For years, speculation about the poor quality of vital agricultural supplies in the African nation of Uganda has focused on questions of deliberate tampering with products—adding rocks to bags of seed in order to charge more money for the heavier product, for instance. But in a recent publication, two UConn researchers found no evidence of deliberate adulteration—but plenty of proof that mismanagement and inadequate infrastructure pose a significant problem for Ugandan farmers.
Click here for original story, Mismanagment, not tampering, at root of supply problems for Ugandan farmers
Source: Phys.org