An interview with former Production and Industry Minister, Ali Mroudjae
Realistic development for The Comoros, but first...
What are the real chances of economic development for the
volcanic, infertile isolated islands of The Comoros? Ali Mroudjae, the
countrys former Minister for Production and Industry, discusses them with
The Courier.
· The Comoros production
is badly held back by the shortage of arable land. What is preventing you from
introducing new farming techniques - that is to say, intensifying production,
and using more inputs, for example?
- There have been a lot of studies of this. We in fact had our
soil charted a very long time ago. This was the basis for listing priorities and
the top priority was cash crops, vanilla and ylang-ylang and cloves, which
brought in a lot of money. For some time now, however, the market has been
dwindling and sales declining, as they have all over the Third World. Cloves,
for example, have plummeted from CF 3000 to CF 400 per kg and customers are hard
to find, so it is sometimes only CF 300 even, a mere tenth of the original
price.
The second priority was restoring the land, because with
large-scale population expansion of around 3.3%, the threats were enormous,
particularly on Anjouan. All our partners, all our funders and all those helping
develop the country realised the danger and almost all of them pitched in to try
and head it off. Food crops, forestry and all those sectors which could bring in
money and could well take over from cash crops were a bit neglected, but the new
three-year structural adjustment plan just negotiated with the Bretton Woods
Institutions and our development partners takes them all into account, because
unless we convert to forestry and food crops, we shall never make up our losses.
Food crops make for savings in foreign exchange after all and we import
something like 30 000 tonnes of rice per annum - we have managed to keep it down
to 28 000-30 000 t for the past 10 years. When you see our galloping population
expansion, you understand why a big effort is being made with local food crops
nevertheless. But production still has to be boosted and this means planning a
processing industry for, say, the food and agriculture sector and so this new
agricultural strategy is very much to the fore.
· You mentioned cash crops...
The price of ylang-ylang is rather high at the moment, but you cannot take full
advantage of it because of the age of your plantations. What prevented you from
renewing these plantations for a crop that is of such importance to the country?
- Yes indeed, ylang-ylang is one of the rare cash crops to hold
its own. Its a very special sort of plant, I think, and competition is
minimal because you need weather conditions you dont find easily anywhere
else. You need the sort of rainfall which you tend only to get on islands, you
need tropical sunshine and I think you need sea air too, because ylang-ylang is
a coastal plant and doesnt grow high up. All this is in our favour, of
course, but a great deal of labour is involved too, because many people have to
work very hard to harvest ylang-ylang and better distillers are called for if it
is to be a profitable enterprise. The flowers are boiled and distilled to
produce essence and the equipment which chills and condences the vapour has to
be sound, with no holes or leaks. The best ones are made of copper, but we
dont produce copper and our copper machines are 30 or 40 years old and
need replacing. Recent arrivals on the market use sheet metal, but it
doesnt last. We have attempted to cope with all this by inviting UNIDO to
take part in a project to look at the problem from all sides. So we do have a
policy of modernising machinery and boosting output. That is one of the
difficulties. Another is the energy required for distillation. We use wood and
wood now is scarce... I told you just now about the calamity on Anjouan. Anjouan
is where most ylang-ylang is distilled and ylang-ylang is partly to blame for
the destruction of the forests there, so we are looking for another source of
energy with decent returns. We tried diesel, but its rather expensive
compared to wood, because wood is free. We once tried to bring in coal from
South Africa, but we didnt have normal relations with this country and I
think the trial wasnt long enough for any proper conclusions to be drawn
and perhaps we should try again. I have just tried to make contact with the
authorities in Madagascar through the Ministry, because Madagascar has huge
forests which it is trying to thin by clearing swathes and so on, which will
mean it has to do a fair amount of felling. It has asked for FAO assistance to
try and make charcoal with the timber - decent, properly tested charcoal which
produces a lot of heat - and it is willing to sell us some for our distilleries.
A start has been made, contact has been established and we have been visited by
an FAO export and various Madagascan businessmen. We arent at the
practical stage yet, but the project could get under way very soon.
· The EDF has financed al least
one project to encourage maize production as a gradual replacement for rice. How
successful has this been?
- You have to see this project in the political context in which
it was devised. Ali Soilih was there at the time and he had what is called a
fascist policy - between communism and fascism - because it didnt go
anywhere. He tried to clear the decks, and bring atheism to the country.
This policy had its positive points, you can see that now with
hindsight, because the aim was to decentralise. But the population rejected it.
This was the context in which the first big maize scheme was set up with the
idea of diversifying the peoples diet. It wasnt that maize was
something the Comorians wouldnt eat. It was just the context. When the
rme changed, the project was started up again, but under a different name -
Maize and food crops, it was called - because we need maize, if only
to keep the livestock sector going. That is where maize can help us to be self
supporting in poultry feed, first of all, and, of course, in food for the
population. But the basic idea must not be to replace rice. Rice is imposing
itself all over Africa because it is cheaper and easier to cook. Even big
countries such as those in Europe, which have culinary and gastronomic
traditions of their own, are being overrun by rice. When I was a student in
France in the 1960s, we used to go miles to find a shop which sold rice - Uncle
Bents from the USA it was then, but now you can get rice from any
supermarket shelf, even in sacks. They eat a lot of rice in Europe. Ive
been to London and most of the restaurants there are Pakistani or Indian and
rice is what counts there too.
· Are there any food crops in
which you can safely say you have achieved self sufficiency?
- In this country, as you know, the food tradition is green
bananas cooked in coconut milk with meat or fish. That is our staple diet. There
are sweet potatoes too - the variety we have here is very good and ideal for the
population and it is an integral part of our diet - and we also have tubers,
that is to say, yams and manioc. What we want to do is stop rice getting any
more popular. We want one out of every two rice meals to be replaced by local
foodstuffs. That is the policy. Our market gardens are expanding because we are
eating more and more lettuces and carrots and so on. We usually eat rice at
lunch-time and have a lighter meal - vegetables and grilled manioc or sweet
potatoes or something - in the evening. So the message is that, while we want to
contain rice consumption, we realise we cannot replace it entirely as it has
become a completely irreplaceable part of our diet.
· Can you hope to go in for
livestock on an industrial scale, given that traditional grazing implies
deforestation?
- We could do intensive rearing here provided we solved the
water problem, particularly on Grande Comore. We have livestock areas there, but
a hydraulic policy for the grazing land is called for. We have to get water to
some places and we are therefore running projects with the EDF, installing water
catchments all over the place, using the old craters you can see if you fly over
the island. No digging is required, as all we do is line the craters with a
thick layer of concrete, a well-tried method in The Comoros which we only need
to spread. We did discover water on Grande Comore, contrary to expectations, a
few years ago, so all we need to do now is dig down, although for centuries
people said there was no water on Grande Comore as there were no rivers and we
just had cement tanks.
· But its supposed to be
very expensive to sink wells on Grande Comore.
- The higher you go, the more expensive it is, of course. The
land slopes up steeply from the coast and the higher it is the more it costs to
bore. Let me explain. There is no clay at the bottom, but seawater filters into
the island through the porous soil and when it rains, rainwater filters in too.
When the waters meet, rainwater, being less salty and less dense than seawater,
comes to the top and can be pumped out. So there is water everywhere. You can
bore on the coast without any problems, although you have to calculate
carefully, because if you go too near the shore you could end up with brine. But
you dont have much choice.
· There is still one resource
you havent exploited - -the sea. What has been achieved in this sector
lately?
- That brings us to something which is of particular concern to
me. When I went to the Ministry of Production, I realised there was a big
drawback to our production policy, because, with cash crops losing their value,
some way of compensating had to be found and, in my opinion it had to be found
in the sea, in fish. Our waters are full of fish. We have huge amounts of tuna.
There are seasons when one fisherman can bring in 20 tuna all by himself -
thats a huge amount for one person - and we have a red fish called
sebastis marinus, for example, very expensive fish, as well. This is where we
need a policy, the master plan for the development of our fisheries which is
wanting at the moment. So there is work to do in this sector. When I arrived at
the Ministry some time ago, one or two very efficient projects were already
under way. There was an artisanal fishing scheme, for example, to update the
tools used by traditional fishermen, who were still fishing from hollowed-out
tree trunks with outriggers and paddles. It tried out seven metre fibreglass
boats fitted with motors so fishermen could get to the fishing banks quicker and
it tried installing rafts all around the islands so the fishermen could be
guided by them and save time and fuel. We should also like to have refrigeration
facilities for this project near the fishing zones and fishing villages to keep
the fish fresh. Thanks to Japanese cooperation with our policy, we now have a
school of fisheries, which is teaching extremely interesting fishing techniques.
The upshot of the artisanal fishing drive is that there are more and more fish
on the Comorian market. There is no shortage nowadays. The problem is keeping it
so the market can be regulated and the fish marketed, because we have plenty of
it, even enough to export, if only in the region as Seychelles does. We are also
looking at the possibility of moving over to semi-industrial fishing with large
vessels which can process the catch on beard. That is phase two, non-artisanal
fishing, and phase three is a preserving plant to process tuna locally and
market it outside.
This is one way of boosting our income from fishing. Another is
farming shrimp. I dont know how good it is, but we are planning to follow
in the footsteps of a lot of other countries and go in for shrimp farming. At
all events, a French firm has applied to come and run trials and we agreed
immediately, so they will be arriving to get their tests off the ground any time
now. We also have crawfish at great depth, not for export, but for local
consumption - there would be plenty for our expanding hotel and tourist sector.
So, those are the different sides of our fishing industry - tuna, shrimp and
crawfish.
We can also breed fish in the sea itself, as Moh has little
islands where we can make what amounts to a big aquarium - the Japanese are very
good at this sort of thing - and raise one particular kind of fish, sebastis
marinus, the red fish I mentioned just now, and market it in the region, on
Rion, where they are very fond of it. All this is part of our fisheries
development policy. With studies and research, we need more and more big
specialists, because this is a sector where amateurs are not wanted. We have to
join much bigger units, because a little country like The Comoros cannot afford
all the infrastructure it needs for surveillance of the coast, territorial
waters and exclusive economic zone. There is a regional organisation, the Indian
Ocean Commission, and we have a fisheries association called the Indian Ocean
Tuna Association, which is financed by the EDF as part of its regional
cooperation efforts. We have laid the foundations for a regional association in
the greater region, going from India, Sri Lanka and the Maldives over to
Madagascar, The Comoros, Seychelles and Tanzania, Kenya and Mozambique, about 11
countries altogether. We got together in Seychelles recently to see just how far
collaboration could go because the Tuna Association aims to evaluate the
regions potential and do some research into the way tuna behaves there and
so on. But some sectors which are of economic interest to us are not dealt with
by the Association - the surveillance of our waters, for example, marketing and
the infrastructure required to process the fish on the spot. We nonetheless
think we should have a big association like the one they have in the South
Pacific, which has had some very interesting results. It will enable us to swap
ideas. A fairly large source of information is of benefit to small countries
like The Comoros, we think, and will mean we can exploit our resources very
soon.
Something else in the fish sector which is already working is
the royalties we get from the agreements we sign with the EC for European
vessels - traditionally French and Spanish and this year one or two Portuguese
ones too - to come and fish in our waters. The same agreements have been signed
with virtually every country in the region. We receive royalties, but we believe
we can go on authorising European vessels and have our own ships out there as
well, just one or two, to try and boost the local catch.
· You have a great deal of
experience in the Government of your country. How do you see The Comoros
economic future?
- The Comoros economic future is very simple. As I see it,
everything has to come from the Ministry of Production and Industry where I used
to be. When President Djohar asked me to join his Government, I said I would do
so on one condition - that I could have that particular department, because that
was where I thought there was something to be done. You need firm opinions in
that department. You need determination, because its a large ministry and
it has many tentacles. By the time a new Minister has found out about all the
links and the different sectors and so on, hes gone. That is the truth,
sadly, although I think (I may not be in the Ministry of Production now, but
once you are familiar with it... ) there is still a lot that can be done,
because there is livestock and there is agriculture, although these are things
that take time. If we were to launch, say, a fruit policy, it would take at
least five years if we got started now. Firm structures have to be set up, so
that even if a new Minister does turn up, he cant alter anything. There
has to be someone who is committed enough to do the basic job, which is all over
once the policy is launched. Ministers may come and Ministers may go, but they
will follow what has been laid down. Its like ylang-ylang. The plants are
there and they dont alter and all we have to do is harvest and sell.
Its a pity, but just when conditions seemed right, because
our development partners realised that a lot of thought was called for in this
sector, they paid for a study which the Comorian Government wanted with a view
to the agricultural strategy. The study is virtually complete. It isnt
perfect, nothing in this world is perfect, but it is something we can work with.
All the major questions have been asked. They perhaps havent been answered
in enough depth, but our technicians are ready to add what is necessary and so
we can add our own ideas and changes to the document.
We have to take action in the three sectors. We have talked
about fish, but we have to deal with food crops too, because food crops can be
exported and they stabilise the diet. I forgot to mention that we have a potato
project which is going very, very well and that the Comorians are beginning to
eat potatoes. We can export bananas and yams, for example. There is a fast
expanding African community in Europe which is crying out for things like that,
for manioc leaves and various selected products which can be exported. Cash
crops exist; something has to be done before we can launch all those products,
be they cash crops or be they food crops. We have to have agricultural credit
facilities. We have to have them because there is not one single institution
which deals with them. Marketing has to be properly organised because we are
islands and we have the problem of transporting goods from one island to
another. Moh is a veritable garnerbouse for all these products, but they have
to be shifted to Moroni, so credit and marketing facilities really have to be
organised first.
The third thing for the future is processing. We have to be able
to process our goods. We grow fruit here. The mango trees you see here grow
naturally. We dont even have to plant them, but now we are working to a
system, because the European market is highly selective. Mali, for example, and
various Latin American nations sell top quality grafted mangoes on the European
market and we shall be forced to work harder, because our land, which is
volcanic, is austere and hostile. Anyway, our future lies with food crops and
cash crops - provided we can set the scene with credit and marketing facilities.
And then we shall have to tackle agro-food processing.
Interview by
A.O.