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BANGLADESH: Initiatives to tackle monga


Photo: Shamsuddin Ahmed/IRIN
Monga is a serious problem in many parts of Bangladesh
DHAKA, 14 October 2008 (IRIN) - The government of Bangladesh is stepping up its efforts to address monga, the seasonal food shortage that affects millions, particularly in the flood, drought and erosion-prone north.

The extreme poor, mainly farm labourers, face unemployment from September through November after planting the Aman crop, which accounts for almost 60 percent of the annual rice yield.

A second round of unemployment occurs in March and April after the Boro crop, accounting for another 30 percent, is planted.

The Public Food Distribution System (PFDS) is the government's main mechanism for addressing shortfalls in household food.

Nearly two-thirds of the total food distribution is done through seven main channels of the PFDS - Open Market Sales, Vulnerable Group Development, Vulnerable Group Feeding, Food for Work, Test Relief, Gratuitous Relief and Food Assistance for the Chittagong Hill Tracts Region.

Approximately 6.1 million households or 30.5 million individuals (based on an average household size of five) received assistance from these programmes in the year to June 2008, according to the World Food Programme (WFP).

Photo: David Swanson/IRIN
The first phase of the government scheme will provide employment for two million heads of hardcore poor families for 75 days

100-day employment programme

But in addition, on 15 September the government launched a "100-day employment creation programme" to assist the hardcore poor.

The first phase of the US$295 million scheme provides employment for two million heads of families for 75 days to end-November.

The second phase is scheduled to start in March 2009 and will provide jobs to the hardcore poor for 25 days.

As part of the programme, beneficiaries are provided with employment involving activities such as building roads and embankments, cleaning and digging ponds, tree plantation, making fertilizer and flood repairs of public buildings.

Under the scheme each worker is being paid $1.50 a day.

Controversy

"Instead of pursuing a single approach the government should adopt a policy-mix strategy to address the problem," former economic adviser to the government and chairman of Palli Karma Shahayak Foundation (PKSF), Wahiduddin Mahmud, told IRIN.

While appreciative of government efforts, he expressed concern over the programme's sustainability and implementation.

Mahmud said monga could be addressed with locally available resources – and without foreign aid.

''The government, the donor community, NGOs and all other concerned organisations should invest in the monga area to generate employment so that the people can work to earn their livelihoods.''
"Neither the task of poverty alleviation nor the issue of eradicating monga could be successfully addressed only through bureaucratic efforts. It would yield little result if a populist policy is adopted to meet the temporary needs of the monga-affected people," he said.

"People in monga-affected regions should not be encouraged to live on handouts. The government, the donor community, NGOs and all other concerned organisations should invest in the monga area to generate employment so that the people can work to earn their livelihoods," added Abul Barakat, general-secretary of the Bangladesh Economic Association.
New rice variety

In still another effort to alleviate monga in the northern region, the Rangpur-Dinajpur Rural Service (RDRS), a local NGO, is working to produce hybrid rice in the shortest possible time from paddy ratoons, allowing farmers to produce two yields from one batch of seeds.

Ratoons are shoots that grow up from the bases of crop plants after previous growths have been harvested.

RDRS planted paddy ratoons in late June and harvested the crop in September.


Photo: David Swanson/IRIN
Thousands face a lack of jobs from September to November following the planting of the country's Aman crop
The production rate of rice from ratoons is 3.5 metric tonnes or 1,500kg per hectare of land. The yield is as much as any other hybrid rice, RDRS claimed.

The Bangladesh Rice Research Institute (BRRI) has named the newly developed hybrid rice "BRRI-33" and is cultivating it on 40,000 hectares of land in five northern districts.

"BRRI-33 would be ready for harvest in mid-October, which would ensure jobs for agricultural labourers right at a time when jobs are not there," MA Majid, chief of the BRRI regional station at Rangpur, told IRIN.

"This will create employment opportunities for 2.75 million farm labourers and help 850,000 farmers in the monga-afflicted districts through increased production and new jobs," Majid said.

Majid, who also heads the "BRRI-33" and "monga mitigation" programme of the government, said after harvesting the new variety, farmers could go for early cultivation of non-cereal rabi crops such as potatoes, oil seeds, beans, okra and other vegetables, which would also create local employment during the dry season.

sa/ds/mw


Theme(s): (IRIN) Aid Policy, (IRIN) Economy, (IRIN) Food Security, (IRIN) Governance

[ENDS]

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
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