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The entreprene­urial life of a young Afghan beekeeper

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In war-torn Afghanista­n, honey is regarded as a traditiona­l cure-all – but for one schoolgirl, the sticky commodity has also created sweet opportunit­ies to work and own a business in a country where few women do so.

Three years ago, Frozan, now 19, obtained a small loan, bought two beehives and learned about apiculture from Hand in Hand Internatio­nal, an NGO focusing on poverty.

The bees collected nectar from flowers growing near her home in Marmul in the northern Balkh province.

Their first harvest produced about 16kg of honey, which enabled Ms Frozan to pay back her loan and still have money left over. She now has 12 beehives and last year collected 110kg of honey, which earned her 100,000 Afghanis (Dh5,325) in a country where GDP per capita is only about $600. “The village I live in is a traditiona­l village and women are not allowed to work outside,” says Ms Frozan, who goes by one name.

“But when I started beekeeping I realised that it’s an easy task. I told the people about beekeeping and then they accepted it.”

Since the fall of the Taliban in 2001, the lives and status of women have improved significan­tly. But traditions, insecurity and a recent decline in internatio­nal donors have slowed progress. A Human Rights Watch report quoting government officials says 85 per cent of the 3.5 million children who don’t go to school are girls. Only 37 per cent of adolescent girls are literate, compared with 66 per cent of adolescent boys.

Ms Frozan is now in her final year of school and would like to study economics and grow her business, goals that may now be possible for her and her three siblings thanks to her income stream. She says looking after tens of thousands of bees can easily be done between studies and household chores, and her father, Ismail, who is a farmer like much of Marmul’s population, supports his daughter’s enterprise.

“It has been my dream to have a daughter who could find a job like this and make a future for herself,” he says.

Every few weeks, Ismail takes the fresh honey to Mazar-i-Sharif, the provincial capital more than 50km away, where it’s sold to shops and consumed mainly by local customers. While industry data is scant, local media cited government officials saying Afghanista­n’s honey production has risen in recent years, hitting 2,000 tonnes in 2015. Several varieties such as acacia, almond flower and basil are now available.

But infrastruc­ture constraint­s mean most of this honey never leaves Afghanista­n.

 ?? Reuters ?? Frozan started a successful beekeeping business in an Afghan village where women are not allowed to work
Reuters Frozan started a successful beekeeping business in an Afghan village where women are not allowed to work

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