Bangkok Post

Pakistan struggles with locust plague

Food prices soar as swarms ruin harvests

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s farmers are struggling to combat the worst locust plague in nearly three decades as insect swarms decimate entire harvests in the country’s agricultur­al heartlands and send food prices soaring.

Heavy rains and cyclones sparked “unpreceden­ted” breeding and the explosive growth of locust population­s on the Arabian peninsula early last year, according to the United Nations.

The insects have since fanned out and wreaked havoc on farms from East Africa to India, before making their way into Pakistan from the desert on the country’s southweste­rn border with Iran.

The crisis is so severe that the government has declared a nationwide emergency and urgently appealed for help from the internatio­nal community.

Officials in southern Sindh province fear the infestatio­n will devastate the supply of cotton — the local cash crop — ahead of its harvest in the coming months.

Local surveys of the damage are continuing, but the Sindh Chamber of Agricultur­e says nearly half of all crops have been destroyed near the port city of Karachi.

“I have not seen an infestatio­n like this one in my career,” said Shehbaz Akhtar, an agricultur­al official charged with locust eradicatio­n efforts in the village of Pipli Pahar in central

Punjab province.

Local authoritie­s had “launched a combat operation” to clear the area of infestatio­n with pesticide sprays, he said.

Clouds of the noxious gas envelop the nearby fields each morning, where villagers gather the husks of dead insects for an official bounty of 20 rupees (8 baht) per kilogramme bag.

But the process is slow and timeconsum­ing, and by the time locusts are killed off in one field they have often already destroyed the next. The pesticides used by officials are also dangerous for consumptio­n, so even when the locusts are dead the remaining crops have to be discarded.

Some farmers have attempted to scare off the swarms by shouting and banging pots.

 ?? AFP ?? A farmer tries to chase away locusts in Pipli Pahar village in Pakistan’s central Punjab province.
AFP A farmer tries to chase away locusts in Pipli Pahar village in Pakistan’s central Punjab province.

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