Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Uganda 'happy' about food crisis
Uganda 'happy' about food crisis
Because they can't sell them, 40% of Ugandan bananas rot
The president of Uganda says he is "very happy" about the food crisis.
"Why? Because we produce a lot of food... We are stuck with food," President Yoweri Museveni told Commonwealth heads of government.
The president hopes the food crisis will prompt the removal of trade barriers, allowing countries like Uganda to profit from food surpluses.
A BBC correspondent says most benefits are going to large, commercial farms, while poor Ugandans are suffering.
The BBC's Sarah Grainger in Uganda says most of the population are subsistence farmers, who do not export their crops but are affected by the rising cost of fuel and other inputs.
I think out of all these hiccups we may get a more rationalised interaction... by removing trade barriers, by removing subsidies
President Museveni
Fruit could curb Ugandan poverty
But overall food production has risen in recent years.
Uganda's growth rate is expected to reach 8.9% later on this year, up from 6.5% last year, partly due to debt relief.
"Our problem has been marketing... We produce 10 million metric tonnes of bananas and 40% of it rots because we have nowhere to sell it," President Museveni told delegates.
President Museveni said milk production had risen so rapidly, it had been poured away.
That was until Uganda set up a recent agreement with an Indian processor plant: excess milk is now being shipped to India.
And he thinks Uganda can continue turning the food crisis to its advantage:
"I think out of all these hiccups we may get a more rationalised interaction in terms of the use of our resources, through trade, by removing trade barriers, by removing subsidies," he said.
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