78% of Tanzanians on the brink of starvation. 35% of Tanzanian kids are malnourished.

78% of Tanzanians on the brink of starvation. 35% of Tanzanian kids are malnourished.

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NairobiWalker

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Kila siku tunapigiwa humu kelele ati ooh, wanatulisha ooh, tunapanda maua badala ya mahindi. Hivi wewe unaweza lisha jirani wakati wanao hawana chakula? Ndio hiyo Tanzania ya shibe sasa.


I always tell Tanzanians that the only difference between us and them is that we shout out our problems to be heard and addressed while they timidly accept their government's denial.

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Survey finds most Tanzanians go hungry, despite government denials

DAR ES SALAAM, March 7 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Most Tanzanians have experienced hunger in the past three months, with food shortages most severe in drought-hit rural areas, a countrywide survey found, despite government denials of a food crisis.

The survey by Tanzanian think tank Twaweza found that 78 percent of people had suffered food shortages in the past three months. In rural areas the figure rose to 84 percent compared to 64 percent in cities.

The findings came despite repeated government denials that the East African country was suffering food shortages. President John Magufuli has accused opposition politicians of fomenting a “fake” hunger crisis.

The Twaweza survey said in a country where 80 percent of the population rely on subsistence farming, some families have begun skipping meals.

In February, 65 percent of respondents had worried about their families not having enough to eat in the previous seven days, compared to 45 percent last September.

The research, part of polling platform Sauti za Wananchi—Africa’s first national survey of its kind, shows a sharp decline in food availability among families in the past three months.

“The current shortages and ongoing food insecurity underline the context of general vulnerability and income poverty,” researchers said.

Drought in East Africa has sent prices of staples such as maize and sorghum soaring, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said last month.

According to Bank of Tanzania data, the wholesale price of maize, a staple crop has doubled in the past 2 years from 400 Tanzanian shillings in 2015 to 1,253 ($0.60) per kilo in 2017.

Michael Dunford, head of the World Food Programme (WFP) in Tanzania said the U.N. agency is concerned about food insecurity in Tanzania and is monitoring the situation.

“There are pockets of food insecurity in the country. More information will be apparent in the next season,” Dunford said.

He said a recent government assessment identified more than a million people in 55 districts facing acute food insecurity between now and April 2017, before the next harvest in May.

Those in need of urgent food assistance are estimated at over 118,000.

However, Tanzania’s agriculture minister for Charles Tizeba said the situation is manageable.

“We are generally satisfied by various efforts taken to bring this situation under control,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. (Editing by Ros Russell; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, trafficking, resilience and climate change. Visit news.trust.org)

Survey finds most Tanzanians go hungry, despite government denials

UN World Food Programme
 
Kila siku tunapigiwa humu kelele ati ooh, wanatulisha ooh, tunapanda maua badala ya mahindi. Hivi wewe unaweza lisha jirani wakati wanao hawana chakula? Ndio hiyo Tanzania ya shibe sasa.

Survey finds most Tanzanians go hungry, despite government denials

UN World Food Programme

I always tell Tanzanians that the only difference between us and them is that we shout out our problems to be heard and addressed while they timidly accept their government's denial.
Hawa jamaa wa hawaioendi nchi yetu na maendeleo makubwa ambayo tumeyapata. Yaani wao hawaoni tumeweza kununua baombadier sembuse tushindwe kuwapa watu mahindi????
 
Achaneni na propaganda za hawa wakenya, hii ilitoka mwaka jana mwezi March, wakati kulipokua na upungufu wa chakula. Jambo la kushangaza ni kwamba wiki jana, Kenya imeagiza mahindi mengi sana toka Tanzania, vipi wanunue chakula toka katika nchi yenye upungufu wa chakula?. Hawa wakenya wanatapatapa kwasababu nchi yao ina matatizo mengi, wanataka kutuingiza wajione hawapo pekeyao.
 
Tanzania’s rice exports to Kenya, Rwanda to increase
TUESDAY FEBRUARY 6 2018
mchele.jpg

Casual workers load bags of unprocessed rice onto a lorry in Ahero, Kenya, for export to Uganda on May 10, 2017. PHOTO FILE | NATION

In Summary
  • According to the East Africa Cross-border Trade (EACT), the trade volume will be boosted by supplies from the August harvest and high carry-over stocks, which are likely to lower prices.
  • Amid trade disputes, Kenya is still Tanzania’s main market for rice followed closely by Rwanda.
  • Exports to Burundi will continue to be limited because of the depreciation of the country’s franc and low purchasing power.
maryanne.jpg

By MARYANNE GICOBI
More by this Author
Tanzania hopes to increase its rice exports to Kenya and Rwanda by one-third this year, according to forecast by a trade tracker.

According to the East Africa Cross-border Trade (EACT), the trade volume will be boosted by supplies from the August harvest and high carry-over stocks, which are likely to lower prices. The low rice prices are due to lower maize flour cost which is a substitute staple food to rice.

Amid trade disputes, Kenya is still Tanzania’s main market for rice followed closely by Rwanda.

Tanzania projects to export 84,000 tonnes of the locally produced rice to Kenya and 60,000 tonnes to Rwanda.

Exports to Burundi will continue to be limited because of the depreciation of the country’s franc and low purchasing power as the economic situation worsens because of the effects of the disputed 2015 presidential election.

The EACT projects that rice exports from Uganda to South Sudan will also continue to be minimal due to conflict-related trade disruptions, South Sudan’s currency depreciation and low purchasing power due to subdued economic activity.

Related Content
Re-exports of imported rice by Somalia to Kenya is expected to shoot up between April and September to coincide with the holy month of Ramadhan in May and the August Hajj celebrations.

In Kenya, rice prices have been increasing due to a decline in local production and expensive imports.

Most traded commodity

However, maize continued to be the most regionally traded commodity in the region. Toward the end of last year, maize prices in most markets in East Africa declined due to increased harvests.

In the months after the August harvest, maize prices usually drop to lows of $20 per 90kg bag, even as the October long rain season boosts the second-season harvest.

Bujumbura’s maize prices remain persistently high, being the most costly in the region, whereas the grain was fetching the lowest cost in Ethiopia due to the low cost of production.

The low cost of maize sent Ethiopian traders to Kenya, selling more maize last year than the previous years. Maize is the most traded commodity across the region, followed by dry beans, rice and sorghum.

Uganda, Tanzania and Ethiopia are the main sources of maize, but in September last year Kenya sold the grain to Uganda even as the country was importing it from Mexico to plug a severe shortage. Maize prices had fallen after the end of a long dry spell.

Tanzania’s rice exports to Kenya, Rwanda to increase
 
Tanzania is feeding middle income but hunger infested Kenya

Vibrant EAC cross-border trade critical to region’s food security


WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 28 2018

WARPIC.jpg

Farmers in Ahero Irrigation Scheme, Kisumu County, plant tomatoes on November 14, 2017. The government’s strategy of producing food under irrigation would reduce dependency on rain-fed agriculture. PHOTO | TONNY OMONDI | NATION MEDIA GROUP

In Summary
  • The biggest challenge for Kenya is to increase and stabilise output to meet national demand and even build a surplus for export.
  • The lesson for Kenya is to integrate better farming practices to increase its yield in the medium to long-term.
Warutere+photo.jpg

By PETER WARUTERE
More by this Author
The commitment by President Uhuru Kenyatta and his Tanzanian counterpart, Mr John Pombe Magufuli, to have trade and bilateral issues between the two countries resolved is an important step towards enhancing the free movement of goods and services in the East African Community (EAC).

Even though the presidents described the recent cross-border hostilities as small differences, traders and investors have been worried about their future stake in the regional market.

Resolving the dispute, which restricted the movement of goods, livestock and people across the common border, is critical to deepening trade and exchange among the six EAC countries.

Kenya and Tanzania, being the two largest economies, should ideally be driving the EAC integration that includes Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and South Sudan.

FOOD SECURITY

Kenya and Tanzania need each other in many key areas.

One is food security — which is on President Kenyatta’s ‘Big Four’ agenda to transform the economy in the next five years.

Kenya is a food deficit country, as 80 per cent of its land is arid and semi-arid and frequent, prolonged droughts, have increased its dependency on food imports.

Tanzania is better endowed, with large tracts of arable land and a fairly good weather.

It is least affected by the recurrent Horn of Africa drought that mainly hits Kenya, South Sudan, Somalia and Ethiopia.

The latest Famine Early Warning System (Fews) network report shows Tanzania has minimal food challenges — except for areas occupied by refugees on the Burundi border.

FOOD PRODUCTION
Food production data shows Tanzania’s output increasing remarkably, which makes it an important buffer for stabilising Kenya’s food supply and prices.

Tanzania’s production of cereals (mainly maize, wheat and rice) nearly doubled from 5.4 million tonnes in 1995 to more than 10 million tonnes, the latest reports by the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) show.

Over the same period, Kenya’s output increased from 3.6 million tonnes to 3.9 million tonnes amid wide fluctuations depending on weather variability.

This illustrates the difficulty for it to sustain output and satisfy local demand.

Notably, Uganda, also an important source of maize for Kenyans, nearly doubled its output from 1.9 million tonnes to 3.5 million tonnes.

With a steady growth trade, Uganda has caught up with Kenya — whose production stagnated.

IRRIGATION
There could be other factors driving these trends — such as the supply of inputs and extension services.

But, presumably, Tanzania and Uganda are doing better in this respect because their yields per hectare rose more significantly than Kenya’s.

The biggest challenge for Kenya is to increase and stabilise output to meet national demand and even build a surplus for export.

The government’s strategy of producing food under irrigation would reduce dependency on rain-fed agriculture.

This would be achievable in the medium to long-term, when several dams in the marginal agricultural and pastoral areas will have been built.

Until then, Tanzania and Uganda will remain important for stabilising Kenya’s staple food needs.


FARMING PRACTICES
The President’s food security agenda also needs to focus on increasing cereals yields.

The FAO statistics show that while the yield in the EAC is, on average, two tonnes per hectare, South Africa has double that.

The top cereals producer, the United States, averages eight tonnes and China, with a phenomenal output growth over the decade to become the second-largest producer, has six tonnes.

The lesson for Kenya is to integrate better farming practices to increase its yield in the medium to long-term.

Mr Warutere is a director of Mashariki Communications Ltd. ptwarutere@gmail.com

WARUTERE: Vibrant EAC cross-border trade critical to region’s
 
Tanzania is feeding middle income but hunger infested Kenya

Vibrant EAC cross-border trade critical to region’s food security


WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 28 2018

WARPIC.jpg

Farmers in Ahero Irrigation Scheme, Kisumu County, plant tomatoes on November 14, 2017. The government’s strategy of producing food under irrigation would reduce dependency on rain-fed agriculture. PHOTO | TONNY OMONDI | NATION MEDIA GROUP

In Summary
  • The biggest challenge for Kenya is to increase and stabilise output to meet national demand and even build a surplus for export.
  • The lesson for Kenya is to integrate better farming practices to increase its yield in the medium to long-term.
Warutere+photo.jpg

By PETER WARUTERE
More by this Author
The commitment by President Uhuru Kenyatta and his Tanzanian counterpart, Mr John Pombe Magufuli, to have trade and bilateral issues between the two countries resolved is an important step towards enhancing the free movement of goods and services in the East African Community (EAC).

Even though the presidents described the recent cross-border hostilities as small differences, traders and investors have been worried about their future stake in the regional market.

Resolving the dispute, which restricted the movement of goods, livestock and people across the common border, is critical to deepening trade and exchange among the six EAC countries.

Kenya and Tanzania, being the two largest economies, should ideally be driving the EAC integration that includes Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and South Sudan.

FOOD SECURITY

Kenya and Tanzania need each other in many key areas.

One is food security — which is on President Kenyatta’s ‘Big Four’ agenda to transform the economy in the next five years.

Kenya is a food deficit country, as 80 per cent of its land is arid and semi-arid and frequent, prolonged droughts, have increased its dependency on food imports.

Tanzania is better endowed, with large tracts of arable land and a fairly good weather.

It is least affected by the recurrent Horn of Africa drought that mainly hits Kenya, South Sudan, Somalia and Ethiopia.

The latest Famine Early Warning System (Fews) network report shows Tanzania has minimal food challenges — except for areas occupied by refugees on the Burundi border.

FOOD PRODUCTION
Food production data shows Tanzania’s output increasing remarkably, which makes it an important buffer for stabilising Kenya’s food supply and prices.

Tanzania’s production of cereals (mainly maize, wheat and rice) nearly doubled from 5.4 million tonnes in 1995 to more than 10 million tonnes, the latest reports by the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) show.

Over the same period, Kenya’s output increased from 3.6 million tonnes to 3.9 million tonnes amid wide fluctuations depending on weather variability.

This illustrates the difficulty for it to sustain output and satisfy local demand.

Notably, Uganda, also an important source of maize for Kenyans, nearly doubled its output from 1.9 million tonnes to 3.5 million tonnes.

With a steady growth trade, Uganda has caught up with Kenya — whose production stagnated.

IRRIGATION
There could be other factors driving these trends — such as the supply of inputs and extension services.

But, presumably, Tanzania and Uganda are doing better in this respect because their yields per hectare rose more significantly than Kenya’s.

The biggest challenge for Kenya is to increase and stabilise output to meet national demand and even build a surplus for export.

The government’s strategy of producing food under irrigation would reduce dependency on rain-fed agriculture.

This would be achievable in the medium to long-term, when several dams in the marginal agricultural and pastoral areas will have been built.

Until then, Tanzania and Uganda will remain important for stabilising Kenya’s staple food needs.

FARMING PRACTICES
The President’s food security agenda also needs to focus on increasing cereals yields.

The FAO statistics show that while the yield in the EAC is, on average, two tonnes per hectare, South Africa has double that.

The top cereals producer, the United States, averages eight tonnes and China, with a phenomenal output growth over the decade to become the second-largest producer, has six tonnes.

The lesson for Kenya is to integrate better farming practices to increase its yield in the medium to long-term.

Mr Warutere is a director of Mashariki Communications Ltd. ptwarutere@gmail.com

WARUTERE: Vibrant EAC cross-border trade critical to region’s


Feed yourselves first before trying to export your food.
 
Feed yourselves first before trying to export your food.
I bet ur Afternoon dish came from Tanzania, u see we refused to send you maize to keep ur milling factories running and as a result 4 million people are to die of hunger and price of Unga sky-rocketed! We will keep doing that then come and later buy all the collapsed milling factories just like Zimbabwe.
 
Achaneni na propaganda za hawa wakenya, hii ilitoka mwaka jana mwezi March, wakati kulipokua na upungufu wa chakula. Jambo la kushangaza ni kwamba wiki jana, Kenya imeagiza mahindi mengi sana toka Tanzania, vipi wanunue chakula toka katika nchi yenye upungufu wa chakula?. Hawa wakenya wanatapatapa kwasababu nchi yao ina matatizo mengi, wanataka kutuingiza wajione hawapo pekeyao.


I give you official data from WFP, 2018 data is not yet out till next year. When it comes out I'll let you know. Maybe your starving population will be more or less than 78% but statistically it can't drop by much. The best you can achieve is 65%.

The second link is by Twaweza - the same source you used to open a thread about hunger in Kenya. I guess it's only propaganda when the truth about Tanzania is told. lol.
 
Achaneni na propaganda za hawa wakenya, hii ilitoka mwaka jana mwezi March, wakati kulipokua na upungufu wa chakula. Jambo la kushangaza ni kwamba wiki jana, Kenya imeagiza mahindi mengi sana toka Tanzania, vipi wanunue chakula toka katika nchi yenye upungufu wa chakula?. Hawa wakenya wanatapatapa kwasababu nchi yao ina matatizo mengi, wanataka kutuingiza wajione hawapo pekeyao.

So unataka kushindana na Kenya??
 
I bet ur Afternoon dish came from Tanzania, u see we refused to send you maize to keep ur milling factories running and as a result 4 million people are to die of hunger and price of Unga sky-rocketed! We will keep doing that then come and later buy all the collapsed milling factories just like Zimbabwe.

78% of Tanzania is over 40 million people. That's 10 times more starving people in Tanzania than Kenya. Feed your people first before scrambling for Kenyan money.
 
I give you official data from WFP, 2018 data is not yet out till next year. When it comes out I'll let you know. Maybe your starving population will be more or less than 78% but statistically it can't drop by much. The best you can achieve is 65%.

The second link is by Twaweza - the same source you used to open a thread about hunger in Kenya. I guess it's only propaganda when the truth about Tanzania is told. lol.

Most malnourished patients hail from Tiaty - MTRH official
Mar. 01, 2018, 12:30 am
By JOSEPH KANGOGO @kangogojk1
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1722353.jpg

Kenya Red Cross staff donate relief food to hungry residents at Moinonin, Baringo North subcounty, on March 11 last year
The NGOs donated bags of maize, beans, uji mix and salt to feed over 3,000 residents at among other 144 villages Lodengo, Chepkararat, Kakabul, Chebelion and Kaisakat in Kolowa in East Pokot.


“We were targeting over 10,000 residents in the entire subcounty” Red Cross North Rift regional manager Michael Ayabei said, adding, “although our capacity may not be sufficient.”

Ayabei said Red Cross is also issuing some Sh3, 000 cash transfer fund to the hungry victims to afford their basic commodities.

“We are doing much we can to cushion the lives of the hungry population, although more is needed to be done,” Ayabei said, adding that the situation is as a result of long droughts and ongoing security operation.

He said the residents in these drought-ravaged localities cannot continue depending on relief handouts year in year out.

“The government must do something, be it sinking more boreholes, opening up pan dams and embracing irrigated agriculture to ensure constant supply of food among the communities throughout the year” he said, adding that insecurity has adversely affected development.

Since the beginning of this year, the residents have been left in destitution not knowing where to get their daily food after the last relief supplies donated by the government stopped three months ago.

The government issued some 200 bags of rice the hungry pokot community in Koloa on Monday last week, although this has turned out to be a drop in the sea.

Last year, the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital (MTRH) Assistant Director Finance Mathews Birgen distributed some 400 bags of maize through their Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR).

Most malnourished patients hail from Tiaty - MTRH official
 
78% of Tanzania is over 40 million people. That's 10 times more starving people in Tanzania than Kenya. Feed your people first before scrambling for Kenyan money.

FEERUM TO BUILD GRAIN SILOS, WAREHOUSES IN TANZANIA FOR $33.1 M
Posted about a year ago by Corporate Digest
Feerum has signed an agreement with National Food Reserve Agency based in Dar es Salaam to ...





Feerum has signed an agreement with National Food Reserve Agency based in Dar es Salaam to build five grain silos complexes and storage facilities and the revitalization of existing warehouse facilities by the company.

According to the company, the total value of deal is $33.1 million

The implementation of the agreement will be fully financed from funds from the loan granted by the Polish Government to the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania on the basis of the agreement from Sept. 28

FEERUM TO BUILD GRAIN SILOS, WAREHOUSES IN TANZANIA FOR $33.1 M - Corporate Digest
 
Hiyo ripoti sio kweli chakula kipo kingi ila pesa hakuna ya kununua chakula
 
Hawa huwa na njaa kubwa sana sema media zao huwa zimebanwa, yaani wanaishi kama Korea ya Kaskazini Kyle ambapo ni sheria kukenua meno siku zote hata kama una njaa.
78% ni wengi sana, pole zao.
 
FEERUM TO BUILD GRAIN SILOS, WAREHOUSES IN TANZANIA FOR $33.1 M
Posted about a year ago by Corporate Digest
Feerum has signed an agreement with National Food Reserve Agency based in Dar es Salaam to ...





Feerum has signed an agreement with National Food Reserve Agency based in Dar es Salaam to build five grain silos complexes and storage facilities and the revitalization of existing warehouse facilities by the company.

According to the company, the total value of deal is $33.1 million

The implementation of the agreement will be fully financed from funds from the loan granted by the Polish Government to the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania on the basis of the agreement from Sept. 28

FEERUM TO BUILD GRAIN SILOS, WAREHOUSES IN TANZANIA FOR $33.1 M - Corporate Digest

13740.png
 
Hiyo ripoti sio kweli chakula kipo kingi ila pesa hakuna ya kununua chakula

Mnauzia Kenya mahindi wakati Tanzania Kuna njaa? Ndio maana only 4M Kenyans face starvation while 40M Tanzanians face the same yet Tanzania is 40% bigger with very few arid areas
 
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