The Economist - UK (2022-04-16)

(Antfer) #1

42 MiddleEast&Africa TheEconomistApril16th 2022


“I


amdistraughtbecauseI amabout
tofinishmylastjar,”saysIrineMbo­
weni,a residentofJohannesburgand
motheroftwo.“ThereisnoMarmiteon
theshelvesandI donotknowwhatto
do.”Amidthemanytragediesbefalling
theworld,a shortageofglossydarkgoo
tospreadonbreadissurelysmallbeer.
ButnottothemillionsofSouthAfricans
who,quiteinexplicably,likethesalty
sludgeandarestrugglingtocopewith
theworstMarmiteshortagesincethe
endofapartheid.
Thelove­it­or­loathe­itspread,in­
ventedinBritainatthestartofthe20th
century,isanextractofyeast.Itismost
commonlyeatenspreadthinlyonbut­
teredtoast,butit canalsobeusedtoadd
a rich,vegan­friendlyumamiflavourto
soups,stewsandsauces.
InSouthAfricaMarmiteisindeed
thinlyspread.Shoppersfirstnotedshort­
agesatthebeginningofthecovid­19
pandemic,whenSouthAfricabanned
alcoholsalesinanattempttofreeup
bedsinhospitalsthatwouldotherwise
befilledwithtipsydriversordrunken
brawlers.Thebanhadanunexpected
consequence.Withbeersalesonice,
SouthAfrica’smainbreweriessharply
reducedtheirproduction.Withmuch
lesslagerfermentingintheirvats,they
werealsoproducingfarlessbrewer’s
yeast,thebeeryby­productthatisthe
mainingredientofMarmite.
Throughthecourseofthepandemic,
SouthAfricaimposedfourseparate
alcoholbans,eachoneofwhichdealta
blowtoMarmiteproduction.Nine
monthssincetheliftingofthelastprohi­

bition,productionoughttohavereco­
vered,allowingshopstorefilltheir
shelves.Yetit hasnot.Whenyourcorre­
spondentrecentlywalkedtheaislesof 15
grocerystoresinJohannesburg, 12 hadno
Marmiteatall.Inthethreeremaining
shopsa totalofjustsevenjarscouldbe
found,ofwhichthreeappeartohave
escapedpurchasebyhidingbehindjars
ofBovril,a beef­basedcousinofMar­
mite.Thebranchmanagerofa largestore
ineasternJohannesburgsaysthatdeliv­
eriesstilldribbleinbutflyofftheshelves
inaninstant.
Thattheshortagecontinuesisbe­
causeofanotherhiccupinthesupply
chain.PioneerFoods,thelocalmanufac­
turerofMarmite,reportedlysaidthatits
productionhasbeenslowedbya short­
ageofsodiumcarbonate,whichisused
inthemanufacturingprocess.Muckrak­
ingbytheDailyMaverick, a localpaper
betterknownforexposingpolitical
scandalsthanforscrutinisingsand­
wiches,foundthatintermittentcutsin
thewatersupplywerealsoaffectingthe
country’sonlyMarmitefactory.
Perhaps,though,somegoodmayyet
emergefromSouthAfrica’sforceddietof
drybread.Ina countrythatisoften
dividedalonglinesofraceorwealth,all
boundariesaretranscendedbylove(or
hatred)ofMarmite.“Whetherblackor
white,richorpoor,mostSouthAfricans
havea jarofMarmiteintheircupboard,”
saysMrsMboweni.Yourcorrespondent
willneitherconfirmnordenysnagging
Johannesburg’slastsevenjars.Sufficeit
tosaythatMrsMboweniisnolonger
shortofsludge.

SouthAfrica

Marmageddon


J OHANNESBURG
ThereisnoendinsightforthenationwideMarmiteshortage

Ethiopia’scivilwar

Horrorheapedon


horror


T


heluckyoneswerefrogmarchedonto
busesanddrivenacrosstheriver.The
lessfortunatewereslungintodetention
campsandlefttheretorot.Otherswere
murderedinthestreetsorhackedtodeath
astheycoweredintheirhomes.“Wedon’t
needa singleoneofthemanymore,”a mi­
litiamantolda foreignresearcherlastyear.
“Theycannotbetrusted.”
SincethestartofEthiopia’sbloodycivil
war 18 monthsago,therehavebeenfre­
quentallegationsofethniccleansingtar­
getingpeoplefromthenorthernregionof
Tigray.Antony Blinken,America’ssecre­
taryofstate,firstlevelledthischargemore
thanayearago, infuriatingthegovern­
ment of Abiy Ahmed, Ethiopia’s prime
minister, which strongly denied it. Be­
causethegovernmenthasimposeda tight
blockadeoftheregion,ithasbeenhardto
assesstheclaimsofatrocities.Butsome
horrifyinghintshaveemerged,suchasthe
corpseswiththeirhandsboundthathave
washeduponriverbanksinSudan.
NowathoroughinvestigationbyHu­
manRightsWatchandAmnestyInterna­
tional,twopressuregroups,leaveslittle
doubtoftheenormitiescommittedbygov­
ernmentforcesandtheirallies.Thejoint
report,publishedonApril6th,concludes
thatauthoritiesfromtheAmhararegion
havesystematicallykilledorevictedhun­
dreds ofthousands ofethnic Tigrayans
fromterritoryseizedfromTigraysincethe
startofthewar.Thecampaign,carriedout
withtheconnivanceoffederalauthorities,
wasasmethodicalasitwasbrutal.Notices
orderingTigrayansto leavewerepinned
aroundtowns.FreshlyappointedAmhara
officialshandedouttitledeedsforplotsof

stolenland.Identificationcardsweregiv­
entonewAmharaarrivals,butdeniedto
Tigrayans, whowerepreventedfromre­
ceivingaidandgovernmentservices.The
newauthoritiesevengrantedpermitsfor
shipments oflootedsesame, alucrative
cashcropattheheartoftheterritorialdis­
putebetweenthetworegions.
Thismattersnotonlybecauseofthe
frightfulhumantoll.Thecontestedarea,
knownofficiallyasWesternTigraybefore
thewar,isnowarguablythebiggestobsta­
cletoendingtheconflict.“It’sdefinitely
thethorniestissue,”saysa seniorofficialof
the ruling party. Both sides have long
claimedthisland.Botharehardeningtheir
stances.Justdaysbeforethe reportwas
published Amhara investigators an­
nounced the discovery of mass graves,

whichtheyallegecontaintheremainsof
AmharasmurdereddecadesagobytheTi­
grayanPeople’sLiberationFront(tplf), the
party­cum­militiathatrunsTigray.
Meanwhile,hundredsofthousandsof
Tigrayans arestarving. A “humanitarian
truce”thatstartedonMarch24thisalready
teetering. The government has allowed
justoneaidconvoytoenterTigray(thefirst
sincemid­December)andhasbeenwith­
holding permission for more until the
tplfwithdrawstoTigray.Thetplfwants
aidtoflowfreelybeforeitpullsbacken­
tirely, ideallyin tandemwith thewith­
drawalofAmharaforcesfromWesternTi­
gray.Withouta breakthroughtoeasethe
blockade,thehorrorofethnic cleansing
willbematchedbyanequallygrotesque
abuse:deliberate,massstarvation.n

A DDISABABA
Widespreadethniccleansingmay
maketheconflicthardertoend

Tigray

Amhara

Afar

Mekele

Semera

Main
road

Red Sea

ian
ed*

ERITREA

SUDAN

ETHIOPIA


Accesstohumanitarian
aidishighlyrestricted*
State
boundary

100 km

Food insecurity, Feb-May 0 f ’cast

Sources:FEWS NET; OCHA *At Mar 2022

Emergency Crisis
Stressed Minimal
Free download pdf