Photo: Chris Simpson/IRIN. Chronic drought means some families in Kayes have nothing left to share
Source: IRIN
KAYES, 13 April 2012 (IRIN) - “It was the drought that made people move
away from here,” Ousmane Touré said in Kayes, 450km northwest of Bamako,
the capital of Mali, and a 10-hour bus ride across the scorched
scrubland of the western Sahel. “There had been a tradition of
emigration, but it was when the harvests failed in the 1970s that we saw
a real surge in emigration. There was simply not enough to eat, so
people took off for France, Germany and the United States. They knew it
was only the way of feeding their families back home in Kayes. The same
thing is happening this year.”
Touré heads the Association of Returning Migrants of Kayes (AMRK), a
welfare organization that tries to provide short-term shelter and
counselling to people coming back to this part of the country. The
returnees, particularly those from the ethnic Soninké community, which
spreads across Mali, Senegal, Mauritania, Gambia and Guinea-Bissau, have
played a major role in developing western Mali through their
remittances and other cash transfers, giving it a stronger identity and
economic base. Many of them are now deportees who have fallen foul of
immigration restrictions in France and other countries.
“The emigrants have been well-organized and have always ensured money
gets channelled back, building health centres, schools, even roads,”
said Touré, but the economic crisis in Europe and tighter immigration
controls are having a serious knock-on effect, and impoverished villages
can no longer count on the same level of support.
In Mali the three-month rainy season starts in June, with the heaviest
falls in July and August. This is the time when everyone participates in
the intense agricultural activity of the main cropping season, which
provides most of the food for the rest of the year. The lean period
occurs in the driest months, just before the next rains come.
For Kayes, the capital of Mali’s First Region, which borders Mauritania,
Senegal and Guinea, 2012 is a particularly tough year. Besides the
effects of political turbulence elsewhere in the country and a rebellion in the north,
serious food security problems appeared months ago, after sparse rains.
Surveys by the government and international agencies identified Kayes
and the surrounding areas as particularly vulnerable, and likely to be
exposed to severe food shortages as an already impoverished population
experienced the impact of failed harvests.
By February, market prices for sorghum, millet, groundnuts and other
basic foodstuffs were grossly inflated; food reserves were depleted well
ahead of the usual lean season, with alarming shortages of seeds. There
were complaints that the government’s emergency food rations had given
temporary respite to some villages but had ignored dozens more, as well
as serious nutritional concerns, particularly for children. The UN
estimated that 1.6 million Malians would be food insecure in 2012.
The events in the capital and the north have overshadowed the food
crisis in the west. “A lot of things have been put on standby,” said
Abdoulaye Samoura, advocacy officer for NGO Oxfam. “There have been
serious delays in getting food distributed.” The dramatic price hikes at
local markets in January and February have eased off, but there is no
reason for complacency.
“What do you do when there is no food and you have to take care of five,
10, 20 people?” Touré asked. The answer is an exodus of men to Bamako,
or across the border into Senegal, or to the gold-mining areas 75km to
the south.
Mariam Cissoko, who heads the women’s section of the Association des
Organisations Professionnelles Paysannes - Association of Professional
Peasant Farmers (AOPP) - in Kayes, confirms that 2012 has been markedly
worse. “It rained for only month of the usual three (in 2011) and that
has meant drought and everything that comes with it,” she said.
“For us, the Bambara people, we don’t have the same tradition of
emigration as the Soninké. We are agro-pastoralists. If you work the
land, you will also have some livestock. But there is a strong spirit of
solidarity here. In normal times, if you have something in reserve, you
will give to those who don’t. But times like these, people just don’t
have anything to spare.”
The priorities are stark. “Feed us and feed our animals,” stressed
Cissoko. “If NGOs come and talk to us about education, that is all well
and good, but we need food first. Without that, everything falls to
pieces. People will get sick. Children won’t go to school. Men may be
able to take off and look for opportunities elsewhere, but women and
children are stuck where they are.”
Kayes has been described as the second hottest place in Africa after
Djibouti. “I grew up here and I remember an abundance of corn. We didn’t
have droughts like we get now,” Cissoko told IRIN. “In the hottest
months, the temperature normally goes to 42 or 43 degrees Celsius, but
last year it was 47 or 48 at times, in the shade. The desert is
advancing and the climatic changes are here for everyone to see. It has
all come progressively.”
Food aid from the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and others may ease the
problem, but Cissoko says rural communities in the Kayes region are
exhausted by the cycle of drought and dependency. They need long-term
practical help as they confront shrinking pasture and ongoing food
deficits.
“We need proper cereal banks in villages; we need irrigation systems
that protect agriculture; we need a credit system that can work, where
people can afford the interest rates,” she told IRIN.
Kayes town lies on the banks of the Senegal River. In stark contrast to
the dominating barrenness of the western Sahel, the riverbanks are
studded with neatly tended plots yielding tomatoes, cucumbers, onions
and other crops. This is all part of the maraîchage, or market
gardening, that provides women in particular with a livelihood. “When I
was a child, people said: ‘You will never get to plant fruit and
vegetables here,’” but they were wrong. That was forty years ago. It
began timidly, but the gardening has really picked up.”
But Cissoko acknowledges that cereal production is critical, and Ousmane
Touré is equally blunt in demanding that the state and its
international partners step up their efforts to help Kayes cope with the
food deficits and the devastating drought. “What do you do when there
is no food?” he asked. “People will not stay here. Families will
disappear.”