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Onion farmers in tears

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IN a satellite town of Senegal’s capital Dakar, 25kg sacks of onions are piled up on pavements, ignored by passers-by.

The West African country is in the middle of a supply glut, with prices plummeting and heaps of the pungent vegetables left to rot by the roadside. Farmers are in despair.

“I’m going to give some to the local women,” says farmer Diongue Masseye, 71, gazing despondent­ly at his onions.

He is standing inside a 450sq m warehouse in Bambilor, an onion-producing town about 30km northeast of the capital Dakar, where his unsold produce has started to sprout.

Gloomy farmers – who produce about 450,000 tonnes of onions a year – blame the problem on increased foreign competitio­n and a lack of storage capacity.

But the government also argues that farmers have overproduc­ed this year, flooding the market with onions and depressing prices.

Masseye said prices had nearly halved. A 25kg sack of onions fetched the equivalent of about €13 (RM64) a few months ago, he said, but are now worth about €7 (RM34).

The bulbous vegetable is a lifeline to many in the nation of 16 million people, where it is a key ingredient in the national fishand-rice dish, Thieboudie­nne, as well as Yassa chicken.

Amadou Abdoul Sy, the director of Senegal’s market regulation agency, said some 200,000 farmers are employed in the onion sector.

“Everyone is producing at the same time,” he told AFP, explaining the glut.

Bad onions

Senegal’s onion sector has long been plagued by problems.

Almost a third of the crop is lost every year, Sy said.

The United Nations’ Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on noted in a 2018 report that the use of low-quality seeds by Senegalese farmers contribute­s to the problem.

Often, producers also harvest their onions too early to try to get ahead of the competitio­n, leaving the vegetables wet. This leads to significan­t losses and makes onions difficult to store, the FAO said.

Consumers are shying away from the damaged goods.

Trader Daouda Mbaye, in a market in a village in western Senegal, demonstrat­ed sacks of poor-quality onions and said buyers were more interested in other vegetables.

But to the dismay of local farmers, many people will buy imported onions.

The president of Senegal’s onion producers associatio­n, Boubacar Sall, said the government suspended onion imports in January in a bid to help struggling locals.

But foreign-owned farms in Senegal are still producing onions, he explained. They are often larger than Senegalese farms and have better storage facilities.

The onion farmer is calling for legislatio­n that will protect small producers who fall “prey to unfair competitio­n” from larger ones.

Lack of storage facilities are a chronic problem in Senegal, according to farmers, where a warm climate means vegetables quickly go bad.

For Masseye, the government should have provided refrigerat­ed store rooms to ease pressure on producers.

But Sy said that producers themselves are partly to blame.

He said government authoritie­s had asked farmers to sell their goods at different times in order to stop a supply glut.

“They were not listened to,” Sy said.

While farmers are unhappy, some consumers are pleased.

Astou Ndiagne, a housewife in Bambilor, flashed a mischievou­s smile when asked about the lower prices.

“This is allowing us to save money,” she said. – AFP

 ??  ?? an onion farmer sitting on his produce at the Notto Gouye diama market, one of the main markets for agricultur­al products in the thies region in Senegal. — afp
an onion farmer sitting on his produce at the Notto Gouye diama market, one of the main markets for agricultur­al products in the thies region in Senegal. — afp

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