Food
and drugs experts from in and outside the country recently converged at
Nelson Mandela African Institute of Science and Technology (NMAIST) for
two days workshop to chart out ways of suppressing one of the most
deadly food poisons.
Aflatoxin
is a poisonous chemical contaminating maize, groundnuts, and other key
staple foods in the country, making them unfit for human and livestock
consumption.
The chemical is secreted by a naturally occurring fungus Aspergillus flavus dubbed silent killer, as it causes liver cancer and suppresses the body’s immunity when the contamination reaches high levels.
“Studies also link aflatoxin to stunted growth among children,” Dr Martin Kimanya, a senior lecturer with the NMAIST, says.
Dr
Kimanya is leading a three-man team tasked with analysing the gravity
of the poison reported to have killed at least 125 people out of over
300 Kenyans found with the chemical in their blood.
The team has devised an action plan that seeks to develop a safe and natural bio-control technology that can effectively reduce aflatoxin contamination of maize and groundnuts in the field and during storage.
Dr
Kimanya says the analysis had also revealed that maize, the country’s
number one staple food, was way above the recommended maximum limits,
citing Bukombe in Shinyanga Region, where the chemical was traced in 80
per cent of the maize sold in the district.
“Ninety nine
per cent of the sampled children were found with aflatoxin in their
blood,” says Dr Kimanya, adding that Tanzania was incurring an average
of $332 million worth of loss in terms of health challenges arising from
the chemical.
“This is besides the loss incurred in trade and food security,” he says. The three-man team has developed a five-year draft aflatoxin action plan for controlling aflatoxin in the country.
If
stakeholders validate the plan today, it will go a long way in
improving the health and livelihoods of millions of families in the
country and reduce loss of income from banned trade of contaminated
food.
Ms
Yokobety Malisa, the acting director of Coordination of Government
Business in the Prime Minister’s Office, says tonnes of exported maize
were once returned into the country after the grains were found to
contain the poisonous chemical.
Tanzania
is among five pilot countries in Partnership for Aflatoxin Control in
Africa (PACA), a flagship programme in the Department of Rural Economy
and Agriculture in African Union Commission (AUC), is focusing aflatoxin
mitigation efforts.
According
to the PACA programme manager, Dr Amare Ayalew, the partnership works
with governments to improve their effectiveness and efficiency in
tackling the aflatoxin challenge in Africa.
PACA
was created at the recommendations of the 7th Comprehensive African
Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) Partnership Platform where the
urgent need to control mycotoxin contamination was emphasized.
Hakuna maoni:
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