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    Kandahar farmers send pomegranates to international market

    KABUL, AFGHANISTAN

    11.13.2010

    Courtesy Story

    ISAF Joint Command

    KABUL, Afghanistan – Afghanistan’s Kandahar International Airport staff helped Afghan farmers load their pomegranate fruit onto an aircraft destined for the international market Tuesday in what has been nearly a four-decade lapse in business.

    In less than a day, 15 tons of pomegranate fruit will arrive in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and two more shipments are scheduled to depart within the week.

    It is an indicator that the historic capability of Kandahar to export their fruits can be revived, said Henry Ensher, U.S. State Department senior civilian representative in Kandahar. State Department members are in Kandahar helping Afghans create a stable, economically-sound country and are working specifically with the U.S. Agency for International Development to bridge export gaps between Afghanistan and the rest of the world.

    “This fruit is world quality,” Ensher said. “And it’s now going out to the world so the markets overseas will come to understand that Afghanistan, and particularly Kandahar, is back in the game.”

    Since airport management began readying for the pomegranate export, the airport’s monthly income increased from $52,000 to more than $142,000, said Kandahar International Airport General Manager Ahmad Faizi. The export business plays a factor, but the real money comes from local business owners showing their support for the airport.

    This sends a message to the farmers that if their vegetables and fruits are going into the international market, Faizi continued, they should focus on improving their pomegranate gardens instead of cultivating other produce, particularly poppy flowers.

    “I think it’s clear that Afghan farmers will come to understand that if they employ good agricultural techniques,” Ensher said and “that if they support the efforts of their government to provide security that they can make a better living for themselves and their family.”

    Farmer Abdul Ghafoor said after seeing the event today he will try to further develop his products, explain to other farmers the benefits of exporting and get them on board with the program.

    It is very impressive, he said, to see the pomegranates flying – so much so that the farmers he knows will forget everything else and focus on their crops.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.13.2010
    Date Posted: 11.13.2010 07:25
    Story ID: 60061
    Location: KABUL, AF

    Web Views: 154
    Downloads: 2

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