Photo: Bethmoon527/Flickr. Farms across Egypt are undeveloped
Source: IRIN
CAIRO, 11 August 2014 (IRIN) - It has been over two months since
President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi formally took power in Egypt following an
election in which he won a huge majority, albeit on a low turnout.
During his inaugural speech, Sisi highlighted the plight of the
country’s farmers and rural poor, promising to develop the agricultural
sector, provide more arable land and support those in desperate need.
His words have raised hopes within the often-neglected rural regions
that Sisi can use his strong mandate to push through major reforms to
improve their lives, especially after many lent him their support during the election.
Yet analysts say Sisi’s plans have so far been vague and point out it is
still too early to know what effect his policies will have on
agriculture. Indeed, as his government pushes ahead with plans to cut
fuel and other subsidies, fears are growing that rural poverty may even
increase.
Upper Egypt top of priorities
During his first-ever media interview in May, then presidential
candidate Sisi spoke about re-mapping Egyptian governorates through a
"development corridor" plan that would include major new infrastructure
networks to enable farmers to use over four million new acres (1.62
million hectares) of land. By introducing scientific irrigation methods,
he said, the country could double its agricultural production.
“The plan is set to create new employment opportunities in agriculture,”
Richard Tutwiler, director of the Research Institute for a Sustainable
Environment (RISE) at Cairo’s American University, said. Egypt has 8.6m
acres (3.48 million hectares) of agricultural land, according to the
State Information Services, but this would increase by a little more
than 40 percent under Sisi’s plans, Tutwiler said.
It is clear that the need for a new approach is most acute in Upper
Egypt, the vast rural region which despite its name is located in the
south of the country. The area is home to around 40 percent of Egypt’s
population but 70 percent of its poor, according to the World Bank.
Likewise, residents suffer from among the highest rates of illiteracy,
malnutrition and infant mortality, while access to safe water and
sanitation are limited. Residents have long accused the Cairo-based
central authorities of neglect, arguing that not enough of the central
budget is allocated to the south.
“Basic services are in very bad condition,” said Dyaa Abdou, programme
manager for agricultural development at the Egypt Network for Integrated
Development (ENID). The project, which is funded by the UN Development
Programme among others, aims to build up the capacity of local farmers
and support rural projects, yet Abdou admits that the state of
infrastructure can be a hindrance to their work. “You can’t do any real
development without improving these services.”
Water and sanitation
Among the top concerns for Egypt’s rural farmers are the poor water
networks. Only a little more than one in 10 people in rural Upper Egypt
have access to clean running water and sanitation, according to ENID.
For farmers this can cause harvests to fail, while for the rural poor
unclean water increases rates of gastrointestinal diseases, cancer or
kidney failure. “The most pressing priority for rural people is to have
an adequate sanitation infrastructure,” ENID managing director Heba
Handoussa told IRIN. This concern was echoed by farmers in the area
around the southern town of Qena such as Ramadan Abdel Razy. “We don’t
have a pipe network that covers all areas,” he bemoaned.
Among the projects proposed by ENID is a new network of large irrigation
canals. Poor villagers mainly depend on traditional sewage systems in
which sanitation pits are dug without a cement base, often leading to
sewage leakage into the water under ground. “We have small canals, with
trapping grass and weeds,” Salah Ahmad, an ENID board director, told
IRIN, adding that a new network would help boost Upper Egypt’s economy.
As yet, few concrete steps have been taken in this direction. Amal
Ismael, head of the Agriculture Ministry Directorate in Qena, said they
were waiting for confirmation of new developments from the central
government. “There are many governmental regulations applying to water
sanitation and framing processes but there are no specific projects for
water, sanitation, agricultural activities in the ministry,” she said.
Food woes
Another area of focus for any government seeking to help the rural poor
is food security. Egypt’s 2011 Household Income, Expenditure and
Consumption Survey indicated that 74.3 percent of households in Upper
Egypt suffer from chronic food insecurity. The poorest families often
buy less expensive, less nutritious food leading to severe health
diseases.
Amal, a teacher at a private school in El Azayza village, said many of
her students were suffering from anaemia, which can be caused by a lack
of iron or vitamins in the diet. “Right now, we have 149 kids in need of
healthy food, out of these, 92 are severe cases.”
As farmers in the region traditionally have small landholdings, they
cultivate relatively few crops, and they have a low market value,
according to the International Fund for Agricultural Development. A
simple, though short-term, route to ameliorating this crisis would be to
encourage more production through fertilizers. During his election
campaign, Sisi suggested he would do just that, but the effects have yet
to kick in.
Currently small farmers can get a limited number of fertilizers for 70
EGP (US$10) per sack, but they cost double that on the market and plans
to increase subsidies appear popular. “We need more fertilizers. The
government only gives us two sacks when we should get six,” said Mouheb
Al Kes Haroun, a teacher of agriculture at a technical school in El
Azayza. Yet fresh reports from Egypt suggest that prices of fertilizer may actually increase, rather than decrease.
Other small-scale projects could also be broadened to aid the rural
poor. ENID recently introduced poultry backyard production in two poor
villages near Qena, by distributing 30 chicks to the 20 poorest
households and encouraging them to raise chickens. Likewise the
organization has started a roof gardening project to raise awareness of
food security. “The idea is to show people how to make good use of their
home roof by planting and eating food from it,” said Muhammed, a worker
on the project. “It’s easy and low cost. Any family can do roof
gardening.”
Mohamed El Sayed, director of technical support at the Ministry of Local
Development, said they were hoping to increase individual support to
farmers to help them grow their businesses. “One of the main challenges
in Upper Egypt is to invest in farmers, develop their capabilities
through ongoing training and sustainable agricultural development,” he
said.
Health and education
There are other areas, too, where reforms are desperately needed. In the
health sector, public services are poor and there are shortages of
essential medicines in rural communities. Villagers told IRIN about
people having to wait hours for urgent surgery, a shortage of beds, and
poor health facilities.
Likewise in education, institutions lack the capacity to accommodate
students, with classes of 70 or more, common. High drop-out rates mean illiteracy rates remain over 30 percent in much of Upper Egypt, nearly double those in Cairo and other big cities.
Kamil Abdo, director of The Association of Upper Egypt for Education and
Development (AUEED), told IRIN many children completed primary school
but stayed only briefly in secondary school. “Parents are interested in
getting basic education for their children, but they’re less bothered
[about secondary] because their kids have grown up,” he said. AUEED runs
one of the 14 schools in Asyut Governorate and it has been held up as
an example - with significantly higher test scores and lower dropout
rates than elsewhere. Abdo said some of the techniques used were simple,
and easily transferable to other schools: more individual support for
children, teachers following students through the years, and smaller
class sizes. Others are harder, such as tackling traditionally high
female dropout rates by meeting families to emphasize the importance of
education.
Sisi seems to have grasped the scale of the challenge, in principle at
least. During his inauguration speech he said he wanted to “focus on
providing the premium medical care for the elderly along with the
development of the education sector, which includes both the student and
the teacher, from providing them with the necessary libraries and
stadiums to theatres, and to upgrade the technical education and
support, linking education to the needs of the labour market.”
Top-down approach
Yet Hatem Zayed, programme officer at the Egyptian Centre for Economic
and Social Rights, said he was concerned that in many areas the
solutions proposed so far have been vague. He added that plans to cut
energy and food subsidies, which Sisi has already begun to push ahead
with, would further impoverish millions. The World Food Programme
estimated last year that removing high food subsidies could push the
national poverty rate up by nearly 10 percent.
“Sisi mentioned that food security would be a priority. However, the
policies [he has introduced] don’t show that,” Zayed told IRIN.
And while Sisi may have shown a genuine commitment for reform, both
Zayed and Tutwiler warned that he appeared to have inherited the
top-down approach that characterized previous Egyptian governments under
deposed dictator Hosni Mubarak.
“One mistake repeated by past governments has been to focus on
macro-scale programmes without a thorough understanding of the local
needs of the county’s rural communities,” Zayer said.
Tutwiler identified local participation development as one area of
interest around issues such as agriculture, water and irrigation. The
idea entails people taking more responsibility in managing their own
resources collectively through community-based local associations.
“It would be interesting to see if the government will encourage
policies of decentralization, local capacity-building,” Tutwiler said.
“It won’t be a huge change of direction but it may ameliorate some of
the problems concerning rural people.”
The rural poor, many of whom had their hopes raised by Sisi’s election,
will continue to wait to see if the new president’s promises prove to be
empty.