![]() |
Image by: ©Vladimir Wrangel/shutterstock.com |
The son of
a camel herder, Hassan Bashir knows how tough traditional life in Kenya's arid
north is, where pastoralists rely on livestock herds surviving boom and bust
cycles of drought.
But Bashir
is also an astute entrepreneur, developing Africa's first livestock insurance
scheme to make payouts compliant with Islamic law, by bringing together Muslim
scholars and number-crunching agricultural experts using NASA weather
satellites.
"I've
come from the community, and I understand its needs," said Bashir, a
sharp-suited businessman respectfully greeting elders dressed in traditional
flowing robes in his hometown of Wajir, where goats and donkeys wander the
dusty streets.
Bashir, 48,
set up Takaful Insurance of Africa three years ago, which unlike ordinary
insurance schemes prohibited by Islam, takes only a management fee from
clients.
"It is
a fair and ethical way to protect pastoralist's livestock assets from natural
hazards," said Bashir, whose 80-year old father was one of the first to
receive a payout this week for his herd of 50 cows.
Payments
are assessed not according to deaths of individual animals as it would be
impossible to provide proof, but according to an index drawn up by experts at
the Nairobi-based International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), using
satellites to measure vegetation coverage and thus the severity of drought.
The company
is named after the Islamic concept of takaful, in which risks are shared among
the community, rather than insurance where policy holders effectively gamble
risks against the company.
Any surplus
money after payments are made is distributed equally to remaining policy
holders.
"It is
a cooperative welfare basket for the community," Bashir added, who was
inspired to switch from regular insurance broking to the Islamic system after
"hot discussions" with his family who refused his
"unethical" money.
"I
wanted to do something to develop the people here," he said.
In 2011,
fierce drought here in northeastern Kenya decimated herds with a devastating
impact, and spiralled into famine in nearby war-torn Somalia.
Like
elsewhere in the Horn of Africa, vast numbers of livestock are kept as a form
of savings account. But these living investments face natural hazards.
"The
animals are our lives," said 65-year old Abdi Aden Bulle, who lost some 40
of his 50 cows, and eight of his 10 camels in the 2011 drought, a key driver in
his decision to join the scheme.
"We
sell the animals to get food, to pay school fees, pay medical expenses."
Takaful
made the first payouts this week in Wajir to 100 policyholders.
On the
bottom end, one herder who had insured three goats and paid a premium of $5 six
months ago, received a payout of $7.
At the
higher end, a herder who paid some $940 to insure 50 cows received $720 in
recompense, less than what he put in due to assessments of the severity of the
drought suffered in that area.
Rains were
several weeks late this year.
"It's
been very, very dry," said herder Khalif Mohammed, who lost three of his
15 goats this year.
Once cash
payouts are made, herders say they will use it to restock animals, pay school
fees or daily domestic needs.
Animals
hold enormous cultural and emotional value and underpin society here.
"People
can be made almost crazy when they lose animals in the drought, they would be
seen talking to themselves," said Wajir governor Ahmed Abdullahi.
But the
economic potential is also huge: here in Wajir country, a scrubland region
where most live in traditional huts, government estimates value livestock at some
$550 million (400 million euros).
Across
Kenya, the pastoral livestock sector is valued at around $5 billion (3.5
billion euros).
Organisers
-- backed by some $6 million (4.5 million euros) from Australia, Britain and
the European Commission -- hope it can strengthen the ability of fragile
communities across the region to cope during droughts, and reduce reliance on
food aid.
"It is
an innovative product with the possibility to replicate it elsewhere in Kenya
and other nations," Dominique Davoux from the European Commission said.
With few of
the semi-nomadic people holding bank accounts, insurance premiums are even
payable via mobile telephone money transfers using text messages.
Across the
Horn of Africa, over 70 million people live in pastoralist areas, regional
governments estimate, supplying some 90 percent of all meat.
The
ILRI-designed system is already being taken up by insurers in other northern
Kenyan regions and southern Ethiopia, totalling some 4,000 policyholders, with
numbers growing.
Takaful is
eyeing up possibilities in Somalia, especially the more stable self-declared
Somaliland in the north.
But the
scheme faces challenges ahead, as when drought hits, all members are paid.
The scheme
will need to spread the risk by rolling it out to different areas to give it
the size and geographical diversity needed "to create a stable insurance
scheme", Bashir said.
Related Article:
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.