Sheep come running when Larbi El Ghazouani pours alfalfa and straw into their troughs twice a day. The 55-year-old farmer had counted on selling the bulk of his 130 sheep to Moroccans preparing for early June’s Eid al-Adha holiday, but now his hopes are unraveling and he expects to lose about half of his investment.
That is because, in a surprising break from tradition, Morocco’s King Mohammed VI on Wednesday urged Moroccans to forgo buying sheep to be sacrificed during this year’s holiday amid record inflation and climate change. A seven-year drought has decimated the country’s livestock, causing sheep prices to surge beyond the reach of working-class families.
“Performing it [the sacrifice] in these difficult circumstances will cause real harm to large segments of our people, especially those with limited income,” the king, who is also Morocco’s highest religious authority, wrote in a letter read on state-run Al Aoula television.
Photo: AP
Drought has driven some of his neighbors to stop breeding livestock, so he said he understood the circumstances that led to the king’s decision. He still plans to breed more ewes to be sold before next year’s holiday, but for breeders like him, the cancelling of Eid festivities would deal a heavy blow.
It costs El Ghazouani about 1,500 Moroccan dirhams (US$150) to feed a sheep for one year on a diet of straw, alfalfa and fava beans — a 50 percent spike from only three years ago. Now he and other breeders are preparing to wait. It would be another year of buying feed before they can sell them.
“There’s a difference between the years before the drought and what we’re suffering today,” he said, tending to sheep on his farm outside the city of Kenitra. “I wasted money on fodder and made an effort with these sheep.”
Eid al-Adha, which takes place this year in early June, is an annual “feast of sacrifice” in which Muslims slaughter livestock to honor a passage of the Koran in which the prophet Ibrahim prepared to sacrifice his son as an act of obedience to Allah, who intervened and replaced the child with a sheep.
It is a major holiday from Senegal to Indonesia, with traditions so embedded that families have been known to take out loans to buy sheep.
The prices have become so exorbitant that 55 percent of families surveyed by the Moroccan non-governmental organization Moroccan Center for Citizenship last year said they struggled to cover the costs of purchasing sheep and the utensils needed to prepare them. More than 7 percent of respondents said they either took out loans or borrowed money from acquaintances to buy the sacrificial sheep.
The sheep price spikes are driven by increasingly sparse pastures, which offer less grazing room and raise the costs of feed for herders and farmers. Moroccan Minister of Agriculture Ahmed El Bouari told reporters last month that rainfall this season was 53 percent below the last 30 years’ annual average and sheep and cattle herds had shrunk 38 percent since 2016, the last time Morocco conducted a livestock census.
The price of preferred domestic sheep can often exceed monthly household earnings in Morocco, where the monthly minimum wage remains 3,000 Moroccan dirhams (US$300). The country has in recent years subsidized and imported livestock, including from Romania, Spain and Australia, from which it plans to import 100,000 sheep this year. To keep prices steady, Morocco this year removed import duties on livestock and red meat.
It is the first time in 29 years that Morocco has asked citizens to forgo holiday feasting and reflects that food prices remain a struggle for many despite Morocco’s transformation from a largely agrarian nation to a mixed economy whose cities have some of the Middle East and Africa’s most modern infrastructure.
When Shanghai-based designer Guo Qingshan posted a vacation photo on Valentine’s Day and captioned it “Puppy Mountain,” it became a sensation in China and even created a tourist destination. Guo had gone on a hike while visiting his hometown of Yichang in central China’s Hubei Province late last month. When reviewing the photographs, he saw something he had not noticed before: A mountain shaped like a dog’s head rested on the ground next to the Yangtze River, its snout perched at the water’s edge. “It was so magical and cute. I was so excited and happy when I discovered it,” Guo said.
Chinese authorities said they began live-fire exercises in the Gulf of Tonkin on Monday, only days after Vietnam announced a new line marking what it considers its territory in the body of water between the nations. The Chinese Maritime Safety Administration said the exercises would be focused on the Beibu Gulf area, closer to the Chinese side of the Gulf of Tonkin, and would run until tomorrow evening. It gave no further details, but the drills follow an announcement last week by Vietnam establishing a baseline used to calculate the width of its territorial waters in the Gulf of Tonkin. State-run Vietnam News
TURNAROUND: The Liberal Party had trailed the Conservatives by a wide margin, but that was before Trump threatened to make Canada the US’ 51st state Canada’s ruling Liberals, who a few weeks ago looked certain to lose an election this year, are mounting a major comeback amid the threat of US tariffs and are tied with their rival Conservatives, according to three new polls. An Ipsos survey released late on Tuesday showed that the left-leaning Liberals have 38 percent public support and the official opposition center-right Conservatives have 36 percent. The Liberals have overturned a 26-point deficit in six weeks, and run advertisements comparing the Conservative leader to Trump. The Conservative strategy had long been to attack unpopular Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, but last month he
Four decades after they were forced apart, US-raised Adamary Garcia and her birth mother on Saturday fell into each other’s arms at the airport in Santiago, Chile. Without speaking, they embraced tearfully: A rare reunification for one the thousands of Chileans taken from their mothers as babies and given up for adoption abroad. “The worst is over,” Edita Bizama, 64, said as she beheld her daughter for the first time since her birth 41 years ago. Garcia had flown to Santiago with four other women born in Chile and adopted in the US. Reports have estimated there were 20,000 such cases from 1950 to