SENEGAL-AFRICA-AGRICULTURE / CICODEV Afrique warns Senegalese authorities against chemical fertilizers – Senegalese press agency

SENEGAL-AFRICA-AGRICULTURE / CICODEV Afrique warns Senegalese authorities against chemical fertilizers – Senegalese press agency
SENEGAL-AFRICA-AGRICULTURE / CICODEV Afrique warns Senegalese authorities against chemical fertilizers – Senegalese press agency

Dakar, May 3 (APS) – The Pan-African Institute for Citizenship, Consumers and Development (CICODEV Africa) advises the Senegalese authorities to avoid endangering the health of populations and the quality of soil with “decisions inappropriate” regarding fertilizers.

The consumer rights organization is sounding the alarm a few days before the African Union summit on fertilizers, next Tuesday to Thursday in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya.

This meeting of the pan-African organization is presented as a framework to ”define a ten-year action plan for fertilizers in Africa, by increasing them considerably”.

CICODEV Afrique, an organization based in Dakar, said in a press release that it had noted “many gaps in this strategy of the African action plan, with negative impacts on soils […] and humans”.

”Not only do these strategies neglect the critical challenges of soil health and fertility, but they continue to promote methods that will worsen soil degradation in Africa,” she warns.

The ‘strategies’ planned by the African Union for the Nairobi summit contain ‘real dangers’ […] on food security, public health and the diversity of indigenous seeds”, which “are fundamental for food sovereignty”, supports the consumer defense organization.

”It would be dangerous for us if Senegal accepted an agricultural policy based on the use of chemical fertilizers and GMOs (genetically modified organisms). This will kill the soil and will have a negative impact on the health of populations,” warns the executive director of CICODEV Africa, Amadou Kanouté.

He adds that ”the food sovereignty so praised by Senegal cannot accommodate chemical fertilizers and genetically modified organisms”.

”We support a fair and inclusive model to restore biodiversity and foster resilient food systems. And this model is agroecology,” argued Mr. Kanouté.

The executive director of CICODEV Africa and member of the board of directors of the Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa says he encourages the new Senegalese government to lead ”an agroecological transition”, which will be its ”path to salvation [vers] food sovereignty”.

SMD/ESF/ASG

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