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Government and Policy

Mali: A Lesson In How Conflict Takes Food Out Of People’s Mouth

BY Soko Directory Team · December 8, 2022 06:12 pm

By Mohammed Dagnoko and Ali Kabre

Mali once had it good. Mansa Musa, the great ninth Mansa of the Mali Empire, and considered the world’s richest man ever, has roots there. It was West Africa’s second-largest exporter of gold after Ghana.

The good times look so far away. Since January 2012, there has been a food crisis in 2016. And to compound its situation, terrorist attacks have multiplied in the center of the country, in the Mopti region. With the heavy toll of civilian and military victims and damage to farmers’ fields, it has been plunged into food insecurity. In Macina and Dogofry, the damage caused by this crisis is enormous, even if the causes are not the same.

In Dogofry, in the commune of Niono, in early January 2021, several fields were burnt by terrorists. In videos that have been widely shared on social networks, one can see hectares of rice fields, harvesters, and motorbikes being burnt. This scene was repeated several times during 2021 in this part of the country.

This marked a new turn in the modus operandi of Amadou Kouffa’s Macina Katiba, which began carrying out attacks in the center of the country in 2015.

For fear of being attacked by the terrorists, the farmers gradually abandoned their fields and withdrew to the few hectares bordering the village, “not enough to feed the family, so it is not possible for us to sell the surplus as we did before the arrival of the terrorists in order to be able to meet the needs of our families,” says a resident of Dogofry, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

Empty Granaries

In this area, known as the “granary of Mali”, foodstuffs are no longer within the reach of everyone. According to the people contacted, a kilogram of rice costs 450 CFA francs, whereas a kilogram of rice had never before reached 325 CFA francs in Niono.

“Today, even those who grow rice in Niono and the surrounding area prefer to sell it and buy millet in quantities that cost a little less,” says Aly Napo.

Unable to work their fields and thus meet the needs of their families, the able-bodied, by the dozen, leave the localities of this rice-growing area to find work elsewhere. Many of them are now focused on the gold panning sites in the south of the country, with all the consequences that this entails.

This situation does not spare women. With their gardening activities, their harvests of tomatoes, cabbages, onions, carrots, chilies, and others, they used to be able to support themselves and help out in the household. But since the crisis broke out, they have been reduced to plowing backyards. “If we have just a few vegetables for our sauces, that is more than enough. But even with that, at the rate things are going, we may not have any more,” says the head of a women’s organization in Dogofry.

The Bad Ride Office

Unlike Niono, the commune of Macina was until a few days ago spared from terrorist attacks on fields. “At the beginning of November, in Bougouwèrè, terrorists burned a rice field that had just been harvested. This is the first field burnt in the commune since the beginning of the crisis,” says Kalilou Sow, a resident of Macina. If these attacks are at the root of the food insecurity that is taking hold in the cercle of Niono here in Macina, it is rather the Rice Office that the farmers point the finger at as the author of their difficulties.

According to Dramane Kalapo, a member of the Macina farmers’ group, the fields in their area are no longer profitable because of poor infrastructure maintenance. “This year, it rained a lot, and many dykes broke, causing the flooding of several hectares of rice fields. The last development of our fields by the office was done in 1999. Since then, nothing has happened,” he says.

Yields per hectare have fallen short of expectations. “Every year I used to harvest an average of 25 bags of rice per hectare, but this year for my two hectares I only have 30 bags,” says Kalilou Sow.

In addition, fertilizer is not available this year. Usually subsidized in large quantities by the state, fertilizer was unaffordable for farmers because of the lack of subsidies. The 50 kilogramme bag of DPA went from 17,000 CFA francs to more than 42,000 CFA francs; at the same time, granular urea went from 12,500 CFA francs to more than 32,000 CFA francs per bag. Many farmers were unable to afford fertilizer this year, which had consequences for field yields.

“Usually we get 7 bags of subsidized fertilizer from the state. But this year it was only two bags, and even then, there was a form of discrimination in the sharing of these bags. Some were favored over others,&#