Somalia: FAO Helps Nationals to Cash in on Livestock Waste
By NewsfromAfrica
Hargeisa – Suweisra Mohamed waves a thick dry camel bone with an assuring smile. “This is now worth lots of dollars,” she says, brandishing the dense and neatly cut camel thighbone.
At 47, Suweisra, an unrelenting Somali woman, has finally discovered what she describes as a hidden treasure in piles of
“Until now, we used to throw away these bones, which were useless to us,” she said. “But now I know that we have for many years been throwing away money, a lot of it.”
She is the Chairperson of the Somaliland Meat Development Association, a local organization that brings together up to 40 women and men in
Every day, tens of thousands of camels are slaughtered across
“We have been trained how to carefully cut fresh bones at both ends and extract the bone marrow, which we boil and mix with caustic soda in a very simple process,” said one project trainee, describing the soap-making process. She used soap she produced barely hours earlier to hand wash her white fabric. “It works perfectly well,” she added.
After two decades of war, drought and underdevelopment,
Many things can be carved out of the dense, hard camel bones. In the first year of the SEED programme, over 100 trainees have learned to make necklaces, bangles, flower vases, beads, and combs among other products.
Livestock in most parts of
With SEED programme enterprise activities,
“With soap and things like crafts produced from livestock bones, we have seen the value of each animal, be it goats, sheep or camel, go up by 30 to 60 percent and this is unprecedentedly good for our people,” said Dahir Ali. “These are the kinds of activities we strongly believe will lift people out of the cycle of poverty.”
Soap and bone craft production are slowly but surely launching into the Somali market. There now are plans to expand these ideas across
Strengthening the Somali national economy through development of the livestock and fisheries sectors is a key outcome of the UK-funded SEED Programme.
Joanna Reid, head of the
To bring revolutionary change in these sectors, DFID has been working with FAO, UNDP, ILO and Save the Children in a series of interventions. Following the completion of the first phase of the SEED Programme in July 2012, phase two of the programme now seeks to create thousands of sustainable jobs across
“In Phase I, we have succeeded in demonstrating that jobs and income can come from things like bones, which we are scaling up in Phase II by expanding to areas like curing and tanning leather from hides and skins, biogas and manure production,” said Luca Alinovi, FAO’s Country Representative for Somalia.