The Borneo Post

It’s red gold as Afghanista­n saffron production goes soaring

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HERAT, Afghanista­n: Starting before dawn has even broken, Afghanista­n’s army of saffron pickers shift their way across sunbaked fields to pluck the brightly coloured crocuses that are providing the country’s farmers with a new means of income.

The delicate pistil of the flower has for centuries been used in cooking around the world and because of its relatively high price has been dubbed “red gold” by those who rely on its cultivatio­n.

Joma Khan is one of the 156,000 seasonal workers who help harvest the spice, earning about US$1 an hour.

“We start our field work before sunrise and each of us can collect about four to five kilograms of saffron flower,” the 16-year-old said.

The harvest is then sent to factories where gloved workers remove the red pistil, made up of the three stigma that when dried constitute the spice.

Authoritie­s struggling to wean farmers off the highly profitable opium poppy trade are hoping to use the spice as an attractive alternativ­e.

And the results are looking positive, thanks to billions of dollars of internatio­nal aid.

The saffron harvest hit 13 tonnes this year, compared with a tonne in 2013, according to agricultur­e ministry spokesman Akbar Rostami.

Cultivatio­n requires little water, meaning it has not been heavily impacted by the historic drought currently threatenin­g nearly three million Afghans with famine.

It has even intensifie­d in some drought-hit areas, especially in the northweste­rn province of Herat on the border with Iran and Turkmenist­an.

Official figures show saffron cultivatio­n has increased to 6,200 hectares of land in 2018, up 21 per cent on last year.

However, there is still a way to go, with 263,000 hectares currently given over to poppy production. And while the saffron sector generated US$35 million in 2017, opium made an incredible US$1.4 billion.

Iran remains the world’s largest saffron producer, capturing nearly 90 per cent of the global market with 400 tonnes annually. Meanwhile, nearly 90 per cent of the opium harvested on the planet still comes from Afghanista­n.

Prices for the spice have also fallen, from more than US$900 at the start of the year to US$660 now, due in part to mafias who illegally import Iranian saffron and flood the market, Rostami said.

Neverthele­ss, the increased cultivatio­n of is being seen as a positive sign.

The spice is being exported to 17 countries through new air corridors, mainly to China, India, and the Gulf countries, and to a lesser extent to the European Union and North America, says the agricultur­e ministry

“Afghanista­n’s saffron, based on its organic nature, it is better than other saffron in the world,” claimed Abdul Shukoor Ahrari, director of Tila-e-Surkh Afghan (“Afghan Red Gold”), one of the country’s main processing sites.

 ??  ?? Starting before dawn, saffron pickers shift their way across sun-baked fields to pluck brightly coloured crocuses that are providing the country’s farmers with a new means of income.
Starting before dawn, saffron pickers shift their way across sun-baked fields to pluck brightly coloured crocuses that are providing the country’s farmers with a new means of income.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? Workers separating saffron threads from harvested flowers at a processing centre in Herat province.
— AFP photos Workers separating saffron threads from harvested flowers at a processing centre in Herat province.
 ??  ?? Sorting harvested saffron flowers in a field on the outskirts of Herat province.
Sorting harvested saffron flowers in a field on the outskirts of Herat province.

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