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Ghazni farmers make profits from potatoes instead of
poppy
Blackanthem.com,
BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan, November
25, 2005 13:18
Afghan farmers in Ghazni are finding it pays to grow potatoes instead of
poppies after they recently received 400,000 Afghan dollars from the
Coalition Humanitarian Assistance Department.
The Ghazni Provincial Reconstruction Team met within the past month with
the Minister of Agriculture Sultan Hussein to deliver the equivalent of
about $8,240 U.S. dollars to farmers who chose to grow potatoes instead of
the poppies.
The project was coordinated by the Ghazni Ministry of Agriculture who
personally distributed the profits from the sale to representatives from
each of the three farmers’ co-ops.
"The program is very successful," said Lt. Col. Robert Meier, Ghazni
provincial reconstruction team commander. "We were able to take care of
farmers and to distribute food to returnees coming from Pakistan and
Pakistan earthquake victims."
The farmer cooperatives, or co-ops, participated in the Great Ghazni
Potato Project. The program aims to deter Afghan farmers from poppy
cultivation, and toward developing a more viable and legal source of
agricultural commodity.
The co-op represents 21 local Ghazni Province farmers who had an over
abundance of potatoes for their local markets and were paid the fair
market value price for the 40,000 kilograms of potatoes. In the
Coalition’s effort to assist Afghans in the transition from poppy to a
more viable agricultural crop, CHAD purchased the potatoes to distribute
humanitarian assistance food to returnees in the Asadabad, Jalalabad and
Parwan districts.
It’s a "win-win" situation for both the farmers and the government of
Afghanistan said Meier.
Source : COMBINED FORCES COMMAND - AFGHANISTAN
COALITION PRESS INFORMATION CENTER
KABUL, AFGHANISTAN
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