The Herald (South Africa)

Bitter pill for small-scale farmers

- Bongani Mthethwa

SMALL-SCALE sugarcane grower Bongiwe Mcineka, 58, is feeling the pinch and struggling to survive because sugar imports are threatenin­g to suffocate South Africa’s sugar industry.

The mother of seven, who has been a sugarcane farmer since 1992 in the Glendale Valley on KwaZulu-Natal’s North Coast‚ is now battling to educate her children.

“We used to get a lot of money but now we are getting nothing. We can’t even take our children to school‚” she said.

“Job opportunit­ies have been lost because you can’t hire someone if you can’t pay them.”

Her sentiments were echoed by another small-scale cane grower‚ Celumusa Mahlobo‚ 44‚ from Emthandeni‚ north of Durban‚ who said some companies had resorted to buying sugar overseas because it was expensive in South Africa.

“Us farmers can’t even have money to live. How am I going to work and how am I going to pay the people who are working for me? Because we don’t get money anymore and we’re owing the [sugar] mills.”

Mcineka and Mahlobo were among more than 60 black small-scale sugarcane farmers who embarked on a 20-hour bus trip from KwaZulu-Natal to parliament in Cape Town on Wednesday to show their support for the sugar industry’s applicatio­n to stop sugar imports by increasing the sugar tariff.

Mcineka said they had decided to come together as small-scale farmers to voice their concern about sugar imports, which had a negative effect on their businesses.

Black sugarcane farmers from the South African Farmers Developmen­t Associatio­n (Safda) are struggling to survive due to the ineffectiv­e duty imposed on imported sugar.

Parliament­ary portfolio committee on trade and industry chairwoman Joanne Fubbs expressed concern when viewing a number of cane payment statements that small-scale sugarcane farmers received.

The statements showed that a large number of the farmers received no payment for the 2017-2018 season.

Other statements showed farmers were in the red and had been forced to start a new season with high levels of debt.

Safda said the challenge was that farmers required capital to replant fields‚ purchase fertiliser and for operating costs.

“Starting a new season with a zero or negative balance means that small-scale farmers are already indebted and have little or no chance of securing capital.

‘This, in turn, has a catastroph­ic effect on the rural communitie­s of KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga‚” Safda said.

The associatio­n said it was worth noting that small-scale sugarcane farmers had small plots‚ sometimes as little as 0.5ha‚ “so economies of scales are not feasible”.

Sugar produced outside South Africa is flooding the local market and as a result black small-scale sugarcane farmers are in dire straits, as are rural communitie­s.

But there could be light at the end of the tunnel as members of the portfolio committee on trade and industry‚ the Internatio­nal Trade Administra­tion Commission of South Africa and SARS undertook to deal with the matter urgently, with a resolution expected next month. – TimesLIVE

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