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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

SLUG: 7-37356 Iraq Agriculture Recovery
DATE:>
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=04-10-03

TYPE=English Programs Feature

NUMBER=7-37356

TITLE=IRAQ AGRICULTURAL RECOVERY

BYLINE=Rosanne Skirble

TELEPHONE=(202) 619-2806

DATELINE=Washington

EDITOR=Rob Sivak 202-619-2023

CONTENT=

ATTENTION: IRAQ AGRICULTURAL RECOVERY_

INTRO: The U-S led military coalition in Iraq continues its apparently successful campaign to destroy the Hussein regime and liberate the country. Of course, the war has disrupted normal life. There have been many hundreds of military and civilian casualties. There are shortages of water, food and medicine. But United Nations officials in Iraq report only pockets of humanitarian need -- not a massive humanitarian crisis -- resulting from the Iraq war. They see no significant movement of war refugees, nor evidence of famine or starvation.

The farmlands irrigated by the Tigris and Euphrates rivers are some of the most fertile in the world. But as VOA's Rosanne Skirble reports, war and economic sanctions have taken their toll on the country's rich agricultural sector.

TEXT: More Iraqis work as farmers than in the country's massive oil industry. Even today, Iraq is a net exporter of dates and other farm products. But since 1997, two thirds of the country's 24-point-five million people have depended on daily rations from the United Nations' - administered Oil for Food Program. The program was launched as a humanitarian response to economic sanctions, which the U-N imposed after American-led forces expelled Iraq's army from Kuwait in the 1991 Gulf war.

The sanctions prevented Iraqi farmers from importing fertilizers, chemicals and certain types of machinery, products that could have been used for military purposes.

Laurent Thomas heads the U-N Food and Agriculture Organization's Emergency Program Service for Iraq. He says in the coming days, as basic humanitarian health and food needs are addressed, attention must begin to focus on revitalizing Iraq's farm economy. To that end, he says, the U-N Food and Agriculture Organization has launched an 86 million-dollar campaign to meet the current food crisis and to jump-start Iraq's agricultural recovery.

CUT ONE: LAURENT THOMAS/SKIRBLE

LAURENT THOMAS: "This year the harvest is estimated at 1 million 700 thousand tons of grain. We expect this harvest in the coming months. This is a top priority. It is a harvest of wheat and barley. We have to make sure that that this harvest takes place, and then we have to make sure that agriculture can resume. The farmers need seed, fertilizer, pesticides and fuel for the tractors. Don't forget that this is a very modern agriculture. You are in a very arid region of the world. You (need) sprinkler systems, water pumps and fuel for the water pumps. This is the type of help that is needed immediately to allow the farmers to resume production."

SKIRBLE: "How do you go about that? How do you go about resuming those activities?"

LAURENT THOMAS: "Access will depend on what is going to happen in the coming days and weeks. We will be in a condition to work where we have minimum-security conditions. Right now in the north we are working with our national staff, although on a reduced basis. But, the minimum conditions of security exist. In the center and south of the country, for the time being the minimum security conditions are not restored, but we hope to be in the position to return as soon as possible."

TEXT: F-A-O's Laurent Thomas says that as the country is stabilized, other short-term agricultural needs must be dealt with.

CUT TWO: LAURENT THOMAS/SKIRBLE

LAURENT THOMAS: "We have to make sure that (we take care of) the spring planting, the maize, the rice and then the fall planting that takes place in September. We also have to make sure that the animals are in a healthy situation. We have to make sure that we control the spread of animal disease in the country and possibly outside of the borders of the country. Another important activity is to make sure that the commercial poultry production is continuing. In Iraq you have over 4,000 poultry farms. They have been instrumental in providing the protein, the meat requirement of the population. We have to make sure that these farms continue to produce. It means that they have the animal feed, the drugs in place to produce."

SKIRBLE: "How are you going to going to wean the country from the Oil for Food Program? If 2/3 of the country depends on it, how are you going to wean the country from this program?"

LAURENT THOMAS: "The Oil for Food Program was approved by the (U-N) Security Council as a measure to mitigate the impact of the embargo on the humanitarian situation of the population. This was really the objective of the program. The day the embargo is lifted I believe that the forces of the market and the forces of the economy will allow a relatively quick return to normal."

TEXT: "Normal," says Gerald Martone - director for emergency response at the International Rescue Committee would be an end to Iraq's economic isolation. Mr. Martone says Iraq must re-establish agricultural markets and international trade. He says Iraq must break its dependence on international handouts.

CUT THREE: GERALD MARTONE

"Food aid is not the answer in a food shortage. It needs to be studied closer. More often it is a market problem, an economic problem. There needs to be some type of price controls, some kind of monitoring where there are commodity surpluses, where there are commodity deficits and help the two interact with each other, bring those surpluses to deficit areas and visa-versa and stimulate the markets.

The other thing is that during food scarcity, people make decisions life decisions such as selling their oxen, selling their farmland, selling tools or leaving their farmlands to seek wage labor. You need to find out what the coping mechanism is that they have invoked and then try to reverse it. You need to find out what incentives they need to go back to farming. Do they need tools? Have they eaten their seeds? Do they need more farmland? Do they need more draft animals to pull the plough? (You need) to find out what that is and restore it."

TEXT: Gerald Martone says the goal of emergency relief should be restoring livelihoods, not merely saving lives.

CUT FOUR: GERALD MARTONE

"We have to be very intelligent and not perceive Iraqis as helpless people incapable of helping themselves. Iraq is a very exciting place to work in terms of humanitarian assistance because you have extraordinary rates of literacy, high rates of college matriculation, a lot of people with professional backgrounds and extremely competent workforce."

TEXT: Iraq is an industrialized nation blessed with natural resources. Gerald Martone with the International Rescue Committee says Iraq is not a charity case, but a country that has "an abundance of virtues to recover." (SIGNED)

NEB/RS/rms



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