UN agricultural body provides funds to hurricane-affected farmers in Haiti

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The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) says it is investing US$10.8 million to help restore agricultural productivity in some the worst affected areas of the French-speaking Caribbean country. 
With many rural areas in Haiti still recovering from the devastation caused by Hurricane Matthew in 2016, the IFAD says the funds will be distributed through the Agricultural and Agroforestry Technological Innovation Program, known by its French acronym PITAG, extending its reach to eight additional municipalities in Haiti’s South Department, and spreading sustainable agricultural practices and technologies.
“Haiti’s rural population suffers from a vicious circle of low agricultural productivity, high environmental degradation and poor nutrition,” said Lars Anwandter, who leads IFAD’s programme in Haiti.
The UN said weak agricultural practices in Haiti have been compounded by a series of natural disasters. 
The most recent, Hurricane Matthew, which struck the south-western part of the country on October 4, 2016, left 2.1 million people severely affected, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
As of February 2018, some 622,100 are reportedly still in need of food security assistance, OCHA said.
While the situation in Haiti has improved since the hurricane hit, the UN said “deep-seated vulnerabilities persist.”
Over the past few decades, Haiti has seen its soils, water reservoirs and woods severely degraded, the UN said.
It pointed to World Bank data that shows that 59 per cent of the total population lives below the poverty line, with the figure rising to 75 per cent in rural areas. 
Today, Haiti produces only 45 per cent of the food that Haitians need, the UN said. 
“[PITAG] aims to break this cycle and help small farm families improve their productivity, food security and income levels,” Anwandte said. 
For example, he said the programme proposes the combinations of fruit trees and vegetable cultivations as a means to achieve larger harvests and feed more people, “all in an environmentally-sustainable manner.” 
IFAD said the new technologies and practices endorsed by PITAG will be put in place through farmer field schools, a method of learning which involves community-based and peer-to-peer teaching programmes. 
After the training, IFAD said small farmers will get tools, seeds and other inputs to practice the innovations they will have learned.
Currently, PITAG – a US$76.8 million programme – is already under way in many areas of Haiti, thanks to financial support from the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program (GAFSP), IFAD said.
With 65,000 small farming households targeted, it said the project focuses particularly on women, youth and other vulnerable groups.

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