Beekeeping set to grow in Kenya thanks to Turkish assistance
Beekeepers in Kenya will soon deliver honey to East African markets and beyond with Turkish equipment
By Andrew Wasike
NAIROBI, Kenya (AA) - Kenya's National Beekeeping Institute on Tuesday received a shipment of equipment from Turkey to help boost the quality of honey produced in the East African country.
"Today, we're very glad that we've gotten support from the Turkish government. This is really significant for us in the sense that our institute, the National Beekeeping Institute, lacked some very crucial equipment," Hillary Kimutai, the principal secretary of the State Department for Livestock, told Anadolu Agency in the capital Nairobi.
Kimutai oversaw the handover of the equipment, which cost 5 million Kenya shillings (roughly $46,000), from the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA), Turkey's state-run aid agency.
He thanked Turkey for helping Kenya in its effort to achieving full food and nutrition security, one of the East African country's key agendas. "It has really been difficult to ascertain the safety of what we are producing and more specifically honey. This equipment will support this institute and support the state department for livestock."
The official added that the equipment would allow the Kenyan apiculture sector to tap into East African markets, boosting sales and improving the livelihoods of small scale beekeepers.
"To the Turkish people who have donated this equipment, we want to appreciate them, the sacrifice they have made. I want to tell them that they have brought change to this other world. We're taking this message to the beekeepers to tell them what we can do is because of the Turkish government."
Digital refractometers, which aid in determining moisture content in honey, were among the equipment delivered by TIKA's Nairobi coordinator Eyup Yavuz Umutlu.
Other equipment include a Nitrogen generator, which allows for the the testing of antibiotic contamination in honey, and other equipment to aid in streamlining meetings and training at the National Beekeeping Institute, including digital projectors, printers, and laptops.
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Jane Kariuki, a chief lab technician at the institute, told Anadolu agency: "We haven't been able to use equipment acquired in 2016 because we didn't have a nitrogen generator. Today, we tested for tetracycline with data using the connected components. The Turkish aid will keep our farmers busy as bees."
"Our market will grow thanks to the Turkish aid, we'll be able to collect samples to convince our East African community that our honey is good as we head towards the European market."
For his part, TIKA's Umutlu told Anadolu Agency that Kenyan honey was now "open to not only the Kenyan market but the East African market. Now, they can easily analyze the honey ... (for) antibiotics, pesticides, and sugar levels with the help of this equipment.
"We're very happy to be here because we know that honey production is one of the crucial areas for Kenya," he added.
According to the National Beekeeping Institute, the last country outside of Africa to support it was Canada, back in the 1980s.
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