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Cameroon agriculture-nutrition nexus: actors and key intervention areas
1. CAMEROON AGRICULTURE-
NUTRITION NEXUS: ACTORS AND
KEY INTERVENTION AREAS
BY
FLORENCE FONTEH ANYANGWE
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
THE UNIVERSITY OF DSCHANG, CAMEROON
Yaounde, 8th December 2016 1
2. Introduction: justification, objectives, methodology
State of nutrition security in Cameroon
Determinants of nutrition status in Cameroon
Stakeholder identification, clusters & linkages
Some success stories
Some key entry points
2
3. FNS is of special significance for the ACP region
Without adequate nutrition it will be difficult to attain
the sustainable development goals (SDGs)
A mutual relationship exists between agriculture (food
supply) and nutrition and the benefits/casualties are bi-
directional.
However, insufficient attention has been paid towards
improving the agriculture and nutrition nexus
3
4. Malnutrition does not simply arise just from
poor access to food, but also from a host of
interacting processes (health care, education,
sanitation and hygiene, access to resources,
women’s empowerment etc) which are
indispensable to the AN nexus
Furthermore, a combination of several options
(enabling env, research, SH cooperation,
capacity bldg, etc) contribute to strengthening
the AN nexus and in achieving the desirable FNS
outcomes
The effectiveness of roles played by these
options vary tremendously between countries
and regions
4
5. To highlight some indicators of nutritional status
and food security in Cameroon
To identify stakeholders, clusters and their
interactions
To identify key areas of intervention
5
6. Desk top review
Interviews with key stakeholders
Stakeholders’ consultation workshops
6
7. 7Figure 1: Map of Cameroon, showing administrative Regions
Population : 22.3 million
Surface area: 475,650 km2
Pop growth rate : 2.5 %
GDP/capita : 1426 USD
Life expectancy : 55 years
HDI : 0.505
11. Micronutrient Children (1 -
5 yrs)
Women (15 –
49 yrs)
Zinc 69.1 76.9
Folate 8.4 16.6
Vitamin B12 28.1 28.6
Vitamin A 35 21.4
Iron - -
11
12. Food security
Education (esp. of women)
Poverty
Health care
Water and sanitation
Gender equality/women empowerment
Enabling environment
12
13. Indicator Prevalence source
% living below poverty line 39.9% NIS, 2012
Life expectancy 55.1 yrs UNPD,
2013
Infant mortality 61/1000 UNPD,
2013
Access to improved drinking water 59.8% NIS, 2012
Use of improved sanitation facilities 52.4% NIS, 2012
Gender inequality index 0.622 UNPD,
2014
Females in secondary school 45.8% NIS, 2014
Govt expenditure on health 5.2% of GDP UNPD,
2014
Govt expenditure on education 3.2% of GDP UNPD,
14. Only 20% arable land is cultivated
53% of nat. pop. live in rural areas, where > 50% live
below national poverty line
Low productivity, high food exportation to CEMAC,
high influx of refugees, result to high food prices
Strategies used: eat cheap (72%); eat less (45%);
reduce # meals (33%)
10% of rural households live in persistent food
insecurity
Severe food insecurity: FN= 4.1%; N= 3.7%, W= 3.3%
Food insecurity is recurrent in FN & N Regions
14
15. The adoption of a National Policy on Food and
Nutrition in the year 2006;
The creation of an inter-ministerial commission
on food security in 2010;
The admission of Cameroon into the SUN
movement in 2013;
The creation of an inter-ministerial commission
to combat malnutrition in the three northern
regions and the East region in 2014;
The adoption in 2014 of a national policy on
gender -2011-2020;
The elaboration of a national policy on food and
nutrition (NPFN) – 2015-2034 in 2015.
15
17. SH collaboration is essential to achieve common objectives17
Cluster Stakeholders
Policy makers MINSANTE, MINADER, MINEPIA, MINFI, MINRESI
MINPROFF, MINATD, MINEE, MINT, MINCOM
MINESUP, MINSEC, MINEDUB, MINPMEESA, MINCUL, MINTEL, MINAS
Research and training MINRESI, MINESUP, MINEDUB, MINSEC
UN system UNICEF, FAO, WFP, WHO, UNDP, UNHCR, UN Women
NGOs International: HKI, Plan Int., Counterpart Int, French Red Cross,
CARE, SNV, NEPAD
National: WHINCONET, Action for Development, PROPAC
Business world (Food
processors)
Oil processors (Diamaor, Mayor, Palm’or, Mula palm); Salt processors
(Sasel, Ngwang); Flour processors (SCTM, Grand moulins, La Pasta);
SNEC; Water bottling companies (Tangui, Supermont, Semme,
Madiba, Sano)
Farmer’s /Women’s groups CAMNAFAW, OFSAD, MBOSCUDA
Consumer syndicates COSADER, ACDIC, COMINSUD, CAMORIF
Donors AFD, M/S Dell foundation, Bill Gates foundation, WB, USAID, DFATD,
Sight for life, GEF, CERF, Japanese embassy fund, Belgian
government, ADB, EU
19. Low influence-High importance
MINPROFF, CAMNAFAW, OFSAD,
COSADER, ACDIC, COMINSUD,
Action pour le Developpement,
PROPAC, MBOSCUDA, UN
Women, UNDP
High influence-High importance
MINSANTE, MINADER, MINEPIA,
MINESUP, MINSEC, MINEDUB, MINAS,
UNICEF, FAO, WHO, WFP, WB, AFD,
ADB, M/S Dell foundation, Bill Gates
foundation,
USAID, DFATD, Sight for life, GEF,
CERF, Japanese embassy fund,
Belgian government
Counterpart international, French
Red cross, HKI, CARE, UNHCR, EU,
NEPAD
Low influence-low importance
SNV, Plan international,
MINCUL, MINCOM
High influence-low importance
MINFI, MINATD, MINEE, MINT, Food
processors, CRTV, Cameroon Tribune,
The Post, The Messenger, The Herald,
Canal 2 International, Equinox19
22. Valorize indigenous foods: evaluate their
nutritive values.
Evaluate post harvest losses of major food
commodities for both crop and animal foods.
Analyze the value chain of major foods from
farm to fork
Establish standards and evaluate safety of
locally produced and imported foods.
Creation and updating of data bases (regional
and national levels).
Make use of existing grey research data
(transform research into practice).
22
23. Formal nutrition education: Introduce
relevant nutritional components in all
educational programs and at all levels
Informal education: education of the
population on cultural practices and culinary
techniques; recruit and assign adequately
trained nutritionists to health centers,
hospitals, councils, districts, etc.
Sensitization: use mass media
communication tools
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24. Creation of an autonomous national office on
food and nutrition (more visibility and
autonomy)
Evaluate the cost of malnutrition in monetary
terms (demonstrates the cost of inaction).
Identify nutrition champions or goodwill
ambassadors (e.g. sports or music stars)
Encourage the creation of and support food and
nutrition advocacy groups.
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