Nigeria’s ‘tomato Emergency’ Prompts Online Outrage — At Spain - Washington Post
Over
the past few days, a number of Nigerian social media accounts have been
posting photographs of La Tomatina in Bunol, Spain. For the
uninitiated, La Tomatina is a festival that takes place in August and
involves 20,000 participants from all over the world engaging in an
enormous tomato fight. Some estimates say that more than 100 tons of
tomatoes are thrown during the event.
La Tomatina is supposed to
be fun. But to Nigerians, it evidently looks more like something else —
an enormous waste of tomatoes.
This message online may be
tongue-in-cheek, but the problem is a real one. In the past few months,
the price of tomatoes has surged in Nigeria: from $1.20 a box to more
than $40, according to the BBC ($1.20 translates to about 240 Nigerian
naira). One state in northern Nigeria, Kaduna, has been forced to
declare a state of emergency in the tomato sector.
Government
officials say the culprit is Tuta absoluta, a type of moth that can
ravage tomato crops (it is also known as tomato leafminer). At a news
conference on Monday, Agriculture Commissioner Maigari Daniel Manzo said
the pest had affected 80 percent of tomato crops in Kaduna.
The
shortage is a considerable problem in Nigeria. Tomatoes are an important
part of the country's cuisine, often forming the base of a stew or
being included in other dishes, such as the famous Jollof rice. There
have been long-standing concerns that the country cannot meet its own
demand. While Nigeria's tomato industry, largely based in the north, is
among the biggest in sub-Saharan Africa, the country imports huge
amounts of tomatoes and tomato paste, often from China. Domestic
growers, hampered by poor storage facilities, find about half of their
produce going to waste.
The government has been seeking inventive
plans to get around the shortage. In January, Africa's richest man
announced a plan to help wean Nigeria off its reliance on foreign
tomatoes — a plan that Agence France-Presse reports was supported by
favorable government loans. Aliko Dangote had hoped that the Dangote
Tomato Processing Factory could eventually provide more than half of the
900,000 tons demanded by Nigerian consumers.
There had initially
been some suspicion that the Dangote plant was responsible for the
shortage of tomatoes. However, the company announced this month that it
would have to suspend production because it could not get enough
tomatoes.
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