Ukraine War to Compound Hunger, Poverty in Africa, Experts Say

NAIROBI, KENYA — Experts warn the war in Ukraine could increase hunger and food insecurity for some people in Africa. Most African countries import wheat and vegetable oil from Ukraine and Russia, a region now engulfed in conflict since Russia invaded its neighbor.

African families are feeling the pinch as prices of essential commodities increase due to persistent drought, the coronavirus pandemic, and now, the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

The United Nations says Russia and Ukraine produce 53% of the world’s sunflowers and seeds, and 27% of the world’s wheat.

The U.N. Conference on Trade and Development figures show Africa imported wheat from the two countries worth $5.1 billion between 2018-2020.

The study shows at least 25 African countries import a third of their wheat from Russia and Ukraine, and 15 of them import more than half from those two countries.

Kenya is one of the African countries affected by the global food price increase.

The head of policy research and advocacy at the Kenya Association of Manufacturers, Job Wanjohi, says the cost of importing wheat to the country has increased by 33%.

“The cost of wheat per ton, of which Kenya is heavily dependent on Russia and Ukraine, has increased to $460 per ton. Before, it was $345 per ton and the landing cost in Nairobi is likely to increase from $500 to $550 per ton. So, the Ukraine-Russia war is aggravating the situation, food security in the country is concerned,” Wanjoh said.

Vegetable oil prices have also increased. Malaysia and Indonesia account for 85% of global crude palm oil exports.

Malaysian authorities warned this week the price of palm oil could reach $2,200 a ton and is expected to remain that way until the third quarter of the year.

Peter Kamalingin, head of Pan Africa at charity Oxfam International, says Africa is more vulnerable to food insecurity.

“Relying on the global food chain only means you are going to be more vulnerable for a long time. Oxfam has said what we need is investing in small farmers, making them more resilient, bringing technology that is responsive and sensitive to their unique needs. Small food producers are still the most important, and our agricultural produce and extension services, our national budget investment have not been focused on this. Food sovereignty means producing as much food as possible within the country, if not within the country at least within the region,” he said.

Kamalingin also says African governments are not investing enough in their communities.

“Government in our part of the world have had to go into increasing problem of debt and some of the economies in the region, for every 10 shillings of the national budget probably seven is going to repaying debt. That also means governments are not investing in social services, in water, health, education. So, that burden is being transferred to the household and most of the household, it means women and children are the ones bearing that burden. And now we have had this Ukraine crisis, which is exacerbating the problem in many fronts,” Kamalingin said.

The U.N.’s International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) warns that the ongoing war in Ukraine will escalate global hunger and poverty.

Gerrishon Ikiara, who teaches economics at the University of Nairobi, says African countries need to build infrastructure that can help with the movement of goods.

“But also try to see how we can integrate Africa economies much better, because there are some countries with surplus food countries like DRC, Uganda, and quite a number of others have the capacity to feed a big part of Africa if it’s properly connected,” Ikiara said.

Experts say intervention, like stabilizing local markets, cash transfers and creating savings and loan groups, can help Africa cope and reduce the impact of the global food crisis.

Source: Voice of America

A Glimpse into the Prehistory of the Western Lowlands of Eritrea

The western lowlands of Eritrea are known to have a long history of human settlement. The lowlands have archaeological sites which for long have been associated with the country´s later prehistory. While introducing the potential of the lowlands in light of a multitude of socio-cultural processes of the past, an outline of different phases of human settlement constituted in the archaeological record of the region is provided here for the reader.

The archaeology of the western lowlands of Eritrea started to feature since the second half of the last century, when a sizable collection of artifacts was reported from what came to be known as the four Agordat sites. The localities of Kokan, Dandaneit, Shabeit and Ntanei have been designated the Agordat sites and eventually the western lowlands are said to be the conduit of linking this part of the Horn to major civilizations of antiquity in Nubia and ancient Egypt.

Arkell´s report of the Agordat sites in 1942 provoked a significant amount of interest, particularly as to their age and the evidence they possibly provide for cultural contacts between the pastoralists, farmers and urban centers of the Nile Valley and eastern lowlands of Sudan and those of the Eritrean highlands. The Kokan rock shelter was excavated in 1994, 50 years after the initial reporting of the sites and the excavations uncovered flaked stone tools, grindstones, and pottery that helped place the Agordat sites in chronological and cultural sequences. These find showed close similarities to the civilizations which flourished along the Middle Atbara valley and the Gash Delta along the Eritrean- Sudanese borderland. This connection is of paramount importance as it helps understand the emergence of complex agro-pastoral societies in this part of the Horn.

The evidence from the Agordat sites, and particularly from the Kokan rock shelter, firmly place the western lowlands of Eritrea within the array of regional trading systems from 2300 B.C. to 400 B.C. indicating a successive sequence of human settlement in the lowlands by different cultural groups. The evidence, therefore, indicates that western Eritrea was influenced by a number of nomadic, pastoral and agro-pastoral cultures from eastern Sudan through direct or indirect contacts.

The geographical position of the lowlands also confirms that they could have played an important role in the region as social, economic and political conduits between polities of eastern Sudan and the Nile Valley and the increasingly more complex socio-political systems that emerged in the Eritrean highlands during this period. The premise that the Agordat sites are dated to at least the Egyptian New Kingdom (1500 BC) and that they were tied socially, politically and economically to pastoral, agro-pastoral farming and urban communities as far north as Nubia and perhaps Egypt in itself begs the outline a number of socio-cultural processes that shaped the late prehistory of this part of the Horn.

The northern Horn of Africa had a key position at the junction between two major trade exchange circuits; namely, the Nile Valley and the Red Sea Coast during antiquity. In light of recent researches along the Nile valley and the Red Sea Coast, the western lowlands of Eritrea are considered as crucial interface in the processes of interaction between the Mediterranean and Africa through the circuits. The routes were complementary and sometimes used alternatively in ancient times and trade connections forged along these corridors are important to consider in order to understand the archaeological potential of the western lowlands of Eritrea. Glancing from the wider spectrum, therefore, important milestones of this period are framed here revolving around the peopling of the lowlands and their integration in regional trade to further indicate their archaeological potential.

The peopling of the Eritrean- Sudanese borderland showed a pattern of continuity from the 5th millennium B.C. to the 1st millennium A.D. as shown in the archaeological record of the region. The borderland was inhabited by a cultural group known as the Butana group, which was included in an interchange route starting in the fourth millennium B.C. giving rise to a hierarchical society at the confluence of the Gash and Atbara rivers. A shift to cattle breeding and cereal cultivation was witnessed during this time allowing permanent settlements along the borderland. Later, the progressive shift of the Gash from its original confluence with the Atbara river to the present bed by the late 4th to early 3rd millennium BC allowed a more direct route from the Nile valley to the Horn of Africa, further enabling the descendants of the Butana group to exploit the resources of the western lowlands during seasonal movements from the Gash to the plateau. The descendants, the Gash group as they are called, started to play a crucial role as intermediaries between Nubia and the region of the Horn of Africa and they started to spread along the western lowlands as far as the Red Sea Coast. Residential villages appeared in the middle Barka valley in early second millennium BC along the way from Kassala to the plateau.

As far as interregional trade is concerned two major events which connected the Horn of Africa to the Nile Valley civilizations of Nubia and ancient Egypt can be mentioned. Egyptian commercial expansion southwards began by the fourth millennium BC. The middle Atbara valley and the Horn seem to have been involved in a broad network of contacts by the 3rd and 2nd millennium BC, possibly related to the economic exchange through which ancient Egypt was supplied raw materials from the African hinterland. The question of the Land of Punt is seen in light of these developments where the Horn of Africa was integrated in the trade connections forged via land caravan routes across the Nile valley.

Throughout the ancient Egyptian history, several non-military expeditions were organized to a region which the Egyptians called Punt. The Land of Punt was a major exporter of gold and biological materials such as myrrh, ebony, ivory, short horned cattle and baboons (Papio hamadryas). The importance of these materials to the ancient Egyptians is reflected in the trade that spanned for 1200 years between ancient Egypt and Punt (2458-1163 BC). Analysis of baboon remains uncovered from New Kingdom tombs, a period considered to be a thriving trade epoch with Punt, showed that the Eritrean corridor was a source of the luxury items to ancient Egypt from the Horn. A further evidence comes from a network of obsidian trade which by the 2nd millennium BC absorbed the western lowlands, Eastern Sudan, the Red Sea Coast and Arabian Peninsula into interregional exchange.

Obsidian raw materials supplied from sources in the Denakil Depression and the Arabian Peninsula circulated along these lands and reached civilizations in Nubia and Egypt via the western lowlands. In this respect, the western lowlands were positioned to reap the benefits of this large circuit of economic interchange that gradually evolved between the peoples of the regions. In conclusion, the Agordat communities should be seen as social, economic and political intermediaries that linked the highlands and lowlands to major civilizations in the Nile valley. The lowlands were isolated towards the end of the 2nd millennium BC as the Red Sea became the main trade route from Egypt to the Horn of Africa and southern Arabia. The shift resulted in regression of social complexity seen in the lowlands and culminated in the emergence of complex societies in highland Eritrea and the Coast.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Ministries of Agriculture and Marine Resources empower farmers to use bio-fertilizers and bio-pesticides

Globally, the need to shift from chemical fertilizers and pesticides to bio-fertilizers and bio-pesticides is becoming trendy. The Ministry of Agriculture (MoA) has put the production of safe food through environment-friendly schemes as one of its priority programs. A number of initiatives have been taken to promote natural fertilizers and pesticides and have begun to be impactful as of last year.

In February 2021, the MoA and the Ministry of Marine Resources (MMR) jointly started a new initiative to use agricultural and marine residues as sources of solid and liquid fertilizers as well as bio-pesticides. The objective of the initiative was to contribute to producing safe and nutritious food through environment-friendly, socially acceptable, and economically feasible agricultural production practices.

To reinforce the endeavors, a technical committee that comprised bio-fertilizer production sub-committee and bio-pesticides sub-committee was established. Members of the committee include experts from the MoA and MMR, Eritrean Institute of Technology and the private sector. The committee has extended its membership up to the sub-regional level and contributed a lot in improving awareness of regional experts and farmers.

In the first stage, the committee has produced a considerable amount of fish amino acid (FAA), seaweed extract (SWE) and neem-pepper-aloe extract and delivered them to several progressive farmers for trials. Later, it accomplished a successful scheme to shorten the decomposition of plant and animal materials in the process of compost and liquid fertilizer production. In addition, the committee has carried out a number of training of trainers (ToT) programs to agricultural experts in all the regions.

As a continuation of its efforts to promote bio-fertilizers and bio-pesticides, the MoA conducted this month a one-week practical training to 30 farmers at Homib and Waekayt in Forto-Sawa Sub-zone of the Gash-Barka region.

According to Mr. Yosief Tewelde, head of the Compost Production Sub-committee, the training was given in response to a demand by representatives of farmers in Forto-Sawa sub-region.

Since the ultimate goal of the MoA is to convince farmers to use bio-fertilizers and bio-pesticides, their demand was most welcome, Mr. Yosief underscored.

“We have organized, for them, three types of training with regards to the production of solid and liquid fertilizers as well as bio-pesticides,” he added.

Mr. Yosief explained further that many farmers have been using compost produced by putting plant materials and livestock droppings in pits. However, they are now being acquainted with different varieties of natural fertilizers that are processed both in solid and liquid forms, he added. Finally, he said that it is good for farmers to know that there are a number of techniques to produce natural fertilizers and urged them to consult agricultural experts in their district.

Ms. Adiam Rezene, one of the trainers who was in charge of speeding-up the decomposition process in compost production, was able to reduce the time needed to produce compost from three months to three weeks.

She said that the experience she acquired from her training in Japan helped her to speed up the decomposition of organic materials to produce viable compost just in three weeks.

According to Ms. Adiam, the main concern of farmers has been the long time that took to produce compost. To address this issue, the MoA has been empowering experts in all the regions with techniques of shortening the time of decomposition in the compost production process using microorganisms.

Finally, Ms. Adiam commended farmers of Homib and Waekayt for their earnest demand and participation in the training program, and urged other farmers in the country to follow in their footsteps and adopt the initiative.

Participants of the training program said that the sessions were practical and important. Mr. Ebe Hadish is a farmer who lives in Homib, Forto-Sawa sub-region. He said that the MoA’s initiative was very important in increasing their awareness about using organic pesticides. He also said that it gave him great satisfaction to be able to use organic materials from their farms to produce solid and liquid fertilizers.

Mr. Osman Idris Yakob is also a farmer who came from Waekayt administrative area of Forto-sawa sub-region. He said that since some years ago he has been preparing compost and found it helpful in boosting his harvest. “However, this training has helped us to prepare compost in a very short period of time,” he added, and confirmed that they will adopt the scheme and influence other farmers in their surroundings.

Mr. Habtemichael Tsegay, a farmer from Homib-Abagosh area, was also one of the beneficiaries of the training program. He said it was his first time to participate in such an important program, and was convinced that using bio-fertilizers and bio-pesticides will help them produce healthy agricultural produce and safeguard their land from contamination by chemical fertilizers and pesticides.

Since the production of bio-fertilizers and bio-pesticides is somehow a new technique to Eritrean farmers and experts, continuous on-the-job training will be carried out, the MoA asserted.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea