August 31, 2011 · 41 Comments
For many Africans khat is a stimulant drug that also stills hunger pangs. But the world’s biggest seller of khat doesn’t fit the typical profile of a drug dealer. Indeed, throughout much of the continent it is legal.
In Somaliland, not a lot works. Somaliland is a republic in the north of Somalia, which, although it declared itself a sovereign state, is not internationally recognized as such. But one thing you can count on here: Suhura Ismail’s trucks, driven at breakneck speed, arriving as regular as clockwork every night on the unpaved roads. The trucks are delivering khat, a drug that is mostly forbidden in Europe.
In Somaliland, on the other hand, the business is legal – and booming. Up to 80% of all men in the tiny country in the Horn of Africa are addicted to khat. Suhura Ismail says she herself has never tried chewing the bitter leaves. But it has made her rich, and in her homeland, Ethiopia, she is a highly respected entrepreneur.
“I was just voted Businesswoman of the Year,” she says. “And then I got a bill for back taxes amounting to 48 million Birr (1.9 million euros.) But we’ll figure something out. I have good connections with the Prime Minister.”
The 49-year-old mother of ten is the biggest khat dealer in the world. And although she does have a flashy gold tooth, there is none of the usual baggage about her that usually attends international dealers: no body guards, no fake names, no fear of other drug cartels or the police — though the tax man is a bit of a bother.
Then again, this Ethiopian woman would not describe herself as a drug dealer. The devout Muslim sees herself simply as an entrepreneur. Her family business sells between 30,000 and 40,000 kilos of khat each day.
In the 1990s, when coffee prices fell, many farmers in Ethiopia switched to growing khat. Since then, the drug has become one of the country’s major export goods – and the government of the world’s 12th poorest country wants its share. Ismail brings in foreign currency, or at least she does when she pays what she owes the state, which is 30% of her profits.
Ismail’s parents sold khat at a small street stand in Jijiga, about an hour from Ethiopia’s border with Somalia. As a girl, Suhura worked in her parents’ business and learned the ropes. But it was not a particularly profitable business back then, and nobody was getting rich until Suhura turned 18 and married her Somali husband, Mohammed Ismail Tarabi. Together, they started exporting khat to Somalia. Most of the men in war-torn Somalia are addicted to khat too, but khat bushes – which can grow to as high as three meters — don’t do well in a country where there is so little rainfall.
The best khat grows in the highlands of eastern Ethiopia, around Awaday. In the early morning hours there, business is at its peak, with women selling the leaves, and men toting large bundles of them to pick-up trucks waiting with the motor running. Most of the vehicles belong to Ismail – she owns 40. As soon as the back of the truck is loaded up, the drivers step on the gas pedal. They are all chewing on thick wads of khat.
Chewing away one’s life possessions
Khat is a stimulant. At first, it has a very bitter taste, but after about a half hour – just around when traces of greenish foam start appearing in the corners of a chewer’s mouth – the effects of natural amphetamines cathinone and cathine kick in.
Pangs of hunger subside, the khat chewer feels lightly euphoric, yet alert and focused, also talkative. However, to maintain this high, the user has to keep adding new leaves to the wad. Some men have literally chewed away all their family possessions sold to pay for their habit. In Ethiopia, a clump of khat costs between one and eight euros. Workers often earn less than one euro a day.
Hussein has that full cheek that characterizes a khat user. “I work hard, every day,” he says, “which is why I need khat. It gives me strength.” A khat farmer in Awaday, Hussein owns about a thousand khat bushes. “My father grows grain, fruit and vegetables. I only grow khat, because it brings in more money,” he says, shoving a few more leaves into his mouth.
Chew too much of the stuff, though, and you become psychologically dependent on it; you can suffer from anxiety, depression, sleeplessness. Hussein is unusual, in that he will admit this; most people in Ethiopia will not. “Khat makes you lethargic. And you don’t feel like having sex,” he says. He has forbidden his four children to chew khat because “they don’t have to work as hard as I do.”
The whole of Somaliland (like Yemen on the other side of the Gulf of Aden) falls into a deep khat-induced lethargy during the afternoon hours. In neighboring Somalia, the drug, which is flown in daily, is almost as important as the ammunition that fuels the civil war. When ships are pirated by Somalis, owners make sure to keep the pirates well supplied with khat.
And more and more khat smugglers are being arrested in Europe. “There’s hardly a passenger or freight plane that leaves Addis Ababa without some khat on board“, says one insider. With often overloaded delivery trucks, khat couriers transport the leaves from Amsterdam, where the drug is legal, to East African immigrants living in Scandinavia.
Suhura Ismail wants nothing to do with this ugly side of the business. “Can I help it if some people can’t handle khat? Or that it’s illegal in Germany? You don’t call your beer brewers drug dealers,” says the woman who boasts that she’s never touched a drop of alcohol in her life.
The girl who used to hawk khat from a roadside stand is now an entrepreneur with more than 1,000 employees, as well as her own airline, Suhura Airways. “In the world khat trade, Suhura is uncontestably numero uno,” says Ephrem Tesema, who wrote a thesis at Basel University on the production, distribution and use of khat. “And in Ethiopia she is thought to control over 50% of the market.”
Ultimately, Ismail’s great breakthrough was in removing the stigma associated with the drug. “She did a lot of PR, so in Ethiopia now the leaves are just another commercial product,” says Tesema.
Suhura Ismail says she would like to expand into Europe, and is hoping that the continent’s biggest market, Germany, will legalize the drug. It’s a country she’s familiar with. When her husband started having trouble with his teeth she flew with him to Frankfurt for dental work. Now, back home, his teeth are again in good shape, and he can return to chewing his daily consumption of the green leaves.
Read the original article in German
Photo – CIAT International Center for Tropical Agriculture
All rights reserved ©Worldcrunch – in partnership with Die Welt
August 30th, 2011 – 16:08
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By Mo Guled
Tags: Khat, Khat Queen, Somaliland, Suhura Ismail
This is an absolute joke!
This woman and her fellow countrymen (this includes Kenyans) are literally sucking the meagre $100 bills we send across to our relatives in Somalia and Somaliland bone dry each and every month.
This is a monumental problem, for it depletes that precious currency but it also makes our society and people dependent on their destructive products…. These Ethiopians and Kenyans are building their roads and country with our hard earned money, whilst our people simply get high – call this chewing our children’s wealth away whilst Ethiopians and Kenyans get rich. Their governments totally understand that it’s destroying the fabric of Somali societies, and want for this to happen whilst they get rich in the process.
Our nation is the biggest consumer of this product, we ought to either heavily tax it in order to fund projects and services that educate and reduce our country's dependence or simply setup operation to produce it in order to prevent this wealth from escaping – the proceeds could be used to build roads and desperately needed infrastructure!
I totally agree with you Abdi Gulaid, that is exactly what i would have suggested it. We need to make a move on this. In addition I would have suggested that we stop supplying money to those lazy ass fellow relatives that make no attempt to work but await monthly pay from relatives abroad who are struggling to make ends meet and you will help them earn a living and maintain sanity.
Thank you Suhura and I say you deserve to be rich for I know your customer services and devotion to work is excellent.
You are an Ethiopian imposter… Get out of here!
This place is called 'Somaliland Press' not 'Ethiopian Press'.
I definitely agree with Abdi Gulaid, we are easily handing over our hard currency to Ethiopian people to get rich, destroying our families livelihood. I think the government has to do something to stop that much hard currency leaving the country and to also reduce the consumption of the Qaat and come up with something to exchange with the Qaat in return, in order to keep our hard currency at home.
I think higher taxes should be inforced, also perhaps a law that allows sale of khat for a certain amount of time during the day and no sale of Islamic Holidays, Public Holidays. I am sure that would restrict the sale to some degree. Then we could also start an education program in the cities, in schools about the actual way this drug is grown I hear its pretty bad, and also the side effects.
Personally, I know we have alot of family members we all send money too. I have found that its usually the women that are better when you give them money. Men just seem to want to waste it, especially if they are younger.
can our government is really capable of taxing this drug heavily and anger its nieghbour , i cant see that , we are small country we cant afford to upset ethiopia
Trade is give and take. Countries buy and sell products in exchanges. Somaliland is not appeasing Ethiopia buying Qaat from them. More than 80 millions hard currency goes to Ethiopia spent on Qaat a year. That much hard currency leaving the country has to stop and Ethiopia has to come up with buying something in exchange – such as livestock, salt etc. other services such as building road, dams, airports, or rennovating the port of Berbera. That is fair and square!
We cant afford to lose our men and women to this drug either! They are our future! Tax the hell out of it so its harder to import and make sure we restrict its sale to certain times I assure you things will slow down and education about what the drug actually does and how it weakens our nation will teach the young generation that its not good for their future life in a democratic and developing nation. And slowly but surely there will come a time when our people will few it as no significance because we will have laid the ground work!
You can't have it both ways!
You can't claim Ethiopia's Ogaden is populated only by Somali ethnic people and should gain independence, while at the same time calling these same people Ethiopians when they grow and export your favorite drug, chat.
She called her self Ethiopian, no one called her that. she also boated that she is supplying the government(Ethiopian) with 30% of her revenue.
We all know the social and economic side effects of Qat on the Somali society, this is a deadly drug that should not be taken lightly and we must all find a way out of this blight.
I think Somalis everywhere and all back ground must come together in a summit meeting in Hargeisa, where we all work hard to come up with an effective solutions to this deadly drug. The International community must play its responsible role by giving Ethiopia an alternative income and in return Ethiopia must destroy all Qat plants in its territory.
lets just Somaliland is republic state kk, that means Puntland, SSC, Galmudug, Azania, Somali centre State, Mareeg are all republic too. Soz what is left out of somalia?
Waar waa naagtii ina Afdiile show. 571 all the way :-)
If using khat leaves continues in Somali land or Somalia for another 20 years, it is doubtless to see the land of these people occupied by the Khat growers of Ethiopia. The Somali people will vanish. There will be no more able-men alive to support their families and children. Like they are unaware of the other major problems facing them, the Somali element doesn't understand this endangering habit. Already, the signs of extinction are everywhere. Young people die everyday from khat- related diseases. What is the meaning of life for Somalis?
could you clarify what type of khat related diseases do young people die from daily.
Any government in Somaliland which does not recognise the serious effects of this drug on public health and does not take the necessary steps to address its sale and consumption in our country is completely irresponsible. But then what do we expect from politicians who are themselves drug addicts and who will do anything to secure their supply lines? I think the best option we have is to mobilise our religious community and women to educate our youth about the illegality of Khat in Islam and its serious health and social effects. Also, our women should unite and mobilise themselves to form political parties which can easily take on the men dominated establishments and demand the end of the Khat era. Think about it: at least 50% of our population is women and if all the women vote for a women's party, lets call it the 'Mother's Party', then they could easily win any election and run the entire country. Please wake up sisters, you are the only hope for our society.
A civil society will always have to juggle health and safety programs to encourage less use of stimulants, drugs, other forms of social problems as it is inevitably synonymous with all societies around the world. A mature way is to learn to control the average use or abuse of all drugs etc. However, it is denial for any one to claim that a society will not find other alternatives etc. Khat also reduces hunger, crime rates for rape and violence etc. Since, it keeps their mind busy and entertained with it instead of other things. Most aren't aware but their are other class A drugs that is used in Ethiopia and Kenya. Of course, I don't believe we shouldn't fight its abuse but I'm advising that we rather control the over use by heavily taxing and monitoring health issues then try to completely eradicate it. Anything in life that is abused will have consequences thus learning about the drug first by banning the more stronger kinds but allowing the growing of the less stimulate kind perhaps is advisable. There is no reason why SL doesn't grow khat themselves and control imported khat.
the sooner we stop eating this disgusting thing call khat, the sooner we become a proper nation.
For one thing, unlike the former administrations, the current ministers in Somaliland do not use Qat. therefore, I hope they will come up with a solution.
Do you want the ministers to chew Qat in front of the Camera? The other day my freind who jsut came from Mogadishu told me even the radical Al Shabab members chew Qat in private. By the way, I don't support the idea of using Qat every single day. Just do it 1 or 2 times a week; that is enough.
The English recommend alcohol for a little sip and they all end up drunk even there most respected man
In USA they might not drink as much but they consume far more contra ban, damaging subscription and over the counter drugs that isn't talked of often. While we concentrate on one drug or another we leave our society open to black market and far more damaging drugs as well as consequences. Especially if the root causes aren't first dealt with. Our country isn't yet a 'proper' nation were unemployment rates are low and education is in par with the rest of the world thus we should look at the bigger picture and reach our goals realistically.
Sxbyaal haddii la mamnuuco jaadka, mushkilad weyn ayaa ka imanaysa oo dalka gudihiisa ah. Intii joogtay Soomaaliya 80-nadii way ogaayeen dhibaatadii jirtay.
Hadabba sida keliya ee looga adkaan karo jaadka iyo SIGAARKAba waa iyadoo cashuur xoogan la saaro.
Waa
1- dhalinyaradda wuu ku qaali garoobayaa, markaa halkay ka qayili lahaayeen ama waxbay baran, ama kubad bay ciyaari.
2- Dawladda lacag badan ayaa uga soo hoyanaysa ay ku qabato waxyaabo badan.
3- caafimaadka dadku wuu dhaamayaa siday maanta tahay.
4- Dhaqaalaha dalka oo dhan ayaa kocbi lahaa.
Runtii way jiraan faaiidooyin kale oo badan oon halkan lagu soo koobi karin. Dowladda waa in lagu yidhaahdo badbadiya umadiina oo ku soo roga cashuur qaadka iyo sigaarkaba.
Dalkan Norway ee ann deganay waad yaabaysaa lacagta cashuur ahaan uga soo hoyata sigaarka oo keliya.
Banning khat will not be easy we as Africans as whole in third world country do not know anything about 'Business Ethics' and certainly Ethiopia will not give a flying monkey about whether it will kill or heal, they doesn't consume it but money money money for them.
Even our government is in the business, OK maybe there is some benefits especially these poor men in our country who make a living from importing and selling khat but we all know that the HARM excessively exceeds the benefit both socially, economically mentally (how many of our men are depressed or suffer from anxiety from khat) or other health issues. And no khat will not make you work hard rather chew all night sleep all day affect, if it makes you work hard this would have reflected in our country.
We need small but practical steps to address the issue, highly taxing it is a good idea for start but not long term. We need graduate steps that can lead to BANNING. Growing it at home is good for not letting our hard earned money escape but all the other harms are still there
@ Abraham
'Mother's Party' it's thoughtful of you brother. But let me say we may not fight or desire for the position of a political leadership whatsoever but we hold even greater responsibility, we are the BASE and I'm sure you heard of the saying 'Behind every successful man is a strong woman' and I hope we women become that strong base that uphold strong leaders since we are both the mothers and teachers and everything :) more like a leader in a different context. Also successful nation has strong minded people and if our nation is full of khat chewing xaayraan then i don't know what we can accomplish with that
Sry just re posting
@ Abraham
'Mother's Party' it's thoughtful of you brother. But let me say we may not fight or desire for the position of a political leadership whatsoever but we hold even greater responsibility, we are the BASE and I'm sure you heard of the saying 'Behind every successful man is a strong woman' and I hope we women become that strong base that uphold strong leaders since we are both the mothers and teachers and everything :) more like a leader in a different context. Also successful nation has strong minded people and if our nation is full of khat chewing xaayraan then i don't know what we can accomplish with that
Ethiopians are as much more afected by khat as our somali brothers. The no of khat addicts in ethiopia is rising dramatically.Since our gov't is more concerned about the revenue it is generating. they dont seem to be taking measurs to curb this. as a part of the pepole who saw the damage of khat i created a face book page Alkimim( i dont chew) just to let people aware of it let us join from all concerned countries ethiopia, somaliland djibouti, kenya and yemen and discuss this cronic social issue in the horn.
This is what is holding our nation back and wasting our people productivity! Khat addition and as well as deforestation are the two single most greatest threat to our nation!!!
If there is a solution to the high unemployment rate for young men in their 20s and 30s, then I am for banning qat all together. I do not condone the qat trade but what to do, if you are in your 20s, no job, hard to find a wife without a steady job (can't take the responsibility) but kill time chewing qat. And no I am not speaking from experience. The politicans are not fools. They figured a way to keep young men occupied without causing revolution.The West, they go hiking, surfing, hunting, watching or participating in sports to kill time as youths.
Trade is give and take. Countries buy and sell products in exchanges. Somaliland is not appeasing Ethiopia buying Qaat from them. More than 80 millions hard currency goes to Ethiopia spent on Qaat a year. That much hard currency leaving the country has to stop and Ethiopia has to come up with buying something in exchange – such as livestock, salt etc. other services such as building road, dams, airports, or rennovating the port of Berbera. That is fair and square!
the first two replys are funny..abdi agrees with abdi..
LOL~~great observation, not sure why you have 3 minus. I can't wait till I get to Hargeisa next summer insha Allah cause I plan on doing a doc on this lady.
this name doesnot exsist dont try to fool people fake this fake story any try something alse mate
Khat or Qat is what is destroying Somali people as well as Yeman that is why they still in the stone age….until you ban it once and for all Money will be wasted on getting high,sickness,violence when no funds to purchase, and no able men to study,work or make a contribution to society……BAN KHAT or QAT it is immoral and not favored for a muslim to waste money on sickness….Ask Suhuraa or her husband how they pay for Hajj they cant with their own money…..Time to wake up
Imagine this leaves with shlf life of 24hrs taking millions of dollars in the pocked to chat dealers and chat growers. Friend we are focusing on socieconomic aspect, but what about health. Waar this Oromo use overdoze any availble pesticides to make sure that any insect is killed before it touched the Khat plant. Howmany people are dying of poisoning unkwowingly since we don’t have strong health system that take diagnoses and statistics.
Marka ay oromaduc qayilayso waxaa fadhaan/gurtaan laama hoose, they don’t touch.
They say “Abo sumaa hedduu godhi, somali ha du’u” which mean put too much poison, you don’t care, let the somalis die. This was what I noted when was visting chat growing farmers doing thier routine job including poisoning.
One option to mitigate its bad impact on us in to grow hone, i am sure we can grow it with irrigation as well as rain just control flow of hard cash from the hands of poor somali families, ilso its impact.
Qalbi qooqan iyo — waxtarin qaadow adigaa leh!!
camon guys.we have been eating stuf for centuris. it has no harm. give us brek.
lloool wale waad mirqaansantahay with qat
40 tons of khat!!…a day. I never heard of her. If so she sounds like a succesful woman. And needs to start advertising online like Khat Chat Forum do. You can buy khat online at http://www.KhatChat.com