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Swaziland: Smallholder marijuana cash crop lessens the pain of poverty

Reuters

Monday 13 Dec 2004

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Source: Integrated Regional Information Networks
MANZINI, 13 December (IRIN) - Concerted efforts by Swazi police to rid the
country of marijuana have been complicated by cultural practices and the
profitability of the illegal crop in an impoverished nation.

Last week police confiscated R1.7 million (US $295,000) worth of marijuana,
locally known as 'dagga', from small-scale farmers in the Hhohho region
north of the capital, Mbabane. The drugs were reportedly compressed into
packages, ready for transport to neighbouring South Africa en route to
Europe, particularly the Netherlands.

"The interdiction of dagga and the eradication of crops continue as
government policy, and there are arrests. But it hasn't dented cultivation
much in the northern Hhohho region, or really cut into the supply going to
the urban areas," a source with the Royal Swaziland Police Force told IRIN.

Swaziland has the climate and soil conducive to growing dagga. Most of it
is cultivated in the north of the country, where the terrain is steep and
hilly, and not easily accessible by road. The aerial spraying of marijuana
fields with defoliants was stopped in 2002 because of budgetary
constraints, and since then eradication efforts have been carried out by a
small band of police inspectors.

According to a study by Swaziland's Council on Alcohol, Drug and Tobacco
Abuse, an estimated 70 percent of smallholder farmers in the Hhohho region
grow marijuana to some extent, as a cash crop.

During a recent visit to the area, local farmers told IRIN that cultivating
it was their best resource against grinding poverty.

"My father and his father grew dagga here; my son now knows how. We are far
from markets, and the trucks from the marketing board (the National
Agricultural Marketing Board) are unreliable. The marketing board tells us
to grow tomatoes and such for sale, but our harvests can rot in the sun
waiting for them," said a farmer near the provincial capital, Pigg's Peak.

He was reluctant to reveal who his clients were, but alleged that they were
Swazi nationals linked to a South African drug syndicate. In 2000, three
tonnes of compressed cannabis were seized in the United Kingdom in a
container emanating from Swaziland. The following year Swazi police seized
a further 3.9 mt in a single raid, saying at the time that the cargo was
probably destined for the UK, where its street value would have been over
US $20 million.

According to the UN Development Programme, two-thirds of Swazis live in
chronic poverty and many are concentrated on rural Swazi Nation Land, where
peasants cannot own their farms or find capital for agricultural
improvements like irrigation or better seed stock.

"I can get kicked off my land, and I can never do much, growing maize on
our small plot, but I can always find a nook somewhere to grow dagga," a
farmer told IRIN.

Farmers admit to supplying marijuana to the growing number of people living
locally with HIV/AIDS. Although growing dagga is illegal in Swaziland,
there seems to have been a system in the past whereby some individuals
obtained approval from the late King Sobhuza II to grow it for medicinal
purposes.

Some support groups for people living with HIV/AIDS encourage their members
to smoke marijuana to stimulate their appetites.

"Particularly when you are starting with the anti-retroviral drugs, your
body can feel bad and you don't want to eat anything - that is when people
become thin," Eunice Simelane of Swazis for Positive Living told IRIN.

Nearly 40 percent of adult Swazis are living with HIV, according to UNAIDS.


 

 

 

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