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Freight & Trading Weekly

Swaziland lifts maize import restriction

30 Sep 2016 - by James Hall
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MBABANE – Road freight

transport will increase in

the final months of 2016 to

alleviate the food shortage

in Swaziland. Half of the

population will require food

aid by December, according

to the National Disaster

Management Agency

(NDMA). Imported food

aid will originate from

or pass through

South Africa en

route to

Swaziland.

Already border

post activity

has increased as

the country’s worst

drought in a generation

has decimated crop yields.

Government has lifted a

restriction of 15kg of maize

meal allowed per person to be

brought into the country. The

new quota is 50kg. Informal

traders moving the commodity

are proliferating at Swazi

border posts with South

Africa.

Heavy machinery will also

need importation by road to

mitigate the effects of the food

shortage. The Ministry of

Agriculture alerted parliament

that only 400 government

tractors were functioning in

the entire country. Subsistence

farming families who make up

two-thirds of the population

depend on subsidised rental

of government tractors to

plough their fields. Because

the machines are not available

locally, importation from

South Africa is the only

option.

Meat and dairy imports

from South Africa

are also likely to rise.

The drought has

killed 87 000 head

of cattle. Some of the

cows supplied some of

Swaziland’s dairy needs or

would have been sold for

slaughter at Swaziland

Meat Industries (SMI) at

Matsapha. While SMI can

import cattle and beef from

South Africa, the firm will

be unable to export sufficient

meat to fill its trade quota

with EU customers. Swaziland

enjoys favourable trade deals

with overseas buyers but these

stipulate that only beef of

Swazi origin may be sold to

them.

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