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Farmers
can't afford to leave markets - literally
Tonderai
Kwidini, Inter Press Service
August 19, 2008
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=43602
It is a wintry Tuesday
evening at one of the tobacco auction floors in the Zimbabwean capital
Harare. A group of small-scale tobacco farmers are preparing food
for the night.
This is the second week
for some of them in Harare after their arrival at the tobacco auction
floors to sell their produce. They have just been paid 20 Zimbabwean
dollars (re-valued), or one U.S. dollar on the parallel market,
as initial cash payment for their produce.
But this amount is hardly
enough to cover a day's costs for a single person in the hyper-inflationary
Zimbabwean environment, where a loaf of bread is priced above one
U.S. dollar.
The rest of the payment
is made in cheques. But accessing the cash is a tall order for the
farmers as a result of constant cash shortages. Several banks have
closed their rural branches where most of the farmers reside. As
a result farmers are now forced to travel to the city to get money.
After selling their produce
at the markets, farmers are left stranded, as they still do not
have enough cash to pay for transport home. Farmers are forced to
seek sanctuary at markets and auction floors in the capital.
The deaths of 14 farmers
in a truck accident in June this year has led to a chorus of farmers
calling for the establishment of centralised markets. The farmers
died when the lorry they were travelling in plunged into a river
while on its way to Harare's Mbare Musika market.
In the past there were
several markets around the country where buyers interested in different
types of produce would converge. But all this changed as a result
of the chaotic farm invasions of 2000, which left many farming communities
resembling ghost towns.
Most of the farming communities,
such as Mhangura, Mvurwi, Chipinge, Chegutu and Karoi, were a hive
of activity but all this is now a thing of the past. Some of the
former trading centres are now being used as storage facilities
by non-governmental organisations.
''Farming
now means nothing to us because, even if we work hard in the fields,
it is not helping. When you sell your produce, the money you get
is useless and the cheques take time to clear. This is our second
week here. We are waiting for the money from the bank,''
Cecilia Madzanise, a small-scale tobacco farmer from Concession,
a farming community located about 80 km from Harare, told IPS.
It costs 50 Zimbabwean
dollars (re-valued), or 2,50 U.S. dollars, for her to travel back
to her rural home. But when she sold her produce she was given an
initial payment of 20 Zimbabwean dollars. She now lives on credit
because she has no money to return to Concession.
''It is better
for them to bring the markets to us so that we don't waste money
travelling to Harare where we end up stranded like this. The money
we are being paid is very little and accessing it is difficult too,''
Madzanise said.
She is just one of the
many farmers calling for the establishment of centralised markets
in rural areas to reduce the distance that farmers have to travel
to reach markets in the cities.
The farmers are currently
paying high transport costs to take their produce to the markets.
Efforts to establish transport clubs where a group of farmers from
a particular area hire a truck together have not worked. Transporters,
seeking to maximize profits, are charging them individually.
Small-scale fresh farm
producers have been the hardest hit. They have to travel to the
cities at least once a week with their produce. Previously they
would meet the trucks with their produce in the towns but now it
is a common sight to see them perched on top of vegetables or tomato
crates on trucks in a bid to try and cut costs, risking their lives
in the process.
''We are
wasting a lot of money on food and transport costs travelling to
Harare. Had the market been in the rural areas or if the buyers
came to buy in the rural areas, it would be better. Now we can't
pay school fees or buy food for our families because all the money
goes towards travel costs,'' Alec Ngwende, a small-scale
vegetable farmer from Chihota communal lands, east of Harare, told
IPS.
Andrew Ferreira, the
Zimbabwe Tobacco Association president, supports the establishment
of regional markets: ''From the growers' perspective,
anything that eases the transport problems is a plus. But we have
to be careful with how we do it because it also affects the prices
that will be paid for the produce.''
Some of the
traditional buyers from Europe who procured goods directly from
small-scale farmers have since stopped, in protest against the country's
human rights record. Europe's largest supermarket chain, Tesco,
announced its withdrawal
in June this year.
An official with Zimbabwe's
Fresh Produce Producers Association said Tesco was their biggest
customer in Europe, buying 50 percent of the association's products.
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