Kabul, Jan 11: The
southeastern Afghan province of Nangarhar was once home to thousands of hectares
of olive groves, but residents say water and electricity shortages, combined
with land-grabs and war, have left the industry devastated.
State-run
farms here once produced 8,000 tons of olives in a season, but in the decade
since the fall of the Taleban, labourers have harvested a total of just 1,400
tons. Last year, the harvest was little over half a ton.
The olive
industry grew up around the 1960s Nangarhar Canal, which was intended as a huge
income generator for eastern Afghanistan. In its heyday, the 70-kilometres
waterway provided the irrigation that enabled local producers to export their
olives and fruit.
Today, however, officials say the canal system and the
surrounding agriculture have been undermined by the dilapidated state of the
Darunta hydroelectric dam, built in 1964 on the Kabul river.
The canal
needs electricity to pump water along it, and its managers say they get far less
than the amount they are supposed to get – 65 per cent of the power generated by
the dam.
“Believe me, we hardly get five hours of electricity a week,”
said Ziyarat-Gul Rahel, director of the Nangarhar Canal Project.
Mohammad
Shoja, deputy director of Nangarhar’s energy department, said the reason the
Darunta power station could not supply enough electricity to the canal was that
there was not enough water dammed up to keep it fully operational. Only one of
the dam’s three turbines was currently working, he said.
“We’re faced
with a lack of water,” he said. “The problem is that the canal department is
asking for both water and electricity at the same time – and we can’t satisfy
both demands simultaneously.”
The United States Agency for International
Development said last year that it was refurbishing and modernising the dam,
where the turbine-driven generators were in poor condition and at risk of
failing. It said it planned to finish the repair work by mid-2012.
But as
Hezatullah, head of the Nangarhar Olive Factory, pointed out, the industry has
declined not just because of water shortages, but also as a result of years of
war and poor maintenance of farms.
There used to be 700,000 olive trees
in the province, which borders on Pakistan, but three-quarters of theme were
destroyed by decades of war starting with the Soviet invasion of 1979, he said.
The farms once employed 12,000 workers, but now ran on a skeleton staff of
800.
“There isn’t enough water to irrigate the olive trees, nor are there
enough people to maintain the farms – not to mention a host of other problems,”
Hezatollah said. “The canal was a significant undertaking for this eastern
region, so the government should revive this now dilapidated
project.”
One major obstacle to recovery is that state-owned farmlands
have been seized and the trees chopped down.
Rahel said that of the
14,000 hectares once held by the Nangarhar Canal Project, only 1,100 hectares
remained. “The rest has been taken illegally,” he said.
Local resident
Naqib Ahmad recalled his father working on the olive farms, but he said that
after the Taleban government was ousted in 2001, opportunists rushed in to grab
government-owned land and cut down the olive trees.
As a result,
Nangarhar residents find it harder and harder to buy locally-pressed olive
oil.
Mohibullah said he went shopping for olive oil to treat pains in his
grandfather’s feet, but was only able to find inferior Iranian and Pakistani
products at the local markets. He went to the olive factory, but was turned away
at the gates.
“The staff there are just standing around in the sun,” he
complained. “The plant hasn’t functioned for several years; its an olive factory
in name only.”
Faced with such customers, local shopkeeper Ziaurrahman
Arab said that he sometimes lies and tells people the products they are buying
are not foreign but Afghan.
Ends
SA/EN
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