Monday, 23 July 2012

Tropical Wholefoods Director Richard Friend's second blog from Afghanistan where he has been visiting our Fairtrade Raisin partners, Parwan Raisin Producer Cooperative.
Parwan Raisin Producer Cooperative
Richard with PRPC members


 Am slightly put out when I wake at 3.15 am. Also its a Shia festival today so the Muezzin are up early and start the call to prayer at 3.30 accompanied by supportive car horns. Not helpful, the cake and pepsi option for the farmer meeting means a 6am start, I close the windows and turn on the rattily fan. Seems to do the trick and its time to get up in no time.    
Chirpy and refreshed we miss the worst traffic and make the journey north to Charicar in an hour and a half. We meet at one of the cooperative collection centres, and greet every one. Every new comer greets everyone with a hand shake or touch of the wrist or side to side hug or cheek to cheek touch, depending on status, kinship, friendship or combination thereof. Aman and I are given the place of honour furthest from the door. Eventually we start although each late comer still greets everyone. Its a lively and good humoured meeting except when due to a mistranslation the coop chairman thinks I want to take over his position rather than just chairing the meeting and makes a rather impassioned speech in response.  Everyone puts away their guns and laughs (of course there were no guns, just pandering to your stereotype dear reader).  After an hour and a half of my talking and Aman translating on the forthcoming FLO audit everyone is well ready for a cake and pepsi  break. Good call Aman! Its a very generous portion of very dry madeira cake so I mostly stick to the pepsi, blaming the large breakfast I didn't have.
Fair Trade Grapes and Raisins Farmers Afghanistan
Richard addressing PRPC meeting

The Panshir restaurant is bedecked with pictures of the Lion of Panshir, Amad Shar Masood the Mujahedeen commander and national hero assassinated by Al-Qaeda suicide bombers on 09/09/2001(two days before the twin towers attack). Its cheap, clean and very busy. The restaurant is presided by a captivating, booming voiced master of ceremonies.  He seats customers and takes and shouts their orders to the kitchen. Although he takes no notes when the customers leave, he shouts what they have eaten to the blue eyed owner at the till by the door. Great performance.  We have a good meeting discussing volumes and terms for and distribution of the fairtrade pre-payments with the coop board over kebabs, Kabuli rice and pepsi. I stick to the rice and pepsi. 
The road to Kabul is just wide enough and in good enough condition to get some real speed up before attempting an overtaking feat of eye popping fearlessness. Unfortunately I fell asleep and missed most of the fun. However back in KabuI I was moved when an individual, who faced with the tiresome prospect of circumnavigating a large roundabout, drove against the direction of travel, crossed two traffic streams and forced himself into his desired lane. Sadly the road condition was too poor to attempt this at speed so no gold medal for our driver but still highly commended. I managed a horse bravo but in hindsight it warranted at least polite applause.
Fair Trade Raisins Afghanistan
Fairtrade raisins are in
Oxfam shops, www.tropicalwholefoods.com
and health food shops.
Back to the guest house and invited the two resident MC staff to share my tomato and aubergine yum. Always a good story to be had from these folk, however Mikes are in the champions league. He has spent much of the last six years living and working with nomadic tribesmen in 30 provinces of Afghanistan (also Sudan and Kenya). No not the sort of job you see many adverts for. He runs a successful conflict management program solving problems between settled and nomadic peoples all over Afghanistan. There are plenty of these because of increasing settlement on traditional range land. The Afghan climate produces a low animal carrying capacity on permanently settled land so nomad animal stock accounts for nearly 70% in Afghanistan and nearly all of the breeding stock. The Kuchi nomads are therefore important to the country but unpopular with settled people (like travellers everywhere).

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