A gloomy season for Ethiopia's 'green gold' at the khat market

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'We call it green gold,' says Ramadan Youssouf, a khat trader in the Ethiopian town of Aweday, one of the largest markets in the world for the mildly narcotic shrub. Many of the bundles from the Aweday market will make their way to Wajale, a border town straddling Ethiopia and Somaliland -- a breakaway region of Somalia.

"We call it green gold," says Ramadan Youssouf, a khat trader in the Ethiopian town of Aweday, one of the largest markets in the

"The prices are too low," Mohamed Ibro, a 45-year-old trader, says with a grimace, after an unusually rainy dry season resulted in an overly abundant harvest.Traders also complain about an increase in taxes and the recent tightening of conditions for exporters to obtain a commercial licence. Men carrying large green bundles on their shoulders jostle against each other as they walk down the narrow aisles packed with tin-roofed shacks selling khat and other products.As farmers hand over their harvest, traders examine the leaves and weigh the bundles before they agree on a price."My hand is the scale," says Saada, a 30-year-old shopkeeper assessing the quality of a bouquet estimated to weigh several kilos.

Between 2019 and 2022, khat represented around 10 percent of national exports, according to figures from Ethiopia's Central Bank.

 

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