Kenyans query maize imports amid price hikes
Kenyans have been facing shortages of basic foods following a drought last year that affected the country's food stocks.
The
shortage is such that the price of maize flour, with which people make the
staple ugali, is currently twice its usual level, and people living close to
the border with neighbouring Uganda and Tanzania have taken to shopping there.
One man is even reported to have killed his wife over a portion
of ugali that was too small, The Star website reports.
The government last week imported 30,000 tonnes of maize flour,
but Kenyans have been eyeing the shipment of food with suspicion, the Standard Digital website says.
Questions
have been raised as to whether the government is colluding with companies to
take advantage of the shortage, and suspicions have been exacerbated by pointed
questions as to how long the government took to import the maize, and initial
uncertainty over where it came from.
The government first said it was from Mexico. When this raised
questions about how the shipment could have arrived in the six days that it
did, the government clarified it had been imported into South Africa last year
but not used, Capital FM reports.
Deputy President William Ruto has called the questions
"unfair", asking, on Citizen TV: "Do you sincerely believe that
we can play that kind of game with a very serious issue like the lives of
people? The food of the people. Don't you think that is dangerous?"
The government has also since announced it will subsidise the import of
maize to enable the price of a 2kg bag of flour to return to its usual price of
about 90 shillings ($0.87, £0.67).
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