Locust invasion of Sindh may lead to food emergency

Locusts fly over the National Cricket Stadium in the Pakistan's port city of Karachi on November 11, 2019. (AFP)
Updated 04 December 2019
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Locust invasion of Sindh may lead to food emergency

  • Locust swarms migrated from the Red Sea and entered Pakistan through Iran in March
  • Farmers in Sindh fear the locust plague will deprive them of wheat crops 

KARACHI: Until Monday evening, Rahmatullah Rajar, a farmer in Samaro, Sindh province, had big dreams as he was expecting the best wheat harvest this year. A few hours later the dreams were no more.

When Rajar went to his fields in the morning, he thought that by accident he had arrived at someone’s else property, but soon he realized it was his own 50-acre land, devoured by a plague.

“Suddenly, I noticed a swarm of locusts in the remaining field,” he told Arab News, “they had disappeared my crops which had come out up to three inches from the surface.”

Rajar desperately rushed to a nearby market to buy pesticides and save the remaining crops, but he still anticipates with horror what the coming days will bring as all irrigated lands in districts adjacent to the desert region of Sindh are under a massive locust attack.

The locust-exposed area comprising the deserts of Thar, Nara, and Kohistan covers approximately 68,000 square kilometers.

In May, the swarming short-horned grasshoppers were spotted in the Nara desert, prompting the Department of Plant Protection (DPP) at the Ministry of National Food Security and Research to apply insecticides. But some of the insects survived and started to breed out of control, spreading to Thar and Kohistan.

Desert locusts have been destroying crops in Africa and Asia for centuries. Their ability to move in huge swarms with great speed has earned them notoriety as one of the most devastating agricultural plagues in the world.

In January, swarming locusts emerged from the Red Sea coast of Sudan and Eritrea. Only a month later, they were already in Saudi Arabia and Iran. In March, they hit Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province. In May, they entered Sindh.

Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah on Monday confirmed that crops in 11 districts of the province were seriously damaged by the plague, and ordered to release Rs10 million to DPP to arrange three aircraft, fuel, and pesticide for aerial spraying in the desert area.

“We had one aircraft in Sindh, so we took another one from Punjab to conduct aerial pesticide spraying,” DPP director Muhammad Tariq Khan told Arab News on Tuesday. “Our department is tackling the situation in accordance with international standards,” he said.

These standards, however, impose limits as not all areas can be subjected to spraying.

“We can do aerial spraying in desert areas and we are doing it. But we cannot conduct it in inhabited districts, as the lives of people and livestock would be endangered,” Khan said, adding that ground teams were deployed and the DPP will control the situation as it did six months ago.

“It’s true that locusts are present in the desert areas of Sindh, but we are vigilant and will overcome the situation as we did it six months ago. Despite an army of locusts had come in May, we saved cotton crops. We will control it again,” he said.

Not all stakeholders, however, are as enthusiastic as the DPP director, especially with regard to the success of the anti-locust battle in June. 

Briefing the provincial cabinet on Monday, Sindh Minister for Agriculture Ismail Rahoo said the locust control operation six months ago had failed as it could not be properly implemented due to financial and other constraints.

Farmers already fear the worst and are warning of possible food shortages.

Nisar Khaskheli, the president of a growers’ association in Khairpur, told Arab News that hopes were fading. “It seems we are proceeding toward a food emergency in our province,” he said, explaining that this time the locust plague may deprive them of wheat crops.


Security forces kill nine Pakistani Taliban militants in restive northwest, military says

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Security forces kill nine Pakistani Taliban militants in restive northwest, military says

  • The militants were killed in separate operations in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's Dera Ismail Khan and Bannu districts
  • Pakistan this week summoned Afghanistan’s deputy head of mission to demand action against the Pakistani Taliban

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan security forces have killed nine Pakistani Taliban militants in two separate engagements in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, the military said on Sunday, amid a surge in militancy in the region bordering Afghanistan.

Four militants were killed in an intelligence-based operation in KP's Dera Ismail Khan, while five other Pakistani Taliban members were gunned in an exchange of fire with security forces in the Bannu district, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military's media wing.

Weapons and ammunition were also recovered from the deceased "Indian-sponsored" militants, who remained actively involved in numerous activities against security forces and law enforcement agencies and target killing of civilians. There was no immediate response from India to the statement.

"Sanitization operations are being conducted to eliminate any other Indian sponsored kharja [militant] found in the area," the ISPR said in a statement. "Pakistan will continue at full pace to wipe out menace of foreign sponsored and supported terrorism from the country."

KP has seen a surge in militancy in recent years, with the Pakistani Taliban, or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), and other militant groups frequently targeting security forces convoys and check-posts, besides targeted killings and kidnappings of law enforcers and government officials.

Pakistan this week summoned Afghanistan’s deputy head of mission and demanded “decisive action” against the TTP after four Pakistani soldiers were killed in an attack on a military camp in KP’s North Waziristan district that also killed four assailants, according to the Pakistani foreign office.

Islamabad has long accused Kabul of allowing its soil and India of backing militant groups, including the TTP, for attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi have consistently denied this.

The uptick in militant violence triggered fierce clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan in Oct. The two countries agreed to a ceasefire in Doha on Oct. 19, but tensions remain high between the neighbors.