Posted by: willem van cotthem | April 25, 2008

Kenya : Displacement Adds to Food Price Fears (VOA News)

Read at : VOA News

http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-04-24-voa46.cfm

Displacement Adds to Kenyan Food Price Fears

By Derek Kilner

24 April 2008

Kenya’s president and prime minister have toured the country’s Rift Valley region, home to many of those displaced by recent post-election violence. As Derek Kilner reports from Nairobi, the region is also the country’s agricultural center, and a disruption in food production there has added to already serious concerns about the country’s food prices and security.

Political and ethnic violence that followed December’s disputed presidential elections displaced hundreds of thousands of Kenyans and about 160,000 people remain in camps. The Rift Valley region, where ethnic tensions over land distribution run high, suffered some of the worst unrest. But the effects of those clashes will be felt more widely. The region is the country’s main food producer, and with many farmers displaced from their homes, production has fallen. Kwame Owino of Nairobi’s Institute of Economic Affairs, says the impact of post-election turbulence on food prices is likely to persist for some time.

“Because of that disruption and the displacement that took place, even the destruction of certain farms, planting has not taken place in some areas, especially in the Rift Valley, and that generally is what people call Kenya’s breadbasket. Because of that delay in planting the harvest will probably not be as high as it usually is. So food prices will actually be high for the greater part of this year,” explained Owino.

Many farmers were prevented from harvesting their crop following the rainy season that ended in December. And many have been unable to plant crops before the new rains that have recently begun. The unrest also disrupted transportation, making it difficult for the farmers still on their land to purchase enough seeds and fertilizer.

The World Food Program estimates that only 50 percent of the region’s productive land has been prepared for harvest.

Meanwhile, food prices have been a growing concern across the globe in recent months. Skyrocketing oil prices have increased the cost of fuel needed for fertilizer and transportation. Demand for food is rising as the middle class grows in countries like China and India. And the supply of food has been hampered by a shift in agricultural production in developed countries towards inputs for biofuels.

As in other parts of the world, says Owino, the cost of importing food in Kenya has risen steeply.

“Kenya is not self-sufficient in most of these staple-food items. And we are talking about rice, we are talking about wheat, and we are talking about corn. And as you understand, rice and wheat, of course, prices have been going up internationally, so that means if we make the decision to import as we always do, since we are not self sufficient, prices will be much higher,” said Owino.

Additionally, Kenya received less rain than usual during October to December.

John Akoten, a research fellow at Nairobi’s Institute for Policy Analysis and Research, said, “One thing at the moment is that we have not really received much rainfall, like last year. And therefore the food production is going to be low as compared to others, and that actually also contributes to the increase in food prices. So it will take a bit of time before the food prices stabilize”

Kenya has not experienced the riots over food prices seen in other developing countries. Analysts say Kenya is less dependent on food imports than many countries in West Africa, for example.

(continued)

Responses

How can you write an article about climate change and the stress on communities whilst not mentioning that Kenya as a thumping 5.2 birthrate and has many years. A birth-rate the Kenyan government has done little, if any to tackle.

Kenya’s population (like that of the whole of sub-Sarah Africa) is unsustainable, especially as much of the ecosystem is weak.

Until African counties take their own demographic imbalance seriously the west should not offer a carte blanche in aid. Ethiopia’s population has more than doubled since the famous 1984 famine and is still rising at a phenomenal spead, but it is stil dependant on Western Aid. The rising population is the biggest problem in many parts of the world. Sates can deal with climate change but large and growing populations make dealing with the change ten fold more difficult. It’s time demographic expolosion in Africa is discussed honestly.

http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/01/17/opinion/edheinsohn.php
http://demographymatters.blogspot.com/

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