Article from "The New York Times" Madagascar and Vanila plantations Photographs and Text by FINBARR O’REILLY AUG. 29, 2018
Comment: I once found a bag near a shopping Mall in Paris .... It looked like a girl owned it because it was full of makeup bits and pieces and there were a lot of cards in it , one of which belonged to a buisness school and this had her name on it. The student was from Madagascar and i was sighing to myself when i called the school and the receptionist wasnt helpful in finding the person i was looking for. I went to the consolate or Embassy one morning , spending money on a Taxi in order to give the bag to a safe person working there. The consolate reminded me of consolates or embassies representing very poor countries ... .... where is all the money and wealth going ?
SAMBAVA, Madagascar — Bright moonlight reflected off broad banana leaves, but it was still hard to see the blue twine laced through the undergrowth, a tripwire meant to send the unwary tumbling to the ground.
SAMBAVA, Madagascar — Bright moonlight reflected off broad banana leaves, but it was still hard to see the blue twine laced through the undergrowth, a tripwire meant to send the unwary tumbling to the ground.
“This is the way the thieves come,” said the vanilla farmer, lowering his voice and sweeping his flashlight beam over a ditch.
Sambava
Mozambique
Channel
Antsahalalina
Madagascar
Indian
Ocean
Each night the farmer, Ninot Oclin, 33, patrols
his land in the foothills of a volcano in Madagascar, barefoot, with a
bolt-action rifle slung over his shoulder. If he hears someone fall, he
knows yet another bandit is trying to steal his lucrative crop of
ripening vanilla.
The lush mountains in Madagascar’s northeast
produce about 80 percent of the world’s vanilla, one of the most
expensive flavors. Its price has soared, reaching more than $600 a
kilogram last year, or about $270 a pound — more than silver — compared
with $50 a kilogram in 2013.
Growing Western demand for the flavoring is
partly driving the price spike, with vanilla used in everything from ice
cream to alcohol to cosmetics. Supply was diminished by a cyclone that
ravaged crops last year on the island, which lies off the coast of
southeast Africa.
With the perfect climate and soil for growing vanilla, the Sava region of Madagascar is in the midst of an economic boom.
So-called vanilla mansions have sprung up above
traditional thatched grass huts. Even the humblest homes often boast
solar panels and LED lights that make once-dark villages glow by night.
Gleaming SUVs ply the broken streets of Sambava, the vanilla capital,
where bustling markets line the roadsides.
The windfall, however, has come at a cost.
Vanilla’s high price, combined with rampant poverty and a corrupt, weak
state, has made the crop a favorite target of violent criminal networks.
The story of the vanilla trade in Madagascar is
one of dangers and rewards, and can be told through three vital links
in the chain that delivers the flavor from the fields to port, where it
is exported to the world.
The Peasant: Grueling Work, Always on Guard
Most vanilla still comes from small farms, like Mr. Oclin’s, where the work is backbreaking.
Vanilla plants need to be nurtured for three to
four years before bearing pods. The flowers bloom once a year for 24
hours and must be immediately pollinated.
Melipona bees in Mexico, where the Aztecs first
used vanilla, originally did this job, but the insects never existed in
Madagascar. So each season, about 40 million vanilla plants are
fertilized by hand using a toothpick-sized wooden needle.
Once
pollinated, a flower produces green beans within two months; the
vanilla fragrance is tucked inside in thousands of little black seeds
and an oily film. The beans begin fermenting once picked, so growers
must quickly find buyers.
The hard work does not bother Mr. Oclin.
“The problem is security,” he said, explaining that thieves will attack and kill farmers for their vanilla pods.
So not only does he patrol his plot of about
3,000 vanilla vines, he pays three men to stand guard every night during
the four months before the summer harvest.
The men are armed with double-pronged fishing
spears and clubs, plus Mr. Oclin’s rifle. Each night, a vigilante group
patrolling local plantations stops by with a half-dozen men armed with
clubs and machetes.
“Every vanilla plot will be guarded,” Mr. Oclin said.
With little public trust in a corrupt police
force and justice system, mob justice often prevails when a suspected
thief is caught.
In April, a local militia captured a thief with
a little over three pounds of freshly picked vanilla. He was beaten
with sticks until he collapsed, then hacked to death with machetes,
according to residents. It was just one of dozens of similar “vanilla
murders” over the past two seasons.
But arrests do happen.
On one day this year, “we had 33 convictions,”
said Volozara Sakina Mohamady, the director of the prison in Antalaha,
one of the Sava region’s main ports. “Mostly for vanilla.”
Despite the risks, Mr. Oclin has seen a small
payoff from the vanilla trade. He now has a smartphone and a Facebook
account, and his one-room home has a TV and satellite dish powered by
solar energy.
The Middleman: ‘With Vanilla, Life Is Sweet’
In Sambava, in the shade of a mango tree,
Pascale Rasafindakoto, 44, a “commisionnaire,” or middleman, waits with
dozens of his peers for lower-level sellers to arrive from the
countryside with small plastic bags of vanilla beans.
The aroma, texture, and bean size (bigger is better) are examined and a price negotiated.
Sometimes, Mr. Rasafindakoto ventures into the
countryside in a battered car in search of deals. His trip back might
include a forced stop at one of the frequent roadblocks, where the
police expect a payoff to pass.
“I’ve never had any problems with gendarmes,”
he said smiling. “I work with them. I have to give them something so
they are my friends.”
With beans spoiling so quickly, growers have
little bargaining power. They often get much less money for their beans
than middlemen like Mr. Rasafindakoto receive when selling the beans to a
central curing facility.
“We’ve been poor for too long,” said Dominique
Rakotoson, 55, a longtime farmer in Sambava who represents 100 families
of vanilla growers. “Despite the price hike, most farmers remain poor
because they sell their crops right away, or too early.”
Tales of commissionaires swindling growers
abound. They also are widely accused of lowering overall quality by
mixing good and bad vanilla.
“The middlemen is where the shady business goes on,” Mr. Rakotoson said.
Mr. Rasafindakoto shrugs off talk like this.
His family now has a new house with a flat screen TV and makes frequent
trips to the beach to barbecue with friends.
The vanilla trade is hard work, he said, so why not enjoy the good times while they last?
“With vanilla, life is sweet,” Mr. Rasafindakoto said. “It has sped up and we can live it fully.”
The Exporter: ‘It’s Like Cocaine in Latin America’
Michel Lomone presided over his warehouse in
Antalaha, watching a small army of aproned women curing, sorting and
packing tons of vanilla into boxes for export.
While wealthy by local standards, Mr. Lomone’s biggest concern is the same as Mr. Oclin’s: theft.
“There is no security of goods or of people,”
Mr. Lomone said. “The system of justice is rotten. There’s total
impunity. It’s like cocaine in Latin America. They get the little guys,
but not the head.”
Mr. Lomone said hundreds of pounds of vanilla
have been stolen from his warehouses over the years. All his employees
are frisked when they leave work.
“The pods are so small and valuable it’s easy to hide them,” he said. “It’s like with diamonds in South Africa.”
Mr. Lomone produces the highest quality “bourbon” vanilla, using a curing technique that takes months.
“Vanilla takes patience,” Mr. Lomone said.
This year, with supply less affected by bad weather, the price may dip, but vanilla’s worth is expected to stay far above historical norms.
Mr. Lomone said he was concerned about the
boom’s effect on local culture, with people doing whatever they can to
get rich quick.
“Now in Madagascar, it’s not a problem of
poverty to eat, but of social poverty,” he said. “It’s about the
competition to keep up with others making fast money. It’s not good. We
can’t keep going like this.”
Map by Baden Copeland. Produced by Craig Allen and Gray Beltran.
Follow Finbarr O’Reilly on Twitter and Instagram: @finbarroreilly
Follow Finbarr O’Reilly on Twitter and Instagram: @finbarroreilly
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