Farmers Want Probe Into South Africa Drought-Relief Spend

Farmers Want Probe Into South Africa Drought-Relief Spend.
Agri SA wants Public Protector, Auditor General to investigate Funds wasted on service providers, pricey feed, farmers say South African farmers called for an investigation into how 2.5 billion rand ($192 million) of government funds earmarked for drought relief last year was spent, after many commercial farms received no state help.
Only 1 billion rand was allocated to government departments, of which about 85 percent was spent during a period in which six of the country’s nine provinces were declared disaster areas, according to research from Agri SA.
Of the 1 billion rand, just 0.24 percent went to commercial farmers and much of the money was wasted on inexperienced distribution companies and overpriced feed and boreholes, the farmers’ group said.
“This is a warning shot, a flag going up to say we need to investigate these things,” Omri Van Zyl, executive director of Agri SA, told reporters Thursday in Centurion, south of Pretoria.
“For all South Africans, we need a proper delivery system to help us in such a crisis.” South Africa experienced the worst drought in more than a century in 2015 and the dry weather continued the following year, pushing up food prices and hurting small-scale and commercial farmers.
The Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries will cooperate with any inquiry and will work with Agri SA to find out where the money was spent, acting spokesman Steve Galane told reporters.
The DAFF allocated 212 million rand for drought-relief measures but only spent 146 million rand, 90 percent of which went to subsistence farmers, Agri SA said.
Heavy rain across most provinces this year and the end of 2016 has given farmers relief from the drought and the country’s Crop Estimates Committee is forecasting a record corn crop.
However, the drought still persists in the Northern and Western Cape provinces.

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