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Chiyembekeza (R) interacting with a tobacco farmer in Salima
By Dumbani Mzale
Malawi Minister of Agriculture, Irrigation and Water
Development Allan Chiyembekeza has said the ministry is currently
compiling a comprehensive report detailing key challenges haunting
tobacco growers in the country to ensure that they are fully addressed.
Chiyembekeza said this at Matenje Extension Planning
Area in Traditional Authority (T/A) Khombedza in Salima on Monday where
he toured tobacco nurseries alongside other senior government and
Tobacco Control Commission (TCC) officials.
The minister was reacting to unrelenting outcries from
tobacco growers in the area who complained about high interest rates,
exchange rate volatility, punitive deductions from their proceeds, high
cost of farm inputs on the market and long duration to get registered at
TCC, as some major challenges “robbing” tobacco growers.
Said Chiyembekeza: “Right now we are in the process of
investigating all the challenges that you growers are facing and after
that we will write a full report which will be sent to the President for
him to act.”
Chiyembekeza said some of the challenges cited by most
tobacco growers are genuine; hence, the need for all problems to be
looked into.
But he downplayed complaints raised by growers about the levies most tobacco institutions continue to collect from them.
“For them [Aret, TCC, AHL] to offer services to the
growers, they depend on the levies paid by the farmers because these
institutions do not grow tobacco. But, as government, we are looking at
ways of reducing those levies.”
The minister said, so far, he has already met and
discussed with tobacco buyers and representatives from Tobacco
Association of Malawi (Tama) on the challenges facing growers as part of
a process of compiling a detailed report to the President.
TCC chief executive officer Bruce Munthali said they
have been tasked by government to seriously probe the deductions that
apply to tobacco growers on their revenue to appreciate the relevance of
those levies.
But he stated that it was imperative for the growers to
understand that tobacco institutions such as TCC cannot function
effectively without levies on tobacco.
A tobacco grower, Mirambo Phiri, who has been growing
tobacco since 1980, said he only remains with 20 percent of all his
revenue from tobacco after deductions of levies, which he complained
have seriously choked tobacco farming.
CREDIT SOURCE: MWNATION
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