 30 of them African.

Titled Assuring Food and Nutrition Security in Africa by 2020: Prioritising Actions, Strengthening Actors and Facilitating Partnerships, the gathering seeks to explore ways of ensuring food security. Africa’s food production ”is not increasing at a rate necessary to meet population growth, currently averaging 2,4% annually across the continent”, Ifpri says.

Museveni said huge Western agricultural subsidies are hurting African farmers who lack such privileges.

His Nigerian counterpart, Olusegun Obasanjo, who was present at the opening session, concurred.

”In the OECD [the Paris-based Organisation for Economic Corporation and Development whose members comprise wealthy countries] the subsidies stand at about $1-billion per day. We are all familiar with the cliché about Africans living on less than $1 per day. Yet a cow in Europe is subsidised at over $2 per day,” he said.

”With this sort of subsidies, African agriculture cannot attain the competitive edge required to make it buoyant, be it in the area of foreign-exchange earning or precipitating necessary incentives to increase production,” Obasanjo added.

Some research agencies say the African farmer is growing poorer due to diminishing agricultural productivity, which has led to low food availability, rising poverty levels and increased number of undernourished populations.

”An estimated 200-million people in Africa are malnourished, and their numbers have increased by almost 20% since the early 1990s,” an Ifpri statistics shows.

It says ”undernutrition is the major risk factor underlying over 28% of all deaths in Africa, translating into some 2,9-million deaths annually”.

The falling agricultural yields in Africa can be reversed if governments invest in infrastructure, says Adrian Mukhebi, executive director of the Kenya Agricultural Commodity Exchange. He blames poor infrastructure for the rising poverty level.

”Due to bad roads, the high transport cost is unfriendly to the farmer who cannot afford to take his produce from one station to another. Most farmers transport their produce by road and because of the poor state of roads, the goods, which are mostly perishable, reach their destination days after when they are rotten. Investing in infrastructure will automatically reduce transport and marketing costs, as well as poverty level,” he says.

More than half Kenya’s population lives below the poverty line.

Kenya’s economy, like that of many other African countries, is dependant on agriculture. Small-scale farmers dominate the sector, accounting for 75% of the total agricultural production and 70% of marketed agricultural output, according to Joseph Kinyua, Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture.

Asha Rose Migiro, Tanzania’s Minister of Community Development, Women and Children, believes the solution for food security in her country lies in irrigation. Tanzania’s semi-arid northern parts are experiencing a severe drought and the government has undertaken a project to draw water from the River Nile, amid resistance by Egypt.

Edward Lowassa, Tanzania’s Minister for Water and Livestock Development, said last month that Tanzania does not need permission from Egypt to save its famine-stricken population by drawing water from the river, which originates from East Africa of which Tanzania is part.

In solidarity with Tanzania, Museveni responded (on April 1): ”Water is the source of life and Egypt has no right to monopolise use of the Nile water. It cannot deprive others of livelihood. Egypt must sit down with the countries surrounding the Nile and work out a new arrangement, which is equitable. This egocentric approach on the use of Nile waters must stop.”

Controversy has for decades surrounded the use of the Nile water. Egypt claims it has legal rights over it following an agreement signed in 1929 between it and the British government on behalf of Sudan.

According to the treaty, none of the riparian states of Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Eritrea, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and Burundi is to undertake any developmental projects that will interfere with the flow of the water to Egypt.

Delegates at the meeting say the Nile water may ensure food security in the region, thereby achieving part of the United Nations Millennium Development Goal of halving the number of people suffering from malnutrition and hunger by 2015.

More than 350-million people, over half of sub-Saharan Africa’s population, live on less than $1 a day, according to the World Bank. — IPS