World

Yemenis, strapped for cash, yearn for their own honey

 
SANAA: Idrees al Haddad used to buy 7 kilogrammes tubs of Yemen’s world-famous honey when he went shopping. Today he can only afford 1 kg. Like many Yemenis suffering the extreme inflation and salary losses of a seven-year war, Haddad’s reduced consumption has left the industry with a production surplus.

“Merchants used to come to us to buy honey from our houses, from the valley apiaries. Nowadays we go to the market — but there isn’t demand!” said beekeeper Amin Hussein amid his insects at Wadi Dhahr, in Sanaa province.

The bees crawl and buzz around cabinet-like wooden hives, feeding on almond tree flowers. In the capital Sanaa, shopkeeper Faris al Houri said honey prices have fallen 30-40 per cent from last year, when prices were already low.

“Border crossings are closed, shipping and export have stopped. Demand is non-existent’’, Houri said, adding that people can barely afford food, never mind honey.

In Sanaa’s upmarket honey shops vendors scoop up the light, dark, clear and opaque honeys reputed for their taste and medicinal properties. They tease the viscous liquids around spoons for customers to try. “Our commercial trade has almost halted’’, said vendor Helmi al Marhebi.

Yemen’s honey industry faces many challenges. Frontlines, landmines and fuel shortages hamper farmers transporting colonies to feed on seasonal plants. Climate change is also seen as a problem.

Abdullah Yarim, chairman of an industry organisation, said war has reduced access to markets in Gulf states. Saudi Arabia who control Sanaa and northern Yemen, maintains an air, sea and land blockade on Ansar Allah territory.

Import packaging standards also constrain exports, Yarim said. In the UAE, 1 kg of top-end Yemeni Sidr honey can retail around 2,000 AED ($545). Haddad paid just 30,000 Yemeni riyals ($50) for his 1 kg of Sidr honeycomb. — Reuters