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News Release
Cotonou,
Benin
23 August 2005
Agriculture
Takes the Lead in the Fight against HIV/AIDS
in Sub-Saharan Africa: Multisectoral Network Launched
A
multisectoral network, where agriculture will play a leadership role to
mitigate the effects of HIV/AIDS on farming communities across sub-Saharan
Africa, has been launched under the aegis of the CGIAR Systemwide
Initiative on HIV/AIDS and Agriculture (SWIHA), which is convened by the
Africa Rice Center (WARDA).
“The network, which has been named the African Network on HIV/AIDS and
Agriculture (ANEHA), will serve as an interface not only between
HIV/AIDS and agriculture, but will also include inter-related food security,
nutrition, health and policy aspects,” announced Dr
Kanayo F. Nwanze, WARDA Director General.
“It will focus on all the regions of sub-Saharan Africa, including West
Africa, which has been neglected by most of the existing HIV/AIDS-related
initiatives that have concentrated on Eastern and Southern Africa,” he
added.
ANEHA was formed in response to the unanimous demand made by the participants
of the recent SWIHA Regional Workshop on HIV/AIDS and Agriculture:
Implications for Food Security in West and Central Africa organized by
WARDA. The participants urged WARDA to host a sub-Saharan Africa-wide network
to carry forward the momentum of the workshop.
“ANEHA will be an effective collaborative mechanism to implement the
activities within the three priority themes identified by the workshop
participants as part of an integrated strategy developed to respond to the
HIV/AIDS pandemic in the agricultural sector,” stated Mrs Annmarie Kormawa,
Acting ANEHA Coordinator.
The three priority themes are: 1. Diversification of livelihood systems in
farming communities; 2. Nutrition and dietary diversification; and 3. HIV/AIDS
policy advocacy and awareness. Activities under these themes were planned to
be implemented within a specific time-frame, with expected intermediate
results and indicators.
Forging strategic multi-level partnerships with a wide range of stakeholders,
including those involved in existing HIV/AIDS-related initiatives, was
highlighted as one of the major thrusts to successfully carry out the
activities under the three themes.
The first of its kind in the sub-region, the workshop brought together more
than 75 experts representing national, regional, international,
non-governmental and donor organizations involved in various disciplines with
a focus on HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa: agricultural R&D, health,
nutrition, extension, sociology, gender and policy.
The workshop highlighted that as the largest employer in sub-Saharan Africa,
agriculture is particularly affected by the HIV/AIDS pandemic. About 70% of
Africans—and nearly 90% of the poor—work primarily in agriculture.
HIV/AIDS is depleting the region of its food producers, hitting those who are
least equipped to deal with its consequences. The pandemic has become a
determining factor of food insecurity as well as a consequence of food and
nutrition insecurity in the region.
Dr Mamadou Diallo from the United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS)-Côte
d’Ivoire, who delivered the keynote address at the workshop, said that
agriculture is predominantly non-mechanized in sub-Saharan Africa. With the
reduction in agricultural labor force in HIV/AIDS-affected communities, only
the elderly and children are often left to carry on farming. As a consequence,
less land is cropped, farmers switch to crops easiest to grow, traditional
farming knowledge and skills are lost, seasonal crop deadlines are missed,
overall production is reduced and farmers’ incomes fall.
“The agricultural sector has a great potential to help mitigate the
consequences of HIV/AIDS on farmers. For example, breakthroughs such as the New
Rice for Africa (NERICA) varieties give improved yield and are less
susceptible to local stresses, so that the labor burden is lessened,” said
Dr Nwanze.
The workshop was organized with support from the Canadian International
Development Agency (CIDA)’s Canada Fund for Africa. The participants
included representatives from UNAIDS, Economic Community of West African
States (ECOWAS), West and Central African Council for Agricultural Research
and Development (WECARD/CORAF), United States Agency for International
Development (USAID-WARP), CAB International (CABI), CARE International and
CGIAR Gender and Diversity Program.
Participants from several CGIAR Centers also attended: International Crops
Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), International Water
Management Institute (IWMI), International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA),
Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT), International Plant
Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI) and WARDA.
Wishing success to the network, Dr Nwanze said, “We are confident that ANEHA,
which has emerged from a shared vision and commitment of a wide cross-section
of stakeholders, will be on the frontline in the fight against HIV/AIDS in
sub-Saharan Africa, where farming is the most important source of livelihood
for the majority of the population.”
About the Africa Rice Center (WARDA)
Africa
Rice Center (WARDA) is an autonomous intergovernmental research
association of African member states. WARDA is also one of the 15
international agricultural research Centers supported by the Consultative
Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR).
WARDA’s mission is to contribute to poverty alleviation and food
security in Africa, through research, development and partnership
activities aimed at increasing the productivity and profitability of the
rice sector in ways that ensure the sustainability of the farming
environment.
WARDA hosts the African
Rice Initiative (ARI), the Regional
Rice Research and Development Network for West and Central Africa
(ROCARIZ),
and the Inland
Valley Consortium (IVC). It also supports the Coordination Unit of
the Eastern and Central African Rice Research Network (ECARRN), based
in Tanzania.
Since January 2005, WARDA has been working out of the
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
(IITA)-Benin station in Cotonou, having relocated from its headquarters in Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire, because of the Ivoirian crisis. WARDA has regional research stations near St Louis, Senegal and at IITA in Ibadan, Nigeria.
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