Refugees discover benefits of insect farming in Zimbabwe
Refugees at Tongogara settlement have learned how to breed black soldier flies for a greener animal feed and fertilizer that is helping them earn an income.
31.07.2024
When Francine Mashimango fled violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) with her nine children in 2018, she never imagined that a few years later, she would be supporting her family by raising flies and their maggots in a refugee camp in Zimbabwe.
Every day now, Francine, 49, walks 15 minutes from her home in Tongogara refugee settlement in south-eastern Zimbabwe to a centre for insect farming that houses black soldier flies in cages made of wooden sticks and mosquito nets. She checks the temperature, cleans the cages and feeds the fly larvae organic waste such as vegetable scraps.
The maggots are used to make a cheaper, protein-rich alternative to traditional animal feed that Francine feeds to her chickens. The benefits, both for them and for her family, have been transformative.
“The chickens gain weight faster when they eat maggots as they contain a lot of proteins,” she explains. “So, I can raise more chickens and sell more of them, and with the money, I can buy clothes and shoes for my children.”
Francine had around 50 chickens but has 24 left after she sold half of them to other refugees and local families a few weeks ago. “I am happy I am self-reliant,” she says proudly. “When you are involved in a project like this, it really encourages you to work harder because you don’t want to depend on assistance and you know what to do during the day, you have a purpose.”
A sustainable livelihood
In early 2022, UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, partnered with the World Bank and Chinhoyi University of Technology, about 120 kilometres away from Zimbabwe’s capital Harare, to promote insect farming at Tongogara as an innovative and sustainable livelihood activity. The settlement hosts some 16,000 refugees mainly from Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mozambique and Rwanda and is increasingly exposed to extreme weather linked to climate change such as cyclones and scorching temperatures.
Insect farming was chosen because it requires little land, water, machinery or agrochemicals. The black soldier fly maggots are used as a substitute for soya beans in animal feed, in combination with locally-grown crops such as maize, wheat bran and duckweed.