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Big
hope for small grains
IRIN
News
October 15, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=90783
The UN Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO) launched a project in Zimbabwe
recently to promote the use of small grains such as millet and sorghum
to boost food security in three drought-prone provinces - Matabeleland
North, Matabeleland South and Masvingo.
Small grains are considered drought tolerant and
have better nutritional value than maize, which is viewed as an
unsuitable crop in these provinces.
The US$399,000 project - Promoting Production, Processing
and Marketing of Small Grains in the Marginal Areas in Zimbabwe
- which envisages the provision of improved seed varieties, will
target small farmers, and aims to be up and running by the rainy
season starting in the next few weeks.
It will provide small grain inputs sufficient for
the cultivation of half a hectare, and this will also enable farmers
to produce seeds for the next planting season.
Gaoju Han, FAO's sub-regional director for Southern
Africa and Zimbabwe's country representative, said: "The project
will also build the capacity of community based smallholder seed
producers so as to ensure sustainable availability of high quality
small grains seed."
Ministry of Agriculture extension workers will provide
assistance and training on the production of small grains, and inform
communal farmers of their benefits.
Challenges
Han said production of small grains over the years
had faced several obstacles, including the limited access to seed,
poor prices, low yields and the huge flocks of voracious red-billed
quelea birds.
"These challenges have contributed towards
the reduction in the area allocated to small grains on the one hand,
and an expansion of the maize area on the other. FAO's aim
is to assist the Ministry of Agriculture to address these and other
challenges that have limited the production of small grains by smallholder
farmers," he said.
"What is now required is for the key players
to exploit the unique attributes of small grains such as drought
tolerance and their better nutritional value compared to other cereal
crops," Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture
Ngoni Masoka told IRIN.
Food security expert and the former Zimbabwe Commercial
Farmers Union president Davidson Mugabe said the launch was welcome
and if properly conducted, would go a long way towards ensuring
food security.
Food security expert and the former Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers
Union president Davidson Mugabe said the launch was welcome and
if properly conducted, would go a long way towards ensuring food
security.
"We need as a country to come up with policies that ensure
that we grow crops which are suitable to the different regions,
and the three provinces for the programme are ideal for small grains
because they record low annual rainfall," he said.
Zimbabwe's rapid decline from food security has
been blamed on a combination of events - including droughts and
the disruption of agriculture in 2000, when President Robert Mugabe
launched the fast-track land reform programme, which redistributed
more than 4,000 white commercial farms to landless blacks.
In the first quarter of 2009 about seven million
people - more than half the population - depended on food assistance.
The government estimates about 1.3 million people will require food
assistance in the first quarter of 2011.
Marketing
Davidson Mugabe said it was also important to popularize
the consumption of small grains and there was a "need for innovation
when processing food from small grains. Only recently I ate a cake
made from millet."
Dumisani Nyoni, the provincial agricultural officer
for Matabeleland North, told IRIN farmers' yields in the province
had in recent years been declining.
"The farmers would save some [small] grain
[seed] from their harvest which they continued to use as seed and
over the years yields had gone down. When we introduce new seed
varieties to the farmers, their produce will be higher. One challenge
though that needs to be tackled urgently will be the threat posed
by quelea birds which are a problem in the province. The department
of national parks [needs] to be capacitated in order to eliminate
that menace."
Quelea birds, which roam in flocks that can grow
to millions, prefer the seeds of wild grasses to those of cultivated
crops, but their numbers make them a constant threat to fields of
sorghum, wheat, barley, millet and rice.
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