http://ugandaradionetwork.com/a/story.php?s=54921
Bundibugyo district council has passed a bye-law compelling all farmers
in the district to plant food crops and not focus only on cocoa growing.
Farmers in the district have abandoned growing food crops on their
gardens and concentrated on Cocoa, which is the main income earner in
the district. This has left some families with no food to feed on,
causing shortage of food in homes.
The shortage of food in families forces communities to purchase food
from Kabarole, Kasese districts and some parts of the Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC).
According to the bye-law, farmers will have to plant food crops for home
consumption, besides cocoa and vanilla on their gardens or else they
face a jail term of three months, pay a fine of 30,000 shillings or
both.
The Bundibugyo District Agricultural Officer, Martin Mwesige, who
drafted the bye-law, says that the district has the potential to grow
nutritious food crops like bananas, cassava, beans and maize, but
families dedicate large chunks of land to growing cocoa. Mwesige says
that in Busaru and Harugale Sub Counties, there is no single food crop
grown because priority is given to cocoa and vanilla.
Asked how the district will enforce the bye-law, Mwesige says that
agricultural department will rely on extension workers and sub county
NAADS coordinators to ensure that farmers comply.
//Cue in: “Food from Eastern Congo…
Cue out: …to grow food.”//
However some farmers have mixed reactions to the bye-law that has been passed, with some saying that they will not abide to it.
Beatrice Sabiiti, a farmer in Bubukwanga, says farmers should be left to
grow crops of their choice. Sabiiti says she is interested in growing
cocoa because there is market and when sold, she can afford to take her
children to good schools.
Moses Suza, the chairperson of Bundibugyo farmers association, welcomes
the bye-law, saying it’s long overdue. Suza says that in the past
farmers have been encouraged to grow food crops, since cocoa is a
seasonal crop.
He says that some families starve when the cocoa season ends, because they haven’t grown other crops.
//Cue in: “On your land…
Cue out: “…children grow healthy.”//
In 2011, the World Health Organization (WHO) released a report
indicating that at least 45% of children below the age of 5 years in
Bundibugyo district suffer from chronic malnutrition. Last year, a
research carried out by the Ruwenzori Think Tank on Food security
indicated that Bundibugyo district has the highest number of children
below 5 years with stunted growth in the Ruwenzori region.
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