Muscat Daily

WHO backs farmers to grow food instead of tobacco, especially in Africa

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Geneva, Switzerlan­d - The World Health Organizati­on said on Friday it was helping a growing number of farmers turn away from tobacco to help strengthen food security, particular­ly in Africa.

Ahead of World No Tobacco Day on Wednesday, the WHO said it had teamed up with other United Nations agencies to support farmers wishing to convert from growing tobacco to growing food.

The scheme’s pilot in Kenya has proved successful and now the UN wants to export it to other countries and continents.

“A record of 349mn people face acute food insecurity and that is up from 135mn in 2019,” Ruediger Krech, the WHO’S director for health promotion, told reporters in Geneva.

“Then we have 124 countries which grow tobacco as a cash crop, covering an estimated 3.2mn hectares of land. Approximat­ely 200,000 hectares of land are cleared every year for tobacco crop growing.”

Beyond its effects on the health of smokers and farmers, tobacco growing poses a problem for food security, according to the WHO.

The UN health agency is concerned that tobacco companies are gaining an increasing foothold in Africa, with a rise of nearly 20 per cent in tobacco plantation­s across the continent since 2005.

“It is often said that tobacco farming would be so important for economic growth. This is a myth that we urgently need to dispel,” said Krech.

He said it only accounts for more than one per cent of gross domestic product in five countries: Malawi, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Tanzania and North Macedonia.

“So the profits go to the global tobacco companies.”

Dependency ‘trap’

The WHO accuses the tobacco industry of trapping farmers in a ‘cycle of dependency’, giving them little control over product prices and quality.

“They’re trapped. They need to repay the debt before they can discontinu­e the work for big tobacco,” said Krech.

Three UN agencies - the WHO, the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on and the World Food Programme - have set up a credit programme to help farmers pay off their tobacco industry debts and change their crop.

The scheme was launched in Migori county in southwest Kenya, where 2,040 farmers have been helped in the first year.

 ?? ?? WHO’S director for health promotion Ruediger Krech
WHO’S director for health promotion Ruediger Krech

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