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> “For farmers, the future belongs to the organized”..............
“For farmers, the future belongs to the organized” East
African grassroots make themselves heard at the margins of the
WTO Ministerial
December 15, 2011, Geneva
In the face of a world that is
increasingly integrated and in a region where climate change
threatens to create an additional 600 million hungry East
Africans, “the future belongs to the organized farmer”. There
is an urgent need to enable the East African farmer to
organize and adapt so that he can survive. Several
representatives of NGOs from the East African Community raised
this concern today during a side-event to the WTO Ministerial
Conference organized by CUTS International Geneva.
African parliamentarians,
academics as well as representatives of International
Organizations and of the civil society met at the margins of
the WTO Ministerial Conference to take stock of the key
findings of five CUTS studies providing possible ways to
foster healthy interactions between stakeholders involved in
the agriculture sector in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. These
studies were conducted by country researchers who, from the
field, collected the perceptions of farmers, traders, civil
servants, investors and other key actors.
Mr. François Munyentwari, Director
ACORD Rwanda, noted that out of the 925 million with no access
to quality food, 200 million are located sub-Saharan Africa.
In his country, Rwanda, they make 40% of a population largely
dominated by smallholder farmers. It is therefore a concern
that, despite everyone acknowledging the emergency of
improving African agriculture to cope with food insecurity,
the commitment made by African governments in Maputo to allow
10% of their budgets to agriculture is not being implemented
yet.
Participants recognised that trade
can offer many ways of feeding the hungry, but were concerned
that food has now become a normal commodity subject to
rent-seeking behaviour. This increases the price of imported
food and puts a great burden on the poor in food-scarce
regions. While in some regions a priority has now been given
to the production of export crops like horticulture and coffee
which generate more revenue, it was noted that “This is not
applicable to small-scale, subsistence farmers. People don’t
eat flowers!”
Kenyan parliamentarians admitted
that they were wondering until when the region will be bound
to export only raw materials that create no synergies across
industries and generate little employment and economic
development. Mr. Pradeep S. Mehta, Secretary-General CUTS
International, informed them that India is planning
substantial investment in agro-processing in Africa, which
will enable them to add value to many of their agricultural
commodities and thus create employment, and increase export
revenue generation.
In introducing the meeting earlier
in the morning, Mr. Ramamurti Badrinath, Director CUTS
International Geneva noted that all the five studies
presented, which were undertaken under the “Facilitating
Equitable Agricultural Development in sub-Saharan Africa”
(FEAD) Project, recognize the emergency of bringing the
climate change dimension into the food security debate. This
key concern is now being taken on board by CUTS International
Geneva through its newly-launched project entitled “Promoting
Agriculture-Climate-Trade Linkages in the East African
Community” (PACT EAC), which was also presented during the
event
For further
information please contact:
Julien Grollier,
Assistant Programme Officer,
+41 227346080,
jg3@cuts.org
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