The Borneo Post

In rural Senegal, seeds of hope for working women

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NGANDA, Senegal: In Nganda, a rural community in remote Senegal close to the Gambian border, restaurant owner Aissatou Tisse is carving out a reputation for tasty home-made, locally grown food.

About 100 kilometres (60 miles) away in the village of Niakhar, handicappe­d Daba Dione feeds her family by raising chickens on a modest smallholdi­ng. Thanks to a training course in veterinary health, she is routinely consulted by neighbours about their own poultry.

“Today, I’ve even forgotten the difficulti­es of the past,” Dione told AFP.

The two have benefited from schemes that seek both to support women’s empowermen­t and fight poverty in rural Africa, where male dominance, backbreaki­ng labour and misery go hand in hand.

“We have an enormous need of women... We’re up against the ageing of those who hold land and the phenomenon of migration among men,” said Khadija Doucoure, a specialist handling gender and youth issues in west Africa for the Internatio­nal Fund for Agricultur­al Developmen­t ( IFAD).

“It should be normal for (women) to have access, like men do, to financial resources, fertiliser­s, and to be present in decision-making bodies for product marketing,” Doucoure said.

UN agencies like IFAD and the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on ( FAO), both based in Rome, manage projects to help empower rural women, who account for at least 43 per cent of agricultur­al labourers world-wide, according to an FAO report.

Such women bear responsibi­lity for childcare and household tasks, as well as working the fields, yet enjoy only “limited access to land, credit, informatio­n and technologi­es,” IFAD noted in a recent report.

In west and central Africa, IFAD runs 55 projects that feature gender equality as a goal.

Between 2010 and 2015, its projects “reached a total of 139 million people, of whom 43.2 million saw an increase in farm income,” while others built up larger cattle herds or poultry stocks, the agency said.

The support “lifted 24 million people out of poverty”, added the document, which pointed out that helping women is “an efficient means of reducing chronic infantile malnutriti­on. Women are more inclined than men to spend their revenue on food and education.”

Neverthele­ss, independen­t

We have an enormous need of women... We’re up against the ageing of those who hold land and the phenomenon of migration among men. Khadija Doucoure, a specialist handling gender and youth issues in west Africa

analyst Jean- Christophe Debar warned of broader risks if institutio­nal donors like the FAO and the World Bank concentrat­e unduly on women because of perceived hardships. “I’m worried about trendy effects: What we need most is a rural economy that works for everyone.”

“We should not give the impression that it’s enough to focus on women for everything to go well,” said Debar, head of the think tank foundation FARM.

“The two main problems in Africa are access to the means of production ( land, seeds, fertiliser) and access to the market, with the possibilit­y of selling the harvest at a rewarding price.”

In Nganda, where some families cannot afford all the food they need, IFAD has financed farm support programmes jointly with the Senegalese state since 2012.

Villagers are given seeds adapted to survive in drought conditions and also get basic agronomic training in soil management.

Tisse works only with local produce, she told AFP in her small Nganda restaurant where she provided a glass of ruby red bissap, a popular drink made from dried hibiscus leaves.

“We have been able to buy our sheep and horses and we have launched into the production of (groundnut) oil,” said the young woman, who was forced to leave school early after her parents died.

Until recently, jobless men in the district would head off to the capital and never come back, Tisse said.

“Women went too, to be domestic employees. Dakar is a risk for us.”

“This is a dry area where the soil has not been worked for several generation­s, since the majority of young people leave for Dakar or further afield,” said Mame Birame Sene, the head of Nganda’s cultural and sporting associatio­n, which has turned into an agricultur­al cooperativ­e.

Until the funding scheme began, “we had problems meeting our needs, but now we’re cultivatin­g 200 hectares (almost 500 acres) and we run our own business,” Tisse said.

She has deliberate­ly hired a team exclusivel­y made up of women.

“With men around, we would not have been able to engage in food processing nor the restaurant business,” she said. “And I pay everybody!”

But she takes her greatest pride from being chosen as “godmother” to the local football club. Such a position for a woman was hitherto unimaginab­le in the dusty backwater.

Tisse bubbles with more plans, including a shop for local produce and a restaurant in Dakar on the same select basis as her business in the village. “We’ve already spotted the place, we just need to settle the deal.”

In Nganda, increased crop production has enabled women to make the most of a bumper harvest by preparing bags of sankhal ( processed crushed millet) for desserts, typically with milk, and arraw (rolled flour pellets) for porridge.

By pooling their earnings, the women have set up a bank and lend themselves money for their individual projects at a fixed interest rate of 10 per cent.

Tenning Ngom, 27, has been a beneficiar­y.

“My work for the collective is to sieve millet after the harvest. I work from November to February.”

For the rest of the year, Ngom runs a roadside catering concern started when the women’s group lent her money. “My first loan dates from 2015,” she said. “I’ve paid it all back.”

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Above left, Ngom works (right) sifts millet in Niakhar, Senegal, on Dec 5, 2017. ‘My collective job is to sift millet after harvest, I work from November to February’, Tenning Ngom, 27, says. The rest of the time, she has a street catering business,...
— AFP photos Above left, Ngom works (right) sifts millet in Niakhar, Senegal, on Dec 5, 2017. ‘My collective job is to sift millet after harvest, I work from November to February’, Tenning Ngom, 27, says. The rest of the time, she has a street catering business,...
 ??  ?? Ngom works (right) sifts millet in Niakhar on Dec 5, 2017. The rest of the time, she has a street catering business, thanks to a women’s associatio­n which gave her the funds to start.
Ngom works (right) sifts millet in Niakhar on Dec 5, 2017. The rest of the time, she has a street catering business, thanks to a women’s associatio­n which gave her the funds to start.
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