05-0CT-B-10

 

FURTHER VIEWS ON THE SEVERITY OF MALAWI’S

IMPENDING FAMINE

 

ALAWI: FOCUS - IS FOOD SECURITY A MIRAGE?







Milongwe, 11 Oct. (AKI) - The current food emergency in the southern African nation of Malawi underscores the difficulty much of the continent has in feeding itself. Drought, a failed harvest and the effect of AIDS have left half of Malawi's 10 million population reliant on food aid to survive until the April harvest of maize - the country's staple crop. "It looks like it's becoming a perennial problem," the UN Food and Agriculture Organization representative in Malawi, Mazlan Jusoh, told Adnkronos International (AKI).

"The difficulty is there is no real coherent plan to address this chronic situation on a long-term or even a medium-term basis," Jusoh said. But with access to good technology and agronomic practices, adequate water and fertilisers, Jusoh argues, Malawians can feed themselves.

"This year, there was good rainfall, but planting was late because fertilisers arrived late. As a result, the crops were immature when the drought struck," he continued, admitting that HIV/AIDS and poverty had also been a factor in the failure of the harvest.

One in seven people in Malawi is affected by HIV/AIDS and the loss of adult agricultural workers is fuelling the problem of extreme hunger. A depressed economy and rising urban unemployment also means there are fewer people to send cash back to their home villages.

Population growth rates that are "slightly too high" to sustain are also a problem, said Jusoh. "Despite this, landholdings in Malawi are smaller than in Zambia and Mozambique, which means that agricultural yields are unlikely to be economically viable," he added.

Increasing irrigation, but also crop intensification and crop diversification are key to sustainable food security in the landlocked 13 percent Muslim country, Jusoh emphasised.

Less than 10 percent of agriculture in Malawi is irrigated, leaving it vulnerable to drought, despite the country's considerable natural water resources: it has a major lake at its centre (Lake Malawi), as well as the Shire river in the south.

"More areas of Malawi could be irrigated - especially near lakes and rivers - if we had a definite plan. Getting these areas under irrigation could increase the amount of staple food available in the longer term," Jusoh noted.

"Malawi is a landlocked, disadvantaged country with high transportation costs. There has got to be a serious effort to invest in its crop infrastructure," he emphasised. "However, if you have a good agricultural system with irrigated land and good agronomic practices, it can be economically viable."

Malawi suffers from poor, infertile soil and bad environmental management, Jusoh explained. "This can be addressed by training and intensive projects to upgrade the ecological situation, including watershed management to replenish depleted and polluted groundwater," he said.

"Forest management is also vital, especially in the southern part of Malawi, where population pressures are very high and people with no other means of a livelihood have been cutting down forests for fuel," Jusoh added. Land degradation and siltation of the spawning grounds are also endangering fish populations in Malawi.

Aid agencies are trying to distribute send and fertiliser ahead of the rapidly approaching planting season, as many households lack the necessary money to purchase these. But so far, contributions to the UN's emergency relief fund have been miserably low: only 27 million out of the 88 million appealed for have been committed international donors.

But local community involvement is essential if any programme is to be sustainable, Jusoh stressed. "Many previous projects run by donors and worth hundreds of millions of dollars have had no long-term impact because Malawians have not learned self-reliance."

"Committees need to be set up at village level to encourage farmers to save money from previous harvests so they can invest in capital assets and agricultural inputs for the next planting season. They need to be encouraged to save," he said.

Micro-credit schemes and increased participation in these by women are also desireable because "women are much better at husbandry than men," Jusoh concluded.

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