Texarkana Gazette

UN: Farming at heart of Syria reconstruc­tion

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BRUSSELS—Internatio­nal efforts to rebuild Syria once the civil war is over should center on agricultur­e to kick start the economy and quickly improve the livelihood­s of the people, a high-level United Nations official said Tuesday.

In an interview with The Associated Press ahead of an internatio­nal Syria donors conference, the United Nations’ Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on’s Deputy Director General Daniel Gustafson said that in case of a return to peace the impact of funding farming would yield almost immediate results.

“If you invest in are going to get return,” he said.

Despite seven years of warfare through much of the Middle Eastern nation which also blighted farmland that, you a quick and destroyed facilities, farming still accounts for about a quarter of Syria’s gross domestic product.

UN figures show that some $16 billion in production has been lost because of the war and it will take about as much to get the recovery of farming going again. At the two-day Syria conference opening Tuesday, donors from across the globe hope to commit several billion in assistance to alleviate the pressing needs of Syrians. Over $5 billion was committed last year.

Farming in Syria goes back many thousands of years and the nation was long a breadbaske­t for the area. When the war started almost half the population was still employed in farming.

And despite the horrific war that ravaged orchards and fields, cut the availabili­ty of seeds and fertilizer­s and sent many millions fleeing, half the output survives to this day.

“The resilience of the agricultur­e sector is an astonishin­g story. You still have half the production of wheat of what you had before the war”—two million tons, instead of 4 million before the war, Gustafson said.

While most of the attention goes to shocking events like bombings or even gas attacks, war in the countrysid­e often has a more creeping effect.

“It is this continuous deteriorat­ion of their livelihood­s. You cannot get seeds, you cannot sell stuff, you cannot trade, you cannot get spare parts,” Gustafson said. “The whole thing just kind of grinds down.”

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