Thursday, April 16, 2020

East Africa: EAC Wants Foods Security Uplifted


AS East Africa enjoys enough rains, and thus ensuring food security, the EAC Secretariat is devising a Covid-19 recovery strategy.
The Secretariat has finalised the Covid-19 Response Plan and is developing the
EAC Recovery Strategy based on a regional approach.
"While many people have already lost their jobs and are struggling to feed their families, there is a window of opportunity to prepare for the time after Covid-19 and to prevent another catastrophe," Mr Christophe Bazivamo, Deputy Secretary General in charge of Productive and Social Sectors at the EAC Secretariat noted here yesterday.
He has urged the six partner states in the region to strengthen their food production systems by allowing farming activities to continue.
He further emphasized that the states should more than ever before promote the use of technology and digital solutions to improve agricultural production and trade in agricultural products.
The EAC has received good rains since September 2019 in most of its parts and the meteorological forecast up to May 2020 shows near normal to above normal rainfall.
As a result, livestock and wildlife are striving and farmers are expecting good harvests.
"All this presents good prospects for the agricultural sector," said Mr Fahari Marwa, the Principal Agricultural Economist at the EAC Secretariat.
He recommended that pastoralists and farmers should take advantage of the conditions to improve animal, food and cash crop production so as to fill the region's food basket.
That is especially important, as some of the EAC partner states are bracing for a second locust invasion. The Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) has warned that the new generation is expected to hatch in May.
"The free movement of goods and services in the EAC has been maintained and the supply situation for staple food and basic necessities is currently secured. However, on the negative side, enterprises across sectors, including the agro-industry and particularly the informal sector, are suffering.
Value chains have been disrupted and tourism, a major source of income in the region, has come to a complete standstill," he observed.
Against that backdrop, the EAC Secretariat calls upon partner states to immediately commence developing national economic recovery plans.
To mitigate the Covid-19 burden and to brace for the expected economic challenges following the pandemic, the EAC Secretariat recommends partner states to meet the immediate food needs of their vulnerable populations by ensuring that emergency food needs are met, and to adjust and expand social protection programmes.
The EAC Secretariat further urges partner states to gain efficiencies and try to reduce trade-related costs, to reduce food wastage and losses, improve food storage systems and to resolve logistical bottlenecks.
Director of Customs and Trade, EAC Secretariat, Mr Kenneth Bagamuhunda, said other possible measures could include reviewing trade and policy options to address Covid-19 impacts by reducing import tariffs on essential goods and inputs and reviewing domestic taxation policies on essential goods produced locally.
He said there was a need to assess the potential impact of exchange devaluation; Instituting stimulus packages to boost local production and promote imports substitution; Apply monetary and fiscal measures to counter inflationary pressures and upscale trade facilitation to enhance food trade.
The EAC Secretariat has also called upon regional and international partners to establish and support short to long-term measures that compliment partner states' efforts to contain the impact of the Covid-19 global pandemic on the food and nutrition security in the region.
While starting to prepare for recovery after the Covid-19 outbreak, the EAC states should vehemently continue to implement the measures that prevent and contain the spread of the disease until the pandemic disappears completely.
It includes bans on non-essential travel and international commercial flights, enhanced active surveillance and quarantining of Covid-19 suspect cases as well as raising awareness on how to prevent and respond to infections.
Further, the EAC Secretariat strongly encourages the strategy of 'test and isolate' to limit the spread and speed up the containment of the virus.
The EAC Secretariat encourages the EAC citizens to remain vigilant, follow the recommended physical distancing, maintain strict hygiene including washing hands with soap and water and sanitizing them, among other preventive measures.

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