TANZANIA, with the second highest livestock population in Africa after Ethiopia, ironically gains very little from the hides and skins industry because it exports them in raw form.
Addressing a three-day seminar of the
industry’s stakeholders here yesterday, the Chairman of the Tanzania
Trade Development Authority (TANTRADE), Mr Christopher Chiza, said it
was ironical for Tanzania to export jobs and other benefits to other
countries by exporting raw hides and skins.
In 2015, Mr Chiza explained, Tanzania
produced 3.1 million hides, 2.8 million goat skins and 550,000 sheep
skins, with a combined value 33 bn/-.
But, he told stunned participants, hides
and skins worth 76.3bn/- were exported to Turkey, Italy, Hong Kong,
Pakistan, India, Singapore and China.
“Only 250,000 pieces were processed
locally into products with a total value of 12.5 bn/-,” he said. “Stop
exporting raw hides and skins. We are losing many things. Process them
here into products and in so doing you will increase national wealth,
your own income and create jobs,” he said.
He said Tanzania is the second biggest
livestock continental player after Ethiopia. In 2015 it had 25.8 million
cattle, 16.7 million goats, 8.7 million sheep.
Yet, he added, the livestock sector
makes insignificant contribution to the national economy primarily
because of exporting raw products, poor animal husbandry, lack of
quality products and awful skinning of hides.
Acting TanTrade Managing Director Mr
Edwin Rutageruka said the seminar was organised to help stakeholders
appreciate the importance of the sector in creating jobs and increase
players’ knowledge and skills in managing animals and livestock
products.
“Besides, we want the producers to formalise their businesses and pay taxes.
Hides, skins, textiles and bee products
are given priority at the moment,” he said. He said livestock keepers
are told to avoid putting indelible marks on animal’s body, instead they
should put them on animals’ heads.
The Secretary of the Tanzania Leather
Producers Association (Talepa), Mr Timothy Futo said 25 participants
attend the seminar and called on authorities to help producers acquire
machines for processing hides into value-added products.
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