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Maize millers face shortage as State seeks 6 million bags

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A shopper buys maize meal at a supermarket. Prices of maize products may go up due to a maize shortages. Photo/FILE 

By MUNA WAHOME
Posted  Saturday, November 8  2008 at  17:58

Bulk supply of maize in the market is growing tight as millers cry foul over failure to procure enough from the government.

There is a high possibility of a price surge for new maize products ahead of the festive season, a situation that could reverse the trend towards falling inflation.

Unga Group, the market leader, for now retains a recommended retail price of Sh87 for its two-kilo maize meal packet.

There is increasing disquiet from a section of the millers over what they term an emergence of brokers through whom they are forced to go when securing maize from government stores.

Some millers claim brokers are making a huge killing as they flog maize acquired from the National Cereals and Produce Board (NCPB) with a 26 percent mark-up.

But, according to Agriculture permanent secretary Dr Romano Kiome, the board has stopped selling to millers as it fights to shore up reserves of the staple commodity from a low 1.8 million bags to 6 million bags.

The government seems to have ditched the Bretton Woods prescription that it maintain only commercial stocks of grain even as countries like Japan go full blast in the opposite direction.

“There is no maize at the moment. NCPB told us to wait for some allocations this week, but this did not happen,” said executive director of Cereal Millers Association Paloma Fernandes.

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She, however, said she was not aware of brokers receiving the food staple as no one seemed to have any stocks.

Brokers are reported to be buying maize at Sh1,910 and selling it to millers at Sh2,450-Sh2,470. NCPB secures billions of shillings from Treasury to buy grain in the market, mainly to cushion farmers and consumers.

The grain is being secured through currency-distorting imports after politically instigated clashes early this year disrupted planting, and in many cases, destroyed harvested maize.

Last week NCPB communications manager Kipserem Maritim told the Sunday Nation that they had not received complaints from any miller even as some of them continued to queue at the Industrial Area depot.

“We have a register of millers and institutions. We prioritise them in that order, and none of them has been denied maize,” he said. But sources said complaints had been lodged with Dr Kiome by millers. He now says the government has stopped selling maize as it seeks to build strategic reserves.

“Ours is strategic reserves. You cannot sell what you are reserving,” he said on phone from Kakamega. He added that millers should go to the ground to secure supply as farmers are already harvesting in the area and in the North Rift.

An official of giant miller Unga confirmed the shortage and said most millers have camped in the North Rift. But, according to Dr Kiome, most farmers are reluctant to sell at this point until their school fees payments are due; the reason is to prevent men from raiding the family till to finance leisure.

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Add a comment (1 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by frawa07

    why have an induced short supply? if millers can't buy from NCPB or farmers, why not allow them to import from whichever country they choose? bottom line is, we have to feed the masses. how we do it does not matter!

    Posted  November 09, 2008 06:10 AM