New Straits Times

West Africa fights disease that hits staple food

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ABIDJAN: Researcher­s from half a dozen states in West Africa have joined together in a battle against what one expert calls a root crop “Ebola” — a viral disease that could wreck the region’s staple food and condemn millions to hunger.

Their enemy: cassava brown streak disease (CBSD), a virus that strikes cassava, also called manioc, which in some of the region’s countries is consumed by as many as 80 per cent of the population.

The root-rotting disease was first discovered in Tanzania 80 years ago and is steadily moving westward.

“In outbreaks in central Africa, it has wiped out between 90 and 100 per cent of cassava production — it’s now heading towards West Africa,” Justin Pita, in charge of the research programme, said.

“It is a very big threat. It has to be taken very seriously.”

In Uganda, 3,000 people died of hunger in the 1990s after the dreaded disease showed up, striking small farmers in particular.

“You can call it the Ebola of cassava,” said Pita.

The West African Virus Epidemiolo­gy (Wave) project, a multi-million-dollar scheme funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, aims to shield the region from the advancing peril.

Headquarte­red in Bingervill­e, on the edges of the Ivorian economic capital Abidjan, it gathers six countries from West Africa — Benin, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Nigeria and Togo — as well as the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The CBSD virus is generally believed to be propagated by an insect called the silverleaf whitefly and through cuttings taken from infected plants.

But there remain gaps in knowledge about West Africa’s specific vulnerabil­ities to the disease.

They include understand­ing the susceptibi­lity of local strains of cassava to the virus and identifyin­g points in the cassava trade that can help a localised outbreak of CBSD swell into an epidemic.

The scheme will look at initiative­s to help boost yield — a key challenge in a region with surging population growth.

“The current average yield from cassava (in West Africa) is 10 to 12 tonnes per hectare, but it has the potential to reach 40 tonnes a hectare,” said Odile Attanasso, Benin’s minister of higher education and scientific research.

“In Asia, they have yields of 22 tonnes per hectare.”

The Wave project hopes to go beyond the lab and test fields, though. It wants to harness the clout of community leaders and chiefs to spread CBSD awareness and promote better farming practices, such as confining and destroying crops in infested areas and banning transport of manioc cuttings.

“We, kings and traditiona­l chiefs, are the interface between the population and the government,” said Amon Tanoe, the ceremonial monarch of the coastal Grand-Bassam region in Ivory Coast.

Ivory Coast is a huge consumer of cassava — the starchy root is typically pulped and fermented and served in a side dish called attieke.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? A woman peeling outer layers of cassava (manioc) for the attieke side dish in Abidjan in May.
AFP PIC A woman peeling outer layers of cassava (manioc) for the attieke side dish in Abidjan in May.

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