Sowing hope in hungry East Timor

There are two distinct seasons in East Timor – the wet season and the dry season.

For many East Timorese, the time in between includes three to four months known as the hungry months, when last year’s supplies of rice and maize have run out and the new season’s crops have yet to yield.

East Timor president Jose Ramos-Horta is acutely aware of his country’s annual famine.

“This for me is a most pressing and heartbreaking situation. I see people who cannot even afford to have a proper meal a day,” he said.

“The number one priority for us is food security to eliminate malnourishment.

“Children who are stunted because of malnutrition in the first few years of their lives, they cannot perform too well in school because they are malnourished.

“It takes time, it takes years for us to improve agriculture with better productivity, better seeds, better farming techniques and better roads for the goods to circulate faster and cheaply.”

It’s almost 10 years since East Timor gained its independence from Indonesia.

The steps on its march to nationhood have often been faltering. The departing Indonesian forces left a country in ruins, its infrastructure in tatters.

Political unrest has further stymied progress.

So the impending wet season makes the farmers restless. Everything depends on good rains and bountiful crops.

In the mountains south of the capital, Dili, a woman stabs the earth with a digging stick, bobbing as she flicks seeds into the thin jungle soils, a method unchanged in centuries.

East Timor’s demographics are staggering.

This farmer has five children aged under 10. The national average is eight children per family. Half of East Timor’s population is less than 10 years old.

Of East Timor’s 1 million people, about three quarters live in rural areas and subsist on about one hectare of land.

Infant and maternal mortality rates are among the highest in the world.

Children are seen not so much as burdens but as essential labourers, and most endure hard physical work from the age of six, lumping firewood from the forest or produce to and from market.

Fighting famine

Of the many hundreds of aid organisations that have worked in East Timor during the past decade, it would be hard to find one more elemental or effective than Seeds of Life.

Rob Williams is an agronomist with the aid agency, which is funded by the Australian Government.

“Seeds of Life aims to do two things,” he said. “One is to increase yields on farms.

“The second is to train East Timorese scientists, East Timorese researchers to a level where they can solve their own agricultural problems so they can do research that assists their farmers.”

Seeds of Life scientists have identified and propagated the best strains of the country’s staple food crops of corn, rice, peanut, sweet potato and cassava.

“We’ve tested these new varieties on thousands of farmers,” Mr Williams said.

“And as a result of this, last year we distributed about 100 tonnes of seed in five-kilogram lots that have gone out to more than 20,000 farming families, so it’s starting to have a large impact on farming families in East Timor.

“The varieties are public domain varieties, which means the farmer can plant them, keep the seed and plant them again the next year.”

In East Timor’s Alieu district, Senor Zacharias Mouzinho Gusmao proudly shows us his flourishing corn crop, a high-yielding variety with large cobs.

It is one of two new corn varieties introduced, tested and released by Seeds of Life in partnership with the ministry of agriculture.

Sold as fresh corn, it has made Senor Gusmao a tidy sum.

Demand for crops

Throughout the country’s farming districts, word has spread of the new, superior varieties, and Seeds of Life cannot meet demand.

In Baucau province in the country’s east, newly installed seed cleaning and bagging machines have revolutionised the process of seed distribution.

And nearby, in a communally planted field, local dignitaries attending a field day are pulling large sweet potato tubers from the red soil.

The new variety is yielding about 18 tonnes per hectare – double the traditional varieties and on par with world standards.

These sweet potatoes are being sold in Dili and for the first time families have some disposable income. Some say they will now be able to send their children to school.

In Dili, agriculture minister Senor Mariano Assanami Sabino says his most pressing duty is overcoming rural poverty.

“And how to realise the dream of the majority of people in Timor Leste,” he said.

“We fight for the independence and continue the fight of how to reduce the poverty in Timor Leste.”

Local workers

Locally trained staff members are crucial to the success of Seeds of Life.

“We currently have a group of 40 young researchers, mostly graduated from the University of East Timor as agronomists,” Mr Williams said.

“We’ve taken them on board and we’re training them in many, many skills. Some never knew how to ride a motorbike when they started with Seeds of Life.

“Some now can interview in English. They can go out and run a field day by themselves. They work with farmers testing the new innovations. They can conduct their own research experiments to choose the best varieties for their own country.”

One of those trainees, Luis Perriera, distributes the new varieties in the Maubisse region of the country’s central highlands.

“The farmers really like it. I’ve been working with them for the last two years in this district,” he said.

“They can see with their own eyes that the yields are better and they prefer to keep growing the new varieties.

“The farmers themselves will be producing more seed so that they can grow their own seed in future years.

“I think it’s very important work, very worthwhile work because I am working for the development of my own country through agriculture, and in this way we can marry the hard work of the farmers together with the new varieties to get better yields for farmers.”

Rebuilding research stations

Seeds of Life is working closely with East Timor’s ministry of agriculture to rebuild research stations.

“After the violence in 1999 when Indonesians left East Timor, all the research stations in this country were destroyed,” Mr Williams said.

“Many of the trained, professional staff in East Timor were Indonesians who then moved back to Indonesia, so there was a large gap of trained people in East Timor.

“Seeds of Life has a mandate of rebuilding and re-establishing three agricultural research stations in this country.”

Loes Research Station is a 12-hectare site on a fertile river plain several hours’ drive west of Dili.

“The research stations are important to Seeds of Life,” Mr Williams said.

“That’s the locations where we test a large number of varieties on a small number of locations before choosing a small number of varieties to test on a large number of locations.”

Rowan Clarke and his fiancee Rebecca Andersen are Australian agronomists based at Loes with Seeds of Life.

After the violence and civil unrest in 1999, the complex lay abandoned and derelict for almost a decade.

Now it is undergoing a spectacular revival. The land and buildings are being repaired under Mr Clarke’s guidance.

“The story is there was only one building that had been burnt and that was probably accidental,” Mr Clarke said.

“But the rest had just been robbed of anything of any value. All the roofing iron went with the Indonesians. The copper was all taken out of the wiring. The white ants had been through any wood and they were just shells.”

Ms Andersen trained in horticulture and decided to work in East Timor after a holiday there.

She says their work is important for the country’s food security.

“We’ve got about 15 varieties of maize that we’ve got on station at the moment and about another 15 peanut varieties, and about 20 cassava varieties, and we’re also beginning to test kava crops and different types of legumes,” she said.

“I think the ministry of agriculture has the leading priority in the country and so places like this are making a really big impact on food security.”

Watch the full Landline report at 12:00pm Sunday on ABC 1.

Militants kill two policemen in Rajouri sector of J-K

Rajouri, Sep 3 (ANI): Two police personnel, a constable and a Special Police Officer (SPO), were killed in an encounter between the police and the militants in Jammu and Kashmir’s Rajouri district on Wednesday night.

Acting on a tip off, a team of security officers had launched a massive manhunt on Wednesday night to apprehend militants, believed to be three in number, who had taken shelter in maize crops of Tota Morha-Dorimal village in Thanna Mandi.

Two of the police officials lost their lives during a brief encounter.

“When we established contact with the militants, the firing started in which two of our soldiers got killed. We carried our anti-militant search operation the entire night,” said Shafkat Wattali, Superintendent of Police of Rajouri.

The deceased have been identified as constable Aijaz Ahmed and SPO Khan Mohammad. (ANI)

Unique acacia tree could nourish soils in Africa

Washington, August 25 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have said that a type of acacia tree with an unusual growth habit, which is unlike virtually all other trees, holds particular promise for farmers in Africa as a free source of nitrogen for their soils that could last generations.

With its nitrogen-fixing qualities, the tall, long-lived acacia tree, Faidherbia albida could limit the use of fertilizers; provide fodder for livestock, wood for construction and fuel wood, and medicine through its bark, as well as windbreaks and erosion control to farmers across sub-Saharan Africa.

According to scientists, the tree illustrates the benefits of growing trees on farms and is adapted to an incredibly wide array of climates and soils from the deserts to the humid tropics.

“Growing the right tree in the right place on farms in sub-Saharan Africa-and worldwide- has the potential to slow climate change, feed more people, and protect the environment,” said Dennis Garrity, Director General of the World Agroforestry Centre.

“This tree, as a source of free, organic nitrogen, is an example of that. There are many other examples of solutions to African farming that exist here already,” he added.

The Faidherbia acacia tree has the quality of “reverse leaf phenology,” which drives the tree to go dormant and shed its nitrogen-rich leaves during the early rainy season – when seeds are being planted and need the nitrogen – and then to re-grow its leaves when the dry season begins and crops are dormant.

This makes it highly compatible with food crops because it does not compete with them for light-only the bare branches of the tree’s canopy spread overhead while crops grow to maturity.

Their leaves and pods provide a crucial source of fodder in the dry season for livestock when other plants have dried up.

The unique acacia tree is a frequent component of farming systems of Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Chad, Sudan, and Ethiopia, and in parts of northern Ghana, northern Nigeria, and northern Cameroon.

The tree is growing on over 4.8 million hectares of land in Niger. Half a million farmers in Malawi and in the southern highlands of Tanzania grow the tree on their maize fields.

In Malawi, maize yields were increased up to 280 percent in the zone under the tree canopy compared with the zone outside the tree canopy.

In Zambia, recent unpublished observations showed that unfertilized maize yields in the vicinity of the Faidherbia trees averaged 4.1 tonnes per hectare, compared to 1.3 tonnes nearby but beyond the tree canopy. (ANI)

Maize agriculture may have fueled ancient Andean civilization

Washington, July 9 (ANI): In a new study, a skeleton found at a roughly 1,000-year-old site in Peru’s Andes mountains has yielded chemical evidence of substantial maize consumption, which suggests that the farming of the crop led to the rise of the ancient Andean civilization.

Prehistoric communities in one part of Peru’s Andes Mountains may have gone from maize to amazingly complex.

Bioarchaeologist Brian Finucane’s analyses of human skeletons excavated in this region indicate that people living there 2,800 years ago regularly ate maize.

“This is the earliest evidence for maize as a staple food in the rugged terrain of highland Peru,” he said.

According to Finucane, maize agriculture stimulated ancient population growth in the Andes and allowed a complex society, the Wari, to develop.

Wari society included a central government and other elements of modern states. It lasted from around 1,300 to 950 years ago and predated other Andes civilizations, including the Inca.

Previous work has shown that prehistoric societies in the lowland areas of Central and North America depended on maize to grow large enough in numbers to develop state institutions, a pattern that Finucane sees paralleled in the Andes Mountains.

“These new findings indicate that intensive maize agriculture was the economic foundation for the development of the Wari state,” said Finucane.ew evidence for maize as a dietary staple among prehistoric inhabitants of the Andes mountains included chemical data from several skeletons previously excavated from a set of tombs at the capital of the Wari state.

The new data convincingly demonstrate that highland residents relied on maize shortly before the rise of the Wari state, according to archaeologist Daniel Sandweiss of the University of Maine in Orono.

He suggested that a warmer, wetter climate during the Wari period and the spread of terraced cultivation areas might also have spurred maize farming.

“Chemical signatures of substantial maize consumption appeared in the bones of individuals from every Ayacucho site, including three from Formative period sites,” Finucane said.

Only a relatively small part of the Andean valley contains soil suitable for maize cultivation.

Competition for cropland may account for evidence of considerable warfare during the Huarpa and Wari periods, speculated Finucane. (ANI)

Selenium enriched eggs developed in Coimbatore

Coimbatore, July 8 (ANI): A poultry farm in Coimbatore has developed selenium-enriched eggs to counter selenium deficiencies.

The eggs are called ‘super eggs’, which are selenium rich and are capable of curing diseases like arthritis, cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. These diseases have a common root that is less selenium intake.

Considering this a private egg producer near Palladam has developed these peculiar eggs where hens in layer farms are fed with rich organic selenium fodder, which includes fish, maize and 14 other ingredients.

“We have developed a new kind of an egg called as selenium enriched eggs, which we are able to produce by feeding hens which you see behind, with special diet rich in selenium sources now, the selenium enriched egg not only gives (meets) about your daily selenium requirements. Also, it contains a number of other benefits as well,” said Balaji, proprietor of A Hi -Tech poultry.

According to a research in Scotland University, scientists have identified around 40 diseases related to selenium deficiency.

These eggs are graded and have printed dates on them so that consumers can come to know, how fresh they are. They are even packed nicely, so that it is convenient for consumers to carry them back home.

The poultry farm has a production capacity of five lakh eggs, which are supplied, to Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Karnataka. They also plan to export these eggs to Middle East and other European countries. By Jehovah.G (ANI)

Monsoon break brings respite to farmers

Jalpaiguri/Shimla, July 3 (ANI): After a long dry spell, farmers in different parts of the country finally heaved a sigh of relief as the monsoons arrived.

The onset of monsoons in Jalpaiguri in West Bengal raised hopes for the farmers waiting to sow their crops.

The region received almost 300 mm of rainfall in the past two days. The farmers were worried due to the delay in monsoons.

“I am happy that it has rained finally. The crops are more or less fine. We will start sowing jute. We were very anxious when it did not rain for a long time. We hope there will be a good yield and we can sell our crops in the market,” said Khagendranath Burman, a farmer.

With only 40 per cent of farmland irrigated, most of small farmers rely on the monsoon to water their crops.

The Indian Meteorological Department had mentioned that rainfall received for the month of June has been 45 per cent less than the normal.

In Jalpaiguri, the rain is still below average but enough for the farmers to start sowing.

“Average June rainfall in this area is around 650 mm, out of which we have received, in the last two days around 300 mm. Before that, in the last 25 days, we received around 150 mm. So 450 mm rain, we already received. So I think next one or two days, we will get little bit more,” said Subir Sarkar, a meteorologist.

Even in Shimla, the rain showers have brought much needed relief to the farmers. Now, they are ready to sow.

“We will start sowing maize. And amongst vegetables, we are sowing cauliflowers, french beans and tomatoes. It has rained enough for these crops.

We have started ploughing our fields and are ready for sowing.” said Swaroop, a farmer.

The monsoon is crucial for summer-sown crops ranging from paddy, soybean, sugarcane and cotton. (ANI)

Success of Inca civilization a result of global warming that lasted for 400 years

Lima (Peru), July 2 (ANI): In a new study, a team of scientists have determined that the success of the Inca was boosted by a period of global warming that lasted more than four centuries.

The new study is called “Putting the Rise of the Inca within a Climatic and Land Management Context” and was prepared by Alex Chepstow-Lusty, an English paleo-biologist working for the French Institute of Andean Studies, in Lima, Peru.

The Inca Empire was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America. It began as a support group in the Cuzco area, where the legendary first Sapa Inca, Manco Capac founded the Kingdom of Cuzco around 1200.

According to a report in Living in Peru, a team of English and US scientists has analyzed pollen, seeds and isotopes in core samples taken from the deep mud of a small lake not far from Machu Picchu to determine that the success of the Inca was underpinned by a period of warming that lasted more than four centuries.

The four centuries coincided directly with the rise of this startling, hyper-productive culture that at its zenith was bigger than the Ming Dynasty China and the Ottoman Empire, the two most powerful contemporaries of the Inca.

“This period of increased temperatures allowed the Inca and their predecessors to expand, from AD 1150 onwards, their agricultural zones by moving up the mountains to build a massive system of terraces fed frequently by glacial water, as well as planting trees to reduce erosion and increase soil fertility,” said the scientists.

“They re-created the landscape and produced the huge surpluses of maize, potatoes, quinua and other crops that freed a rapidly growing population to build roads, scores of palaces like Machu Picchu and in particular the development of a large standing army,” they added.

According to Alex, the report “raises the question of whether today’s global warming may be another opportunity for the Andes.” (ANI)

Dharamsala receives its first pre-monsoon showers

Dharamsala, June 29 (ANI): Tourists and residents here enjoyed the first showers ahead of the annual monsoon rains.

The rain showers have brought much needed relief to the farmers and residents who were reeling under heat wave conditions intensified by the delayed monsoons.

It not only brought relief to the town but also offered some respite to the tourism industry here.

Tourists those who have come to enjoy the beauty of the hill town are happy and relieved after the rains.

“It is very cool here. It’s very pleasant. Earlier, it was very hot and sunny, ” said Ankur, a tourist from Delhi.

The tourist resort owners and hoteliers hope that these first monsoon rains will bring more tourists.

Meanwhile, the depleting water levels of the Pong Dam Reservoir become cause of worry for the residents and farmers.

The water level of the Pong Dam, which is situated in the Kangra valley, is reducing day by day.

This reservoir supplies water not only for irrigation to Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan but it has also a hydel project.

“In my 33 years, I have not seen such low water levels of the dam.

The water is almost touching the ground. The situation is not good.

The water level is depleting,” said, Gorkhi Ram, a farmer.

The situation has led to delay in sowing of various crops like rice, maize and others.

Further delayed monsoon can result in the shortage of million units of electricity from the state.

The Pong Reservoir is spread in 750 square kilometer and the maximum water level has been recorded up to 1410 feet.

During last year’s summer, it was recorded 1311.12 feet, but this year it is less than 1275 feet. (ANI)

Chiles important reservoirs of genetic diversity

Washington, June 21 (ANI): A new research has provided insights into the domestication of chiles and determined that they are important reservoirs of genetic diversity that are quite significant for conserving biodiversity.

Capsicum annuum is one of five domesticated species of chiles and is notable as one of the primary components, along with maize, of the diet of Mesoamerican peoples.

However, little has been known regarding the original location of domestication of C. annuum, the number of times it was domesticated, and the genetic diversity present in wild relatives.

To answer these questions, Dr. Seung-Chul Kim and his team examined DNA sequence variation and patterns at three nuclear loci in a broad selection of semiwild and domesticated individuals.

Dr. Kim and his team found a large amount of diversity in individuals from the Yucatan Peninsula, making this a center of diversity for chiles and possibly a location of C. annuum domestication.

Previously, the eastern part of central Mexico had been considered to be the primary center of domestication of C. annuum.

On the basis of patterns in the sequence data, Dr. Kim and his team hypothesize that chiles were independently domesticated several times from geographically distant wild progenitors by different prehistoric cultures in Mexico, in contrast to maize and beans which appear to have been domesticated only once.

Geographical separation among cultivated populations was reflected in DNA sequence variation.

This separation suggests that seed exchange among farmers from distant locations is not significantly influencing genetic diversity, in contrast to maize and beans seeds, which are traded by farmers across long distances.

Less genetic diversification was seen in wild populations of C. annuum from distant locales, perhaps as a result of long-distance seed dispersal by birds and mammals.

Across the three loci studied, Dr. Kim and colleagues found an average reduction in diversity of 10 percent in domesticated individuals compared with the semiwild individuals.

Domesticated chiles in traditional agricultural habits, however, harbor unique gene pools and serve as important reservoirs of genetic diversity important for conserving biodiversity. (ANI)

Southwest’s earliest known irrigation system discovered

Los Angeles, May 25 (ANI): While preparing for the expansion of a Tucson wastewater treatment, US archaeologists have discovered the remains of the earliest known irrigation system in the Southwest, a farming community that dates to at least 1200 BC.

The discovery has indicated that the inhabitants of the region began with relatively simple irrigation systems, and advanced towards more complex projects as the climate became hotter and drier.

“These are not the earliest canals known in southern Arizona, but they are the most extensive and sophisticated engineering [from the period] that we have identified to date,” the Los Angeles Times quoted archaeologist James M. Vint, of Desert Archaeology Inc. in Tucson, as saying.

Located at the confluence of Canada del Oro, Rillito Creek and the Santa Cruz River, the site, called Las Capas, or “The Layers”, derives its name from the repeated layers of silt that buried the site until nothing was visible from the surface.

Vint led a team of 30 archaeologists who explored the site, while keeping up with the state laws, before they started working on a planned expansion of the Ina Road facility.

“We put in a mile and a half of backhoe trenches and did archaeology in all those trenches. That tells us this is a very expansive site,” he said in a telephone interview.

The archaeologists identified two main canals bringing water from the Santa Cruz River and feeding it into eight distribution canals, all now buried 3 to 7 feet.

Vint estimated that the system could have irrigated 60 to 100 acres.

The primary crops were maize, which was introduced into the area before 2100 BC, and an herb known as amaranth.

The evidence revealed that the region suffered a huge flood about 800 BC, which buried the canal system.

Vint said: “There is some evidence that they tried getting it going again, but apparently that didn’t work. They cleaned out some sections, but they never brought it back to full scale.” (ANI)

Inflation rate up to 0.26 percent

New Delhi, Apr 23 (ANI): The rate of inflation in India for the week ended April 11 rose marginally to 0.26 percent, from 0.18 percent a week earlier, a government data showed on Thursday.

The inflation rate, as measured by the wholesale price index, was 7.95 per cent during the corresponding week of the previous year.

During the week, prices of raw food as a whole rose by 0.5 percent due to tea prices increasing by five percent, bajara by three percent, fruit and vegetables by two percent, and mutton and maize by one percent each.

Between April 11 and April 4, the wholesale price index rose 0.3 per cent to 228.8 from 228.2 the week before, as per the provisional data released by the Commerce and Industry Ministry.

Among the three main commodity groups, the index for manufactured products and primary articles rose 0.2 per cent and 0.5 per cent.

The index for fuel, power, light and lubricants remained unchanged at 322.6. (ANI)

Inflation rate up to 0.26 percent

New Delhi, Apr 23 (ANI): The rate of inflation in India for the week ended April 11 rose marginally to 0.26 percent, from 0.18 percent a week earlier, a government data showed on Thursday.

The inflation rate, as measured by the wholesale price index, was 7.95 per cent during the corresponding week of the previous year.

During the week, prices of raw food as a whole rose by 0.5 percent due to tea prices increasing by five percent, bajara by three percent, fruit and vegetables by two percent, and mutton and maize by one percent each.

Between April 11 and April 4, the wholesale price index rose 0.3 per cent to 228.8 from 228.2 the week before, as per the provisional data released by the Commerce and Industry Ministry.

Among the three main commodity groups, the index for manufactured products and primary articles rose 0.2 per cent and 0.5 per cent.

The index for fuel, power, light and lubricants remained unchanged at 322.6. (ANI)

EU to examine Germany’s genetically modified corn ban

Prague – The European Commission plans to examine Germany’s move to ban genetically modified maize but is unlikely to pressure Berlin into reversing its decision, EU officials said Wednesday.

Germany on Tuesday joined the ranks of the European Union countries that have banned the MON 810 maize produced by the US biotech firm Monsanto over safety concerns, despite opposition from the European Commission.

“We shall reflect on the issue,” European Commissioner for Environment Stavros Dimas said while attending an informal meeting of EU environment ministers in Prague.

However, the commission was unlikely to force Germany to overturn its ban, as previous efforts in other countries proved unsuccessful, EU officials said.

In March, the EU’s executive failed in a bid to get Austria and Hungary to remove their bans.

An official told reporters that it would be “futile to go against” the latest ban, especially amid adverse public opinion.

Austria, France, Greece, Hungary and Luxembourg have also banned Monsanto’s MON 810 maize, which has been approved for commercial use in the EU since 1998.

Prior to the ban, Germany planned to plant the maize, which has a gene that protects it from a bug, the corn borer, on 3,600 hectares this year. (dpa)

Germany to ban cultivation of GMO maize: Minister

By Michael Hogan and Thorsten Severin

BERLIN/HAMBURG (Reuters) – Germany will ban cultivation and sale of genetically modified (GMO) maize, German Agriculture Minister Ilse Aigner said on Tuesday.

The ban affects U.S. biotech company Monsanto’s MON 810 maize which may no longer be sown for this summer’s harvest, Aigner told a news conference. MON 810 maize is the only GM crop currently approved by the EU for commercial use.

“I have come to the conclusion that there is a justifiable reason to believe that genetically modified maize of the type MON 810 presents a danger to the environment,” Aigner said.

Monsanto declined immediate comment.

Aigner, who took office in October 2008, said previously she would review approval for cultivation of GMO maize in Germany before this year’s sowing took place in late April.

Monsanto gave German authorities a report on compliance with cultivation rules at the end of March.

German authorities had given Aigner differing assessments of the report, the minister said. But the Environment Ministry also believed GMOs presented a threat to the environment.

The decision to ban was based on scientific factors and was not a political decision, Aigner said. It was an individual case and not a fundamental decision against GMO crops, she added.

Her ministry would now prepare a report into Germany’s strategy on GMO crops.

Aigner stressed that five other European Union countries have banned GMO maize cultivation in the face of EU approvals.

Aigner’s decision was welcomed by German environmentalist association BUND.

“The suspicions that genetic maize damages nature and animals are so widespread that a ban is absolutely necessary,” BUND chairman Hubert Weiger said.

Environmental group Greenpeace called on Aigner to work inside the EU to stop further approvals of GMO maize.

A series of scientific studies had shown that GMO maize was dangerous to the environment, Greenpeace spokeswoman Stephanie Toewe said.

German farmers have registered intentions to cultivate some 3,600 hectares of maize for the 2009 harvest, up from 3,200 hectares in 2008.

But the total is an insignificant part of Germany’s annual maize cultivation of around 1.8 to 2.0 million hectares.

(Reporting by Thorsten Severin and Michael Hogan; Editing by Editing by Peter Blackburn)

Germany to ban genetically modified maize

Berlin – Germany has decided to ban genetically modified maize, Agriculture Minister Ilse Aigner announced Tuesday. The decision affects MON 810 seeds produced by US agriculture giant Monsanto, which is the only genetically modified seed currently allowed on German soil.

Monsanto’s seed was due to be planted on 3600 hectares of German farm land this year, predominantly in the east of the country.

MON 810 includes a gene which protects it against a pest, the European corn borer butterfly. The seed has been approved for commercial use in the European Union since 1998.

Aigner had reviewed critical studies on the environmental consequences of planting the seed, as well as drawing on a report by Monsanto which had declared their product safe.

Some EU countries have already banned Monsanto’s genetically modified seeds over safety concerns.

The ban comes in the wake of political pressure from Bavaria in particular, where Aigner’s Christian Social Union (CSU) is based.

Germany’s Green and Left party have long called for a ban, alongside environmental campaign groups. (dpa)

Snow, rains wash off Himachal farmers’ hopes

Shimla, April 9 (IANS) Moderate to heavy snowfall and rain at many places in Himachal Pradesh Thursday triggered fresh worries for the farmers in the state.

‘Keylong in Lahaul and Spiti district had 25 centimetres snow during the past 24 hours, while the Rohtang Pass in Kullu district is still receiving snow,’ Manmohan Singh, director of the meteorological office in Shimla, told IANS.

‘The entire tribal belt in Kinnaur, Lahaul and Spiti and Chamba district witnessed moderate to heavy snowfall during the past 24 hours,’ he said.

Mid hills in the state received moderate to heavy rain, causing worries for the wheat growers.

The maximum rain was recorded in popular tourist spot Kasauli (39 mm) followed by Dharamsala (36 mm), Jogindernagar (28 mm), Mandi (21 mm), Shimla (20 mm) and Solan (15 mm).

Sanjay Kumar, a scientist with the National Wheat Research Centre here, said: ‘Earlier, a long dry spell affected the wheat crop in the lower hills. Now, heavy rain accompanied with hailstorm and high velocity winds is flattening the ripe wheat crop.’

He said as per preliminary estimates, the yield of the wheat this year is expected to fall 20-30 percent due to hostile weather at the time of harvesting.

Agriculture is the main occupation of the people in Himachal Pradesh, providing direct employment to 69 percent of the total workers in the state.

About 81 percent of the total cultivated area in the state is rainfed. Rice, wheat and maize are the important cereal crops.

Monkey menace, a poll issue in Shimla

Shimla, Apr 9 (ANI): The general elections approaching, the monkey menace in Shimla has become a major poll issue.

Among the worst hit areas are Hamirpur, Sirmour, Solan, Kangra, Mandi andhimla districts covering almost all four parliamentary seats of Himachalradesh.

Most of the farmers grow fruits and crops such as maize and wheat. But monkeys are destroying the crop. They want to elect a candidate who can assure them riddance from the monkeys.

As a farmer, Shyamlal from Pantegli village said, “The monkeys destroy whatever we sow in the fields. The monkeys are shifting from the city to the villages. We used to sow maize but that was completely destroyed by the monkeys.”

The farmers believe that the politicians promise to find a permanent solution to the monkey problem during elections, only to forget afterward.

In the 11th Assembly elections too, farmers had made it a poll issue. After the elections, the State Government tried to open Primate Protection Parks but these proved to be a complete failure.

Sterilization of the monkeys is a solution but not much has been done in this regard.

“As per the Wildlife Institution of India, until 70 per cent of any species is sterilized, the population of the species cannot be controlled. But over the years, the BJP and the Congress Governments are saying that they will establish sterilization centres in Shimla, Una and Hamirpur districts to curb the monkey menace and spend 20 million for the purpose. But till today, all they could do was sterilize 4000 monkeys and that too of all age groups,” said Kuldeep Tanvar, a social worker and a Communist party of India leader.

An amendment in the Wildlife Protection Act is needed to tackle the problem. There is also a need to reintroduce the export policy, for exporting monkeys for biomedical research, which was in practice before 1978. By Hemant Chauhan (ANI)

Evidence indicates maize was domesticated 8,700 years ago in Mexico

Washington, March 24 (ANI): An international team of researchers has found the earliest physical evidence for domesticated maize in Mexico, dating back to at least 8,700 calendar years ago, which is 1,500 years earlier than previously documented.

According to the researchers, the maize was probably domesticated by indigenous peoples in the lowland areas of southwestern Mexico, not the highland areas.

They place maize domestication in Mexico about 1,500 years earlier than previously documented there and 1,200 years earlier than the next earliest dated evidence for maize in Panama.

“Our primary goal was to document the early history of maize domestication in the homeland of its wild ancestor,” said Anthony Ranere, Department of Anthropology at Temple University, Philadelphia.

He acknowledged that the timelines make a good deal of sense because the wild ancestor of maize is native to the regions of southwestern Mexico where the team worked, and these regions had not been previously explored by archaeologists.

Researchers focused on the Xihuatoxtla Shelter in an area of the Balsas Valley that is home to a large, wild grass called Balsas teosinte that molecular biologists recently identified as the ancestor of maize.

The shelter contained early maize and squash remains as well as ancient stone tools used to grind and mill the plants.

“We found the remains of maize and squash in many contexts from the earliest occupation levels,” said Dolores Piperno, senior scientist and curator of archaeobotany and South American archaeology for the Smithsonian’s Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.

“This indicates these two crops were being routinely consumed nearly 9,000 years ago,” he added.

The findings suggest domestication of maize in Mexico’s lowland areas as opposed to highland areas as has long been thought. (ANI)

Himachal villagers keen to preserve water powered mills

Kumrali (HP), Mar 19 (ANI): Villagers residing at Kumrali village in Sirmour district of Himachal Pradesh are keen to preserve the century old water powered mills “Gharat”, which are on the verge of extinction.

The Gharat, which is used for grinding flour, rice and maize, has been a source of income.

With the arrival of modern grinding equipment and power, the traditional water mills are facing slow death.

However, the villagers who have been depending on this old method of grinding want to preserve it.

“We are trying our best to preserve but the government has not come forward to help us. We are still practicing this age old tradition of “Gharat” which was set up by our forefathers,” said Shivlal, a villager.

The natural taste of flour from the mills run through water wheel still attracts a few villagers.

“After the arrival of the electricity-run machines, the demand of traditional flour mill has been reduced. But the people do not like the taste of the flour obtained from electricity run machines, they prefer the flour produced in the traditional way. Many people have complained of illness after consuming it. We are trying to preserve and lets see how our children continue,” said Preetam, a villager.

“Gharats” have been used in the Himalayan and the northeastern region for centuries. By Hemant Chauhan (ANI)

Inflation rate drops to a six-year low of 2.43 per cent

New Delhi, Mar 12 (ANI): Inflation has fallen to a more than a six-year low of 2.43 per cent for the week ended February 28, against the previous week’s 3.03 per cent, government data showed on Thursday.

The annual inflation rate was 6.21 per cent during the corresponding week of the previous year.

The fall in the wholesale price index is mainly attributed to a fall in prices of manufactured products and some food items.

During the week, prices of steel ingots, batteries and nylon yarn declined.

While, the prices of maize, arhar dal and moong dal declined by one per cent each, prices of fuel remained unchanged at the previous week’s level.

In an attempt to revive the economy, Reserve Bank of India has slashed the borrowing costs.

According to the experts, inflation is likely to fall below zero by March end this year. (ANI)