Hungry Crowds Spell Trouble For World Leaders
AFRICA: April 2, 2008
YAOUNDE - "Is it not said 'A hungry man is an angry man'?" commented Simon
Nkwenti, head of a teachers' union in Cameroon, after riots that killed
dozens of people in the central African country.
It is a proverb world leaders might do well to bear in mind as their
impoverished populations struggle with food costs driven ever higher by
record oil prices, weather and speculators trading in local market places
and on global futures exchanges.
Anger over high food and fuel costs has spawned a rash of violent unrest
across the globe in the past six months.
From the deserts of Mauritania to steamy Mozambique on Africa's Indian Ocean
coast, people have taken to the streets. There have been "tortilla riots" in
Mexico, villagers have clashed with police in eastern India and hundreds of
Muslims have marched for lower food prices in Indonesia.
Governments have introduced price controls and export caps or cut custom
duties to appease the people who vote for them, but on streets across
Africa, those voters want them to do more.
Sub-Saharan Africa is particularly vulnerable: most people survive on less
than $2 a day in countries prone to droughts and floods where agricultural
processes are still often rudimentary.
For African households, even a small rise in the price of food can be
devastating when meals are a family's main expense.
"People have been driven to destruction because they no longer know what to
do or who to talk to," said Ousmane Sanou, a trader in Patte d'Oie, one of
the areas worst hit by February riots in Burkina Faso's capital,
Ouagadougou.
"They understand it's the only way to get the government to change things.
Prices must come down -- otherwise we're heading for a catastrophe."
Over 300 people were arrested in some of the worst violence for years in
normally calm, landlocked Burkina, prompting the government to suspend
custom duties on staple food imports for three months -- measures some other
countries have also taken.
But unions have threatened to call a general strike in April unless prices
fall further.
Anger over rising prices also fuelled violence in Mauritania late last year.
And at least six people were killed when taxi drivers in Mozambique rioted
over fuel prices in February.
In Senegal, police raided a private television station last Sunday after it
repeatedly transmitted images of police beating demonstrators with
electrified batons and firing tear gas during an illegal protest over high
food prices in the capital Dakar.
The poor country on Africa's west coast witnessed the worst rioting in more
than a decade last year, as hundreds of youths smashed windows and burned
tyres in anger at high prices and government efforts to clear away street
traders.
MARKET FORCES
The UN World Food Programme (WFP) says staple food prices in some parts of
Africa have risen by 40 percent or more in six months. And this on a
continent where malnutrition rates in some areas regularly top emergency
levels even in an average year.
Food inflation in Africa is 2.8 percentage points higher than headline
inflation, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said this month.
In South Africa last week, central bank Governor Tito Mboweni warned
consumers to "tighten their belts" as the targeted inflation measure reached
a five-year high at 9.4 percent year-on-year in February, from 8.8 percent
in January.
Already, consumer spending has slowed sharply, and confidence levels are at
multi-year lows -- all this on top of chronic energy shortages in Africa's
biggest economy.
In Cameroon, a taxi drivers' strike over rising fuel costs -- caused by many
of the same factors pumping up food prices -- triggered widespread rioting
exacerbated by anger over the cost of food, high unemployment and plans by
President Paul Biya to change the constitution to extend his 25-year rule.
Government ministers said around 25 to 40 people were killed, although a
human rights group put the toll at over 100.
The rising food prices have affected both Africa's small middle-class, like
consumers in resource-rich South Africa, and poorer people like Sanou, the
trader in Ouagadougou.
While famines like those witnessed in the 1980s are less common now thanks
to aid and development programmes, there is the risk of a return to chronic
inflation which could threaten the relative economic stability achieved by
many African states.
"We are frustrated. We are disgruntled," said Jean-Martin Tsafack, a
32-year-old law graduate who sells imported second-hand clothes in
Cameroon's capital Yaounde.
"Some of us have become hawkers, others truck pushers (barrow boys). Many
girls who were my classmates in university have now become prostitutes just
to have something to eat. Life is becoming unbearable," he said.
GLOBAL ISSUES
There are several reasons for the spiralling cost of living. Record oil
prices driven by strong demand and insecurity in major production areas have
pushed up fuel pump costs, making anything that has to be transported to
market more expensive.
Rising consumption of livestock fodder and other foods by fast-expanding
China and India, and the use of land and crops for biofuels have boosted
demand. Erratic weather, perhaps due to climate change, has trimmed harvests
in some growing regions.
Meanwhile, investment funds and other speculators have bet on prices to
continue up in a self-fulfilling cycle.
Across the world, governments are facing the consequences.
Philippines President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo asked Vietnam earlier this
year to guarantee Manila up to 1.5 million tonnes of annual supply of rice
because of fears that shortages later this year could spell political
trouble for her.
Indonesia, where President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is expected to seek a
second term in office next year, has unveiled new measures to stem rising
prices, targeting palm oil-based cooking oil, wheat flour, rice and
soybeans.
And in just one example from Latin America, Peru said last week it would
give away food to its poorest citizens and set up a fund to absorb high oil
prices -- this as President Alan Garcia's approval rating has fallen to
below 30 percent.
POLITICAL RISK
In Africa, countries like Mauritania, which imports 70 percent of its food,
have been among the worst affected.
"I can't take it any more. I've stopped eating a meal in the evening," said
Ami Gandega, 36, a civil servant in the capital Nouakchott.
The government suspended import tax on cereals last year and is bolstering
village grain stores with subsidised stocks -- but aid workers believe this
is not enough.
The WFP fears Mauritanian families will not only have to ration what they
eat, but also cut back on education spending, sell livestock, or even send
children to work or beg to survive.
"Inflation of staples is really out of control. We've never seen this
before," said WFP representative Gian Carlo Cirri.
"If we don't react now, this summer will be full of danger."
WFP has forecast a "perfect storm" of woes for its operations: it is faced
with a $500 million funding shortfall purely due to rising costs of buying
and distributing food, even before taking into account greater need for aid
now.
And that need is ever growing. Last week, 40 aid agencies urged the world to
focus attention on Somalia's "catastrophic" humanitarian crisis where
hundreds of thousands of people are suffering from war, drought and food
shortages.
Some humanitarian workers fear the growing furore over rising prices could
even encourage traders to hoard stocks.
Government reaction -- through cuts in duties or subsidies -- may slow down
real economic adjustment to higher prices, such as encouraging local farmers
to grow more. But they help cushion the blow for governments and the poor.
"There are very few governments, especially in this region, that are going
to be strong enough to be able to encourage that normal economic incentive
to come through over the course of time," said Standard Chartered Africa
research head Razia Khan.
"Any measures to allow the price of imported food to be reflected at the
consumer level will be very rapidly reversed."
So more and more governments in Africa may opt for food aid, especially
subsidies, as recommended by donors like the IMF.
Perhaps, at the back of their minds, they will remember Liberian President
William Tolbert, who was stabbed to death in 1980 in a crisis sparked by
riots over a rice price increase.
(Additional reporting by Mathieu Bonkoungou in Ouagadougou, Ibrahima Sylla
in Nouakchott and Alistair Thomson in Dakar; Writing by Alistair Thomson;
editing by Clar Ni Chonghaile)
Story by Tansa Musa
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
|