Zimbabwean tomato growers turn to Mozambican markets

Published Aug 26, 2021

Tridge summary

Tomato growers in Zimbabwe's Chipinge and Chimanimani districts are smuggling their produce into Mozambique due to oversaturation of the local market and breach of contract by buyers, leading to rotting crops and low prices. The smuggling is facilitated by the districts' proximity to Mozambique and the porous border. The bulk of the smuggled tomatoes is sourced from Birchenough, Nyanyadzi and Musikavanhu irrigation schemes.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Tomato growers from Zimbabwe's in Chipinge and Chimanimani districts are smuggling tomatoes into Mozambique in search of lucrative markets, according to the Manica Post. Owing to the two districts’ proximity to Mozambique and the porous border line, smugglers are taking advantage to smuggle the crop. Espungabeira and Matshazi in Mozambique provide the most lucrative markets. The bulk of the tomatoes are coming from Birchenough, Nyanyadzi and Musikavanhu irrigation schemes reports www.thezimbabwemail.com Growers who spoke to The Manica Post said they are turning elsewhere because the crop had flooded the local market and forcing them to sell it too cheaply. They said some companies that had contracted them to grow tomatoes failed to honour their promises to buy from them. This resulted in the crop rotting on farms. A farmer at Nyanyadzi Irrigation Scheme said: “We had a very good crop but some of the companies that had contracted us let us down as they did not buy from us. The ...
Source: Hortidaily

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