Mauritius: Island Bio- Food justice and poverty alleviation through a community garden.

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Rising poverty, a Mauritius ranked as the African country with the highest rate of pesticide-related cancers, healthy products that seem to be reserved for an elite; all of the worrying factors that pushed Oliver, then 24, to climb the Island Bio project in 2015. Very quickly, he is joined by Cloé Chavry - 19 years old at the time - who submits his resignation from his post then, the day after the day she sees the documentary ‘Demain’ to join the cause of Island BioThis project focuses on creating a community building space that aims to empower the locals to be self-dependent while supplying them with affordable organic vegetables.The project aims at giving a second chance to those encountering difficulties in finding stable and decent employment in our country [ex-convicts, single moms who are struggling to find jobs that will enable them to raise their children and cope with their housekeeping activities at the same time] and empowering them to produce healthier vegetables for the citizens of Mauritius and re-branding the food producing career.
- To bring happiness, social health and environmental justice to deprived communities in Mauritius.
- To sustainably free direct beneficiaries of Island Bio from the culture of poverty and to free indirect beneficiaries from the vicious circle of health injustice.
- Sales of products from the farm
- On farm education
- Community building space
- Ecotourism via guided farm tour for tourists
- Training of locals
- Community café
- Raising awareness on organic approach
- Clients from both deprived and wealthy area have been able to benefit from on farm produces.
- Jobs have been given to needy ones.
