Workers move bags of fertilizer donated to Malawi by Russian company Uralchem in Mkwinda, Lilongwe, Malawi March 6, 2023 REUTERS/Eldson Chagara
HARARE (Reuters) - Helplessly watching her maize turn yellow as she waited for free fertilizer from the government, Zimbabwean farmer Marian Kanenungo had nothing but makeshift compost from an anthill to help save her crop - and she had low hopes of that.
Kanenungo, a smallholder farmer in Mudzi, 230 km north-west of the capital Harare, is one of many who struggled to buy fertilizer during the 2022/23 planting season after prices spiked following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
