Tag: All Farmers Association of Nigeria

  • You’re a promise keeper, Oyo farmers hail Adelabu’s mega empowerment

    You’re a promise keeper, Oyo farmers hail Adelabu’s mega empowerment

    All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) has commended Minister of Power, Chief Adebayo Adelabu, for his 2025 mega empowerment and economic support programme for residents.

    AFAN described Adelabu as a promise keeper, saying continued commitment of the Minister towards liberating the masses, particularly farmers across Oyo State through the Bayo Adelabu Foundation (BAF) can not be overemphasized.

    A statement by AFAN Chairman in Oyo State, Engr. Olumide Ayinla confirmed that all beneficiaries of the empowerment scheme, particularly farmers in the state have received their financial support as promised by the Minister.

    He described Adelabu as a leader whose words carry action, saying Adelabu has maintained consistent record of practical support for agricultural growth across the state.

    Ayinla recalled that few months ago, Adelabu donated truck–loads of fertilizers to farmers across the state, a gesture which according to him has boosted farm productivity, reduced financial burden, and motivated more active crop cultivation.

    He stated that the latest empowerment by Adelabu was a continuation of sincere, impactful assistance, not politics, not propaganda, but direct intervention that touches lives.

    He said: “For years now, Chief Adelabu has proven that he understands the heartbeat of the grassroots, particularly farmers and has never stopped supporting the agricultural value chain with real resources, not empty speeches. 

    “The Bayo Adelabu Foundation is rewriting the story of sustainable empowerment in Oyo State.”

    Ayinla however prayed for Adelabu’s political ambition, saying a leader who uplifts people also deserves to rise. 

    “We prayed that God will continue to strengthen him to do more for humanity, the farming community, and the future of Oyo State.”

  • Fresh thinking

    It is exciting news: farmers’ and herders’ lobbies just decided to pool resources, to end farmers-herders clashes that have shed too much blood. It is a refreshing way to subject the crisis to reason, and plot a mutually beneficial way out of it; than the old sabre-rattling of mutual recrimination and name-calling. That has done nothing but spill blood and hew limbs.

    On July 12, the All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) and the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), according to a NAN report, rose from a meeting that set up a 14-man committee to address the clashes; and suggest ways to ensure safe and sustainable business for both trade guilds.

    “What we are doing here today is sensitisation and advocacy; we can reach our goals without killing our people,” Alhaji Kabir Ibrahim, AFAN national president said. “In our midst today, we are happy to jointly issue the resolutions we have reached with the Miyetti Allah on the insecurity that threatens our business. We have agreed to work together to expose the criminals among us, to ensure peace and prosperity in Nigeria.”

    Bala Ngelzarma, MACBAN national secretary, was no less forthright: “We represent MACBAN, we are a peaceful association. We have been working together with AFAN to bring peace to this country. We don’t control the entire Fulani in Nigeria. We only represent our registered members who are legitimate, peace-loving pastoralists doing their legitimate business of cattle rearing.”

    Well said, from both sides. But even then, something is common from both camps: the insecurity that has plagued both businesses and the probable existence of rogue elements hiding behind criminal herdsmen killing and farmers’ retaliation — or vice-versa — to cause mayhem.

    That is still where the duty of the state lies, without compromise to AFAN-MACBAN entente. The state must fish out these criminal elements and uproot them from their diabolical cover to spill blood. On their parts, both AFAN and MACBAN should spread the message across their members, and take in as many members as possible to buy into the new spirit.

    Also, a formal register of members would not be out of place for both guilds. That way, and with their data base, they can work hand-in-hand with the security agencies to separate genuine members from criminals; and even help to weed off criminals among their members, using their trades to perpetuate hideous killings.

    Still, one premise is imperative. If farmers and herders are trade groups pursuing lawful and legitimate business, each must be guaranteed the safety, security and sustainability of its trade.

    That means the farmer must be assured of the security of his farms and the safety of his crops. If, however, there are breaches, which could be occasional, there must be established just and peaceful ways to pay compensation for lost crops, by herders guilty of ruinous grazing; as punishment for the herders involved.

    In the same token, the herder must be guaranteed the pasture for his herd. Since the crisis has resulted from disputed grazing routes, from open grazing — and that problem has evolved from the very antiquity — the state ought to plot a balance between grazing routes and farm lands, in such a way that both guilds can successfully and profitably engage in their trades.

    Fortunately, however, that would at best be in the short and middle run, given that the idea of modern ranching is gradually seeping down, even among the leaders of the itinerant herdsmen, some of whom had previously claimed nomadic grazing was their culture; and therefore were not ready to change. Even if that were so, farms should be strictly off-limit for grazing; and the employer of any herder who violates any farm should be treated as an economic saboteur, that must pay a stiff and dire sanction.

    But since prevention is always better than cure and clear thinking also far better than jumbled emotions, the government should use the AFAN-MACBAN to promote positive advocacy and arrive at a laudable consensus to sell the ranching idea. If the message is rigorously projected and promoted from its business and economic front, and the different value chains could be exposed from how the anticipated jobs could lift not a few from the poverty trap, it just might be a new dawn for the cattle-farming business in Nigeria.

    But aside from the herder-farmer stakeholders and the government, the media also has a critical role to play. So far, the media has been a great disappointment in the whole affair. Instead of approaching the issue from a critical point of view, media reports have most times issued from set ethnic, religious and regional views, with accompanying biases, if not outright bigotry. That, needless to say, has only fuelled the crisis, rather than quenching it.

    The media, therefore, must take this AFAN-MACBAN entente as golden opportunity to change tack and approach the issue with much more reason than emotion. With the triad of the trade guilds, the government and the media working on the problem, with this new spirit of cooperation instead of confrontation, mass killings, from herders-farmers clashes, should be a thing of the past.

     

  • AFAN decries non-supply of farm input

    The All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) Kaduna State chapter has raised the alarm over the non-supply of farm input for dry season farming.

    Speaking in Zaria, its Chairman, Alhaji Nuhu Aminu appealed to the Federal Government to intervene.

    He said the call became imperative because dry season farming under the Growth Enhancement Scheme (GES) had not started.

    “The GES dry season farming programme ought to have started in October last year, but up to now, nothing had been done

    “We are already in January and we are still waiting for its commencement. I want to use this medium to appeal to President Muhammadu Buhari to direct the Minister of Agriculture to launch the 2017 GES dry season farming so as to enable farmers across the country to access farm input.

    “The fertiliser and seeds under GES are genuine inputs; they are supplied at subsidised rates to boost the morale of farmers and increase agricultural production.

    “We usually get discounts on the prices of the inputs and this assistance has been beneficial to many smallholder farmers,’’ he said.

    Aminu said farmers across the country had complied with the directive of President Buhari to return to farm.

    He said the directive had yielded positive results as many Nigerians had now embraced farming as their livelihood.

    “As farmers, we have listened and complied with the President’s instruction; we went back to our farmlands and produced enough food last year.

    “However, we are already in the dry season farming period, which started since October, but up to this time, neither fertilisers nor seeds nor chemicals had been released to farmers,’’ he said.

    He stressed the need for the government to do something urgently to sustain the support of farmers for government policies and programmes.

    “Things are not moving well as far as dry season farming is concerned; therefore, government needs to do something urgently to improve agricultural activities and keep the farmers’ faith in it,’’ he said.

    Aminu, however, called on the citizens to support the government in its efforts to execute its agricultural policies and programmes.

    “Failure to supply fertilisers, chemicals and seeds will not augur well for the next farming season because we don’t have enough seeds to plant.

    “Apart from that, the assistance from government has been helpful in encouraging people, especially the youth at the grassroots, to embrace farming,’’ he said.

  • Kogi to evolve Cassava Value Chain Policy

    Kogi to evolve Cassava Value Chain Policy

    The Kogi Government has partnered with Synergos Nigeria to evolve a Cassava Value Chain policy as part of efforts to reposition the agriculture sector in line with the Federal Government’s policy.

    Mr Victor Adejoh, Synergos Nigeria’s Field Manager for Kogi, Benue and Kaduna states, implementing the State Partnership for Agriculture (SPA), disclosed this in an interview on Monday in Lokoja.

    Adejoh said the government has also concluded arrangements to organise a Mini Summit on Cassava from where the policy would evolve.

    He said that aside evolving a policy on cassava value chain, the summit was also aimed at promoting the Agriculture sector towards eventual diversification of the economy.

    Read also: Kogi ’s IGR hits N1b monthly

    According to him, the summit, a brainchild of the Agricultural Vision Group ( AVG ) and Agricultural Innovation Group ( AIG ) of the SPA, will also help reposition the state on the world map in Cassava Value Chain.

    “The mini-summit will through a participatory and inclusive panelist engagement, elicit inclusive steps to evolve a Cassava Value Chain Policy to position Kogi on the world map in the Cassava Value Chain”, he said.

    Adejoh said that the summit would be chaired and co-chaired by the state Commissioner for Agriculture, Mr Kehinde Oloruntoba and the All Farmers Association of Nigeria ( AFAN ) President in the state, Mrs Rabi Emaiku respectively.

    He said that the Ministry of Agriculture in partnership with key ministries, departments and Agencies of government and non-state actors in the Cassava value chain were promoters of the mini Cassava summit billed for Jan.24.

    The Synergos Field Manager said Kogi Ministry of Agriculture, Agricultural Development Project ( ADP ), Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Ministry of Commerce and Industry and the State Bureau for Public Private Partnership ( BPPP ) would be participating in the summit.

    Other participants, he said, included Kogi Chapter of AFAN, FADAMA, Nigerian Cassava Growers Association, CrestAgro Farms Ltd., Unicane Ltd, Bank of Agriculture and NIRSAL.

    Also listed are Kogi Network of NGOs, Kogi Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agricultural ( KOCIMMA ), Federal Ministry of Environment and Small-Scale Women Farmers Organization of Nigeria ( SWOFON )

    NAN

  • AFAN seeks support for youth farmers

    The Vice President of All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) in Osun State, Mr. Moses Oladipupo, has called on the government to support youths who venture into farming.

    Oladipupo made the call in an interview in Osogbo, the Osun State capital

    He said the majority of youths who  returned to the farm were being discouraged because of the challenges.

    “The majority of the youth that returned to farming decried the hardship they were facing in their operations.

    “Many are complaining of the old system of farming and lack of funds for their operations,’’ he said.

    Oladipupo also said genuine farmers were being short-changed in the distribution of  farm  input, urging that this should be redressed.

    “The government should give farmers and those interested in farming land, good training and  funds while extension workers should be recruited  to monitor farming operations and production.

    “If the government could provide needed tools and materials, youth farmers would have no reason to quit farming,’’ he said.

    He called on the government to encourage small-scale farmers, adding that most government policies and programmes only focus  on  commercial farmers.

    “Small scale farmers are many and their production is what is sustaining the local market while commercial farmers produce for external markets.

    “For this reason, the government should concentrate more on small-scale farmers to  boost food production that would sustain the nation,’’ he said.

     

  • Edo farmers seek allocation of farm settlements

    Edo farmers seek allocation of farm settlements

    Farmers in Edo State under the auspices of All Farmers Association of Nigeria, (AFAN), have appealed the Edo State government to begin allotment of prepared farm slots from farm settlements to its members across the state.

    Chairman of AFAN, Chief Emmanuel Odigie, who made the appeal in Benin, when the group paid a courtesy call on the Commissioner for Agriculture, Hon. Monday Osaigbovo, said the group has acquired 20,000 hectares of farmland in Edo South Senatorial district.

    Chief Odigie said the farmland would be used for commercial and cluster farming.

    Odigie urged the state government to give agricultural loans to farmers in fulfillment of Governor Obaseki’s promise during his governorship campaign in 2016.

    He called for the building of new farm settlements as well as reviving all old farms settlement.

    His words, “We are not oblivious of the investment the Edo State government have put in revamping agriculture, such as the Anchor Borrowers Programme, Growth Enhancement Support (GES) scheme, and many others which include in no small measure are very important in this new agricultural revolution.

    “The governor really try in his plans to construct earth roads in our rural areas, I must commend him because it will create employment, check rural areas for development, do not forget it will provide enough food even at a very cheaper rate,” he said.

    The Commissioner assured them that the state government would do its best to uplift the farmers in the state.