You Are Here: FrontPage Marketplace News


Friday, August 27, 2004 - Web posted at 10:07:02 GMT

African Development Bank grants two million dollars to fight locusts

TUNIS - The African Development Bank (AfDB) has approved a grant of US$2million (N$13,2 million) to help eight countries on the continent battle the worst locust invasion in more than a decade, a statement by the bank said yesterday.

The grant is intended to help the governments of Algeria, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Senegal, and Tunisia protect farmland, pastures and forests, to safeguard the environment against the destruction wreaked by the swarms of locusts and to ensure food security, the statement said.

The grant funds will be managed by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), which will buy pesticides and organise aerial crop spraying in the eight countries.

According to the bank, the FAO fears that this year's locust invasion could be worse than that in 1987, which caused US$300 million worth of damage.

FAO chief Jacques Diouf said on a visit to Senegal last week that Africa would require 100 million dollars to battle this year's locust swarms.

Agriculture and defence ministers from 16 African countries are to gather next week in Dakar, the Senegalese capital, to discuss a common strategy to battle the locusts, Senegalese officials said Wednesday.

"The meeting will focus on how we can marshal our forces to protect the most vulnerable areas," an official at Senegal's agriculture ministry said, adding that a meeting of experts would take place Monday, the day before the ministerial-level gathering.

-Nampa-AFP

Local marketplace

•  Summary
•  Headlines
•  Forums
•  Email this story
•  Printer friendly


Marketplace News Headlines Of The Last 48 Hours


•  Governments and business collude in deaths of trade unionists, survey reveals
•  FNB offers cross-border prepaid airtime
•  Lena Blomstrand: Nuclear power is an environmental disaster
•  IMF finally approves US$2,1bn loan to Iceland
•  Steady as she goes, says Captain Manuel to Good Ship SA
•  Tourism body supports SME sector
•  Bannerman secures N$132m for Namibian project
•  Forsys strikes mega deal with Forrest
•  Air travel nosedives as recessionary clouds gather
•  Global labour union welcomes re-election of ILO boss
•  Booming Gulf looks overseas for agriculture needs
•  Farming development at Ndonga Linena on track
•  Govt aims to decrease Nam's dependence on imports
•  School's out The Tukwafeni Project: an activity beyond the classroom
•  Electricity theft cost firms thousands in Maputo

 

Advertise | About Us | Contact Us | Subscribe | Privacy | Terms Of Service | Guestbook

Material on this site copyright The Free Press Of Namibia (Pty) Ltd
PO Box 20783 - Windhoek - 42 John Meinert Street
Tel: +264 (61) 279600 - Fax: +264 (61) 279602

Back To Top