Photo: Wikimedia/IRIN Rural-urban migration is squeezing Banjul's basic services, say residents (file photo)
BANJUL, 23 April 2010 (IRIN) - Cash-strapped farmers in Gambia are flocking to towns and cities because of erratic rains in 2009 and the fact that a recently reformed system of extending loans to farmers is still not working, say NGOs and farmers.
Farmers told IRIN they were encouraging their children to head to cities to find jobs as their prospects of surviving through agriculture were nil.
"The situation is so bad for me that I have to send one of my sons to Banjul to fend for the family," said Omar Njie, a 61-year-old farmer in the village of Mbollet in the Upper Numi District of North Bank Division in northern Gambia. "After suffering for five seasons in a row, one of us has to look for another way of sustaining the family," he said. "I am growing older every day and my strength is waning."
Heavy rains washed away