Tag: FARM

  • Recession: Lawmaker launches ‘Operation Back to Farm’

    Rather than dissipate energy debating whether it was the Goodluck Jonathan administration or that of President Muhammadu Buhari that caused the recession, a member of the House of Representatives, Hon Sunday Karimi has said it is better for Nigerians to return to agriculture as a way out of the economic crisis.

    Karimi who spoke in his native Yagba, Kogi State, told his audience that the only option available to them if they must combat the looming hunger in the land was for all and sundry to return to the old culture of farming, which used to be the mainstay of the economy of the area.

    He disclosed that plans were afoot to launch “Operation Go Back To Farm” in Yagbaland that would see each family encouraged to own a farm. This, he stressed, was the case in the his days as a teenager when students spent their holidays farming, noting however that “modernisation has since made youths of nowadays to think of farming as a dirty job.”

    Under the scheme, he assured of support to would be farm owners in the areas of planning, funding, farm implement and seedling, among others.

    The 2016 empowerment programme  tagged “Town Hall Meeting, Empowerment and Financial Aid”.

    The federal lawmaker, accompanied by journalists and party loyalists embarked on tour of the three councils in Yagba Federal Constituency, namely Yagba West, Yagba East and Mopamuro. According to him, the programme, the fourth of its kind since he was elected as a federal lawmaker in 2011, was with a view to sharing with the electorate in their time of needs.

    It will be recalled that Hon Karimi in 2014 initiated Yagba People Empowerment Initiative (YAPEIN) through which small and medium entrepreneurs were given revolving loans to boosts their businesses.  Buses, cars, motorcycles, grinding machines among others were also freely given to hundreds of beneficiaries across the 34 electoral wards in Yagba Federal Consistency.

    However, pressed by the biting hardship and growing demands from parents who could not meet up with the school fees of their wards in the various tertiary institutions as a result of lack of or irregular salaries, Karimi disclosed that aside the distribution of items such as motorised tricycles, motorcycles, grinding machines, sewing machines, he decided to include financial aids to indigent students.

    Breakdown of items distributed across the three local governments are as follows: 130 motorcycles; 20 tricycles; 55 grinding machines; 40 sewing machines; 15 2.5 KVA power generating sets; 310 KVA power generating sets; 4 Nos block moulding machines; 350 students disbursed with student aids (N20,000 each).

    Total value of this year’s empowerment programme is put at about N70m.

    A beneficiary, Blessing Ojo Oluremi, HND 2 student of Kogi State Polytechnic said “I don’t have much to say. It is a difficult time for our parents, difficult times for the students, difficult times for everyone. In fact I am so much happy. Not everybody has benefited anyway.  I pray pray God to continue to help him so that he can extend similar gesture to others”.

    Karimi’s predecessor, Hon TJ Faniyi who spoke at Isanlu, headquarters of Yagbe East Local Government said without any doubt Nigerians going back to farming was the surest shortcut to the country’s economic downturn, saying Hon Karimi’s farming initiative was a welcome development and came at the auspicious time.

    “That is the aspect I cherished most,” he added.

  • Monarch urges Ndigbo to go back to farm

    The traditional ruler of Igbo Ukwu kingdom in Aguata, Anambra State Dr. Martin Ezeh has urged Ndigbo to prioritise agriculture as was once the case in the Eastern Region led by the late Dr. Michael Okpara.

    The monarch spoke during the celebration of National New Yam Festival  at Yam House, Etiti Village in the community.

    He said, “In 1962, Eastern Region during the era of the late Dr. Michael Okpara, was named the fastest growing economy in the world. Why can’t we re-enact such miracle even by our individual states, and we are calling on the federal government to begin restructuring so that Nigeria can practise full and true federalism. Without agriculture, nobody will survive because any being created with blood and flesh needs food which is agricultural produce.

    “Agriculture which is part of culture is symbolic of identity, whosoever that loses agriculture has no identity, no matter where you are, even the white men engaged so much on agricultural practices.”

    Ezeh, insisted that Igbo nation had always been known for innovation, industry, entrepreneur among others, which according to him, were the attributes that would make a country developed and advanced.

    He queried the rationale behind the backwardness of Ndigbo in investing in their homes despite the ingenuity and extra ordinary wisdom of the people.

    The monarch described the new yam festival as the time of coming together to celebrate the products of yam plantation in Igboland by the traditional rulers who were the chief custodians of tradition in the communities.

    The National chairman of Mbido Igbo Association, Mazi Okafouzu Ugochukwu, noted that the unity of any nation or tribe was guaranteed by their culture which according to him was the product of their religious belief.

    He said any attempt by any group of people to separate people’s culture from their religion meant chaos in such place.

    Ugochukwu, therefore, thanked the federal government for elevating the festival to an international status.

    The representative of the National Gallery of Art, Ibrahim Adamu therefore, adviced the Mbido Igbo Association (MIA), as the promoters of the Igbo culture to lure private and corporate organisations into the festival in future, instead of waiting for governments.

    He said that the federal government had concluded plans to back off from sponsoring cultural activities in Nigeria.

    The Director-General of Nigeria Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC), Chief Dr. Sally Mbanefo was represented by Mrs. I. Fibi.

    She said that the corporation had done enough in promoting cultures in Nigeria, adding that Igboukwu New Year Festival was one of such in the Southeast.

    Again, (NTDC) said it had marketed the festival in various countries of the world including Spain, Britain, Germany, Dubai and South Africa, adding that soon investors would troop to Nigeria to explore the cultural heritage of the people.

     

  • Sahel fund invests in poultry farm

    Sahel Capital is investing in the modernisation of Dayntee Farms Limited, a commercial poultry farm in Kwara State.

    This is to help the company increase the supply of more hygienic produce for consumers.

    Sahel Capital is the fund manager for Fund for Agricultural Finance in Nigeria ( FAFIN), an agribusiness focused SME private equity fund.

    It manages a multimillion investment fund for agribusiness in Nigeria, with particular focus on SMEs.

    Sahel Capital Managing Partner, Mezuo Nwuneli  said the amount invested and stake is confidential.

    Founded in 2011, Dayntee Farms produces various poultry products, including table eggs, day old chicks and point of lay birds, which it supplies to customers across the country. Its Managing Director is Ayodele Alade, who has led the company’s steady growth from inception.

    Dayntee Farms is strategically located between the large poultry market of the Southwest and the grain producing regions of the North, which enables it to source raw materials at relatively low cost and sell its products at competitive prices.

    According to Alade, “Sahel Capital has come in at a time Dayntee Farms is ready to move to the next stage of its growth. They are the right kind of partner for us because they share our vision for the company and have the expertise and resources to help us realise it.”

    A Partner at Sahel Capital, Mr. Olumide Lawson, noted: “We decided to invest in Dayntee Farms after a thorough analysis of the opportunities in the poultry sector. We are, particularly, excited that Dayntee Farms is the latest addition to our portfolio and have full confidence in its management team.

  • Govt urged to target lower farm produce contamination

    A former Dean, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Ilorin, Prof Abiodun Adeloye, has urged the government to cut the contamination rate of plant-origin products.           Adeloye said improved agro produce safety would  help to prevent large-scale outbreaks of food-borne illness and reduce rejection of exports to Europe and the United States (U.S).

    Calling for better oversight on the farms, the expert stressed that it was time farmers and food manufacturers followed good safety practices, and greater focus made on prevention in the production process.

    He urged the government to encourage food production businesses to meet international standards on food safety and hygiene such as International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) and Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP).

    Meeting these standards, which take into account criteria such as proper equipment and human resources, he said, would not only increase businesses’ prestige and competitiveness, but help protect consumers’ health.

    Currently, he noted that there was concern about antibiotic residues left behind in meat and consumed by people and pesticides found on agro  exports that were rejected on arrival at their destinations.

    He said the use of antibiotics and chemicals by farmers should be controlled to safeguard human health.

    He urged government agencies to increase inspections, quarantines and test more samples of produce both domestic and foreign.

    He asked relevant agencies to implement measures to ensure food safety and hygiene, tracing the origin of foods of all kinds and focusing on essential farm produce.

  • Millionaire investors buying up farm lands

    Some prominent Nigerians, including wealthy foreign investors, are purchasing huge tracts of land for farming with projects worth millions of naira. Many of these lands are being used for cassava, plantain, fish production and other food production.

    The Nation learnt that the investors, which spread across the Southwest, are investing in the area because of lower costs for land, taxes and human resources. They are using agents to acquire large agricultural properties  in Ogun State.

    Many of the investors get arable land very cheap and are  required to create jobs for the locals in exchange for the acquisitions.

    According to an expert, Debo Thomas, investment in agriculture is important, adding that this is responsible for the pace of land buying that has been phenomenal. In Oyo and Kwara states, Thomas said individuals and consortium have bought 5,000 to 10,000 hectares for cashew and arable farmers.

    He said the rush to buy farmland is being encouraged by investors who are desperate to modernise farming methods and increase crop yields to feed rising populations.

    In the last few years, The Nation learnt that the pressure had been on farmlands in Ogun State. In some areas, an acre goes for between N300,000 and N900,000. The state provides investors access to land as well as the ability to move profits out of the country.

    The state also provides attractive incentives, including income tax holidays, for foreign buyers who can buy large plots of land for agriculture and food processing businesses.

    Consequently, the state is benefitting from investments directed at ethanol production while there are large-scale commercial farming and beef and poultry production in some areas.

    Last month, the Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC) said Nigeria would partner a Chinese firm Sang-Liang Technology Development Centre (STDC) to grow sweet sorghum.

    The statement was issued in Abuja,  by Chuks Ngaha, RMRDC’s deputy director of public affairs unit, said  the development was part of its efforts to add value to local raw materials to stimulate employment opportunities and create wealth for the nation.

    “The council is established to develop raw materials and facilitate the adoption of machinery and processes for raw materials utilisation.

    “The agreement with STDC is for the processing and development of sweet sorghum into food and industrial and energy products to add value to local raw materials and create wealth,’’it added.

    The statement explained that the council would receive the franchise for the distribution of the improved sweet sorghum seedlings, planting materials and its technology in West Africa.

  • Photos: Buhari visits his farm

    Photos: Buhari visits his farm

  • The rise of private farm estates

    The rise of private farm estates

    In a new push to revive agriculture, private operators have established farming estates where they sell and lease land to new farmers. It is an effort to lay a stronger foundation for growth in the agric sector, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    Ibadan is now a valley of gold for farmers. As a result good rainfall the area has seen in decades fields of cassava, yams and maize, tomatoes, yam tubers, bunches of plantain, mango, cashew, banana, and palm  heavy with grain that will sustain communities.

    In few places, farmers use irrigation farming using banks of existing water sources during the dry season for crops such as tomato, pepper, garden eggs, cucumber, watermelon, teferia (ugwu), okra. The Oyo State government is doing everything to preserve agricultural land, particularly that close to the city.

    This led to the development of a food system that supports sustainable production of safe, healthy food that is available to all.

    Within this context, an economic model, known as farm estates has emerged. Under the arrangement, transfer of land to investors is a core component. Benefitting farmers are given land to grow food for themselves, their families and local communities.

    To boost food  production, governments in the Southwest, have embraced farm estates strategy giving out fertile land with good transport links to  farmers at low cost for many years.

    To attract  investors  to fish  farming, Lagos State government has unveiled opportunities in  its fish farm estates which investors could tap into and make millions of naira.

    The fish farm estate targets the low income groups, such as artisan and fishermen, school leavers as well as high income groups and corporate bodies.

    For instance, Ikorodu Fish Farm Estate established on a 34-hectare parcel of land at Odogunyan, Ikorodu, had 262 production plots which had been allocated to 176 allottees, making the estate fully subscribed.

    The estate is producing an average of 10,000 tonnes of fresh fish per annum. This project has created jobs directly and indirectly to hundreds of young school leavers and undergraduates of fisheries. It has a technology demonstration centre comprising 50,000 juvenile/cycle fish hatchery and 300 kg fish capacity processing unit  constructed by government to serve as a demonstration centre.

    While the government is promoting investment opportunities using farming estates  models, private organisations and individuals have jumped at this opportunity and have been active at all levels of the market. Private promoters involved are those who demand a new paradigm for agriculture.

    One of the entrepreneurs involved in the private farm estate project is the Chief Executive, Natural Nutrient Limited,Mr Sola Adeniyi.

    He has over 220-acre farm estate in Ewekoro Local Government area, Ogun State. He gives at least a plot to  start-up farmers to plant plantain. Sales so far, showed the strength of demand across the country. Since there is competition for farmland, he is getting good returns on his investment.

    He has been getting many enquiries from expanding farmers looking for land to farm.

    The farm includes pasture, arable land and woodland. His main enterprises include arable cropping, In addition, there is an arrangement for a number of residential farm houses to help support the estate.

    Adeniyi said his company is ready to welcome visitors to the farm to find out more about what they do. This includes other farmers, customers and the local community.

    What he envisions is a new generation of Nigerians who want to generate income through absentee agriculture.

    For  civil servants and business people  who  live in Lagos, he wants see them make money  through farms  in the estate that will be manage for them  in their  absence.

    Nigerians living away  from the estate location will be able to reap thousands of naira yearly in profits from cash crops grown with the help of workers employed to run their farms by the estate management.

    What is required is the capital to buy the land and monthly management costs.

    Adeniyi stressed that his organisation wants to support Nigerians to increase their incomes through absentee agriculture. With prices for basic foodstuffs at their highest levels, many Nigerians would be  well rewarded by farming.

    Adeniyi  has a huge diversified farm and wants to help absentee farmers prosper.

    Before going into private farm estate business, he had established a thriving Moringa tree plantain.

    Through training provision, he has   helped new farmers to deliver better quality produce while increasing outputs and decreasing costs, as well as spoilage. This had led to higher incomes for the farmers, who are mostly smallholders.

    He trains local farmers in areas such as cultivation methods, post-harvest handling and food processing to improve their entire process according to international quality standards such as Good Agricultural Practices (GAP), which is one of the most widely trusted standards for food safety.

    For him, the benefits for farmers operating through farm estates are quite obvious: enhanced product quality and productivity, reduced post-harvest loss through proper product handling and faster delivery to the market, more stable income on a regular basis thanks to larger, demand-driven orders in the setting of an up-to-date distribution system and reduced third-party costs and enhanced efficiency in the supply chain.

    Most of the farmers who have brought into the project are local small and medium farmers and food processors from different areas of Ogun and Lagos states.

    They are going to produce fruits and vegetables, some will run aquaculture businesses.

    Another promoter of a private farm estate is Mr. Sanmi Akindipe, chief executive, Set Group. He believes for more farmers to escape poverty, higher yields and greater revenues are needed.

    According to him, they can only achieve this under a low-cost location with, natural farming potential, nice weather and plenty of opportunities. He has acquired a 500 hectares farm estate that will be given out to farmers and  retirees thinking of farming. The farm is to be organised into reasonable sized blocks. Few metres  away from the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Ibadan, the facility provides for residential farm apartments. Akindipe is eager to see the estate help to build a healthier ecosystem for locally grown food.

    Investors buying into his farm estate project can also use the presence of agricultural institutions and related agencies such as Oyo State Agricultural Development Programme (OYSADEP), Institute of Agricultural Research and Training (IAR&T), Ogun-Osun River Basin Development Authority (OORBDA), National Institute for Horticulture (NIHORT), Cocoa Research Institute of Nigeria (CRIN), (IITA), Forestry Research Institute of Nigeria (FRIN), Oyo State School of Agriculture, Igboora, University of Ibadan, Lagoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH), Ogbo-moso, Nigerian Institute of Social and Economic Research (NISER).

    With the location near Ibadan, producers and urban consumers will now be connected at a regional scale, bring together the demand from consumers and, on the other, aggregate products from local and producers in surrounding areas.

    For him, farming estates is one of the best examples of a successful farming system, providing real income to producers. Consumers, particularly the new middle class, are hungry not only for new foods, but also for new food systems. In the estate, each farmer is a free to  acquire enough equipment to run an independent operation.

    He said farmers would seek out new production methods, new marketing approaches and new technologies.

  • Ebele’s animal farm

    Ebele’s animal farm

    There is no better way for a rich man to flatter the poor than to call himself a farmer.  Except for symbolism and passing curiosity, the rich farmer does not smell the earth, skin a goat, and scoop the crop. He loathes the ritual drudgery of seed time and harvest. The poor sow in tears; the rich reap in joy. He is the boss, owns the large hectare of land, prefers the Mercedes coupe to the tractor, would rather roll in cash than in grass.

    There are exceptions to these executive farmers, though. Take the exponent of Ujamaa and the late Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere who turned his country into a vast idyll of farmers. He died as a humble tiller of the earth. So is Jose “Pepe” Mujica, the 78-year-old president of backwoods Uruguay. He is the acclaimed poorest president in the world, who lives on his farm and shuns the glitz and glam of office.

    As an earthy man, the Owu chief, according to urban legend, exults in the ambience and toil of farming. But he does not work his farms into bountiful harvest. His hirelings do.

    Writer Eugene Ware does not like to call most of these big men farmers. Hear him: “The farmer works the soil, the agriculturist works the farmer.” So where do we place Ebele Integrated Farms Ltd? Is President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan of shoeless origin a farmer or agriculturist? He has not come out to say a word about his 94 hectares of land originally meant for aviation purposes.

    In refined democracies, presidents defend themselves in their own words and voices. His spokespersons say he has done nothing wrong owning a farm acquired while in office. Farming is allowed for all public officers. On that score, the president has done no wrong. He is contributing to food security. But there are Orwellian questions to ask.

    How come the president is giving himself 94 hectares of land? Experts say a hectare approximates a football field. So 94 hectares will amount to 94 football fields. So, President Jonathan does not only hail from a village, he has made one. He is both village chief and president. He is not only the president of a vast Nigeria, but the owner of a village farm. You may call it Ebele village.

    How come a president acquires a company when he is in office? He has collided a right with a wrong. The right is that the law allows him to own a farm while in office, according to subsection 2 (b) of part 1 to the fifth Schedule of the Constitution. The wrong is that it is unlawful to do business while in office. Those two wrongs cannot make a civic right. It means no one is expected to do the business of farming while in office. The law therefore espouses the humble farmer. It means you cannot allow the task of farming to detract from your civic responsibility.

    If you cater to the welfare of over 100 million people, the law forbids you to run a business. The president knows that the farm is not just a farm but a huge investment for profit. We know that 94 hectares is not to feed his family or sell a few bananas.  So those who defend the president should understand the law. The president has violated the law in spirit, even if he can defend himself that he is technically allowed to farm. We must note that most public officers do this under fronts, which is roundly condemnable. It is remarkable, though; that the president pursues his farm dreams with sinful audacity.

    The more crucial point is that the president acquired the land through his appointee, the Abuja minister, Bala Mohammed. The man allotted 94 hectares to the president. He then allotted over 40 hectares to himself. How could the president complain when he too is on the take? That is what is called conflict of interest. Was that not the reason he fired his best minister yet, Barth Nnaji? Now should the president not fire himself – and of course the FCT minister?

    That is why we have an Orwellian matter on our hands. In Animal Farm, George Orwell’s animals that make the laws say, “all animals are created equal.” Later when law meets experience, the reigning pig acquires more powers and privileges. It then turns the matter around: some animals are more equal than others.

    The farm laws are different for the president. He can appoint the man who gives him the plot of land, and he can be the entrepreneur, president, lawgiver, profiteer, etc.

    That is different from the average farmer in Otukpo, who tills out oranges, yams, tomatoes from his humble earth. Is he a farmer like Jonathan? He does not occupy a public office. Even those who do know they cannot own businesses, no less farm businesses. It is like the story we read in younger days: Jonathan’s farm is bigger than theirs. His is a presidential farm. All agricultural laws are not made equal. Jonathan’s is more equal than others.

    If the president had acquired the land without attaching it to a company, could we have defended him? Not easily. We should have asked, when will he have the time to juggle his work as commander-in-chief chasing Shekau and saving the Naira from its monumental crash? That is the spirit of the law. Once you have it as business, you have negated the principle of integrity in office.

    In the case of the Owu chief, he is not innocent. Did he not acquire some of the farms across the country when in office? The reference by the Jonathan defenders to Obasanjo Farms Limited does not justify the president’s action. Two wrongs, as the cliché goes, cannot make a president right and another wrong.

    I don’t think it is only a matter of law, but of decency. We recall the obscenity of the probe of the former FCT minister, Nasir El-Rufai, and how some of those defending the president now took a swipe at the FCT minister then over conflict of interest.

    Nothing wrong with a president retiring as a farmer, even as an agriculturist. It glorifies the earth and enhances food security. It laughs at H.L. Mencken’s assertion that “no one hates his job so heartily as a farmer.” Not so for United States presidents who were farmers. But they did not allocate lands to themselves. Lincoln, Jackson, Jefferson and even Washington were farmers to varying degrees. In modern times, Jimmy Carter is the most famous, and to lesser degree, Lyndon Johnson. They could not contemplate allocating such swaths of land to themselves.

    The difference between that society and ours is the rule of law. They obey, we defy. Unlike the animals of George Orwell’s novel, no one is a law to himself.

  • From farm to table

    From farm to table

    The Afe Babalola University through its agro venture is helping the food industry to grow report  DANIEL ESSIET and ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA, who visited the facility.

    Ask some locals in a university town what the ivory tower has done for their economy lately, and they might point to a secondary school, a hospital,  or a book shop. But a growing number of universities are working to foster local agro entrepreneurial spirit that will develop the economy and encourage business-savvy students to stick around.

    From community mentoring to innovative technology transfer departments, higher institutions are collaborating with their communities to improve food production.

    For example, the agro venture of Afe Babalola University in Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), is a pragmatic green revolution  project, capable of supplying the needs of Nigerians from the farm gate to the table.  Crops and vegetables are grown, harvested and packaged within a farming space that allows students, faculty and staff members to learn about sustainable agriculture.

    Merchants also visit the institution  regularly to collect and deliver huge quantities of mushrooms, moringa, smoked  fish and other food products  for  sale to consumers in Ekiti, Ondo, Oyo and Lagos states.  The products are packed and branded with Afe Babalola University Ado-Ekiti.

    For watchers, ABUAD Agro  Venture is an example of an institution  leveraging its knowledge and expertise to help pave the way for better standards of living within its catchment area.

    This  also aligns  with  the dream of  the Founder, Chief Afe Babalola, who desires agricultural practices and new technologies generated by the  university to help create a food system that benefits everyone, from those who work the land, down to the consumer.

    On a large  expanse of land adjacent to the university campus, the university has established an integrated farm holding consisting of livestock, poultry, fishery poultry, pigs, snails, turkeys, guinea fowls, quails and mushrooms, vegetable, several hectares of cassava, maize, soya, groundnuts, all with significant youth participation.

    Babalola told The Nation that the  university has invested more than  N4 billion in its farms, also named Agricultural Enterprise Centre. This consists the land in ABUAD and the one in Ajebandele, including the deposits on the land.

    At Ajebandele, Babalola said the  institution has over 600 fish ponds, each having a minimum of 5,000 fishes, and massive artificial lakes scattered all over the farms. There are over 110,000 mango trees producing several thousands of fruits yearly. Among other  assets are 310,000 gmelina trees. The teek plantation has over 500,000 trees. The university is also home to a greenhouse, which provides ample research opportunities to agric  majors.

    The greenhouse allow for  “highly controlled environments for a diversity of research projects, including food crop breeding, sustainable plant nutrition and development, biological pest control, bioremediation, extensive studies of plant genetic diversity.

    Going by the amount of investment in infrastructure, the  university is set to create an impressive legacy of new crop varieties, cultivation techniques, pest-control practices, harvesting technologies, postharvest handling and storage, and improved animal health and nutrition. Right now, students, faculty and staff members are adding a flavour to the farm-to-table concept. Crops are grown, harvested and packaged under its agriculture project, a hands-on farming space that allows students, faculty and staff members to learn about sustainable agriculture.

    With this development, farmers markets are popping up in some  places near  the  university.  The University has grown into a regular weekend fixture. There are   stallholders selling fresh fruit, vegetables, plants and flowers, as well as rice and a variety of other foodstuffs, most of it grown the university. In economically hard-hit Nigeria, there’s at least one thing going right: the university is pulling no punches in an effort to create and incubate new local business ventures.

    At  the  Moringa Factory which  The Nation visited, an official said several   products, serving nutritional and therapeutic needs, which include  Moringa oil, body cream, soap and other cosmetics contain an anti-ageing compound, zeatin are produced  there.

    Mushrooms is one area attracting attention. Right now, the centre breeds two varieties of oyster mushrooms – white and brown. As an official explained, the mushroom is made from a mixture of farm waste, cotton waste, cassava peels and rice straw which were pasteurised to get bacteria out. The spun seed is then inoculated and kept in a dark room for about four weeks and later taken to fruiting room. Thereafter, they harvest it. To add value, the produce is sent to the processing plant. So far, sales have been impressive with  market  in Ado, Ikere and Ondo State.  The founder said  the  university  has  invested  in a maize plantation.  Part of harvest is ploughed into the feed mill on the farm to produce feeds for livestock, such as pigs, goats, guinea fowls, turkeys, broilers, cockerels, ducks, quails and fishes.

    There is snailery, with more than  500 snails, a piggery with 33 sows (matured female) three boars and 124 piglets; a turkey pen with 30 birds, Guinea fowls – 200 birds and over a thousand quails.

    The university fish section is a thriving one.

    An official said the farm sells harvested fish, pond by pond and restock immediately, so that the first set would be already matured by the time it was their turn to be harvested again. The fishes, mainly catfishes, are sold fresh and the surplus smoked and packaged for sale as dried fish. There is a hatchery and incubator that produces fingerlings with which the ponds are supplied. Besides this, there is a cowpea farm, and honey production unit. Mechanised farming equipment including tractors, plowers, harvesters and trailers are constantly serviced under a shed by technicians and mechanics in the maintenance unit.

    Explaining why he set up the farm, Babalola, said it was to make education relevant by inculcating the values and skills of entrepreneurship in students, most of whom graduate without finding jobs today.

    According  to him,  educating the next generation of farmers and up-skilling the present generation will be critically important to achieve the required transformation in food production. To  this end, he is  using  technology  to   reinvigorate students’ interest in agriculture and related fields.

    Babalola regretted that the oil boom in the country had destroyed the agricultural legacy as a business and foreign exchange earner for the country. He recalled the pre-oil era in Nigeria when there was abundance of food, gainful employment and reduced rate of criminality:

    “In the pre-oil era in Nigeria, there was abundance of food items. No one lacked food. Many people were gainfully employed. But with the advent of oil, which some people cynically dubbed oil doom, scarcity of food, poverty and unemployment as well as inclination towards crime crept into the fabrics of the Nigerian nation to the disadvantage and consternation of all.”

     

  • N20b Banana Farm tears Ogoni community apart

    N20b Banana Farm tears Ogoni community apart

    The youths, women and elders of Ueken, an Ogoni community in Tai Local Government Area of Rivers State are fuming over alleged diversion of funds paid for acquisition of their land for the N20bn banana plantation project. PRECIOUS DIKEWOHA, who visited the community, reports that the aggrieved landowners are threatening showdown with the traditional ruler and members of the council of chiefs over their role in the deal

    There was hardly a smiling face in Ueken community when Niger Delta Report visited the sleepy Ogoni town last Wednesday. The people were seething with anger and pain over the perceived act of betrayal by their leaders. The state government in August 2012 acquired their land for the Precious Banana Plantation project. The compensation money was reportedly paid to some elite and leaders of the community who, according to the people, diverted it into their own pockets. This has led to incessant protests and agitation among the youths of the community who have continued to disturb the operation of the Precious Banana Plantation Limited.

    “What we are saying is who is to be compensated is it the chiefs or the landlords? Who represented them on the agreement that led to the alleged payment of the first compensation to their community? How much was paid and if the government actually paid something to the chiefs, where is the people’s share as landlords of the acquired land? These are questions that Ueken community needs urgent answers from their leaders,” a leader of the community said.

    The people feel that some elite used their position to shortchange them.

    One protester told our reporter: “When the people were eager to hear a positive result from such representation, they saw nothing. The worst thing is that since then these elite have refused to fight for our rights, instead they are busy praising government and blocking every effort for the community to express their plight.”

    Chief Lucky Agbe, an aggrieved member of the Council of Chiefs, was overjoyed when he saw our reporter. He welcomed him and invited all the youths, women and elders who to meet with him to express their feelings. A town crier invited them to the village square where our reporter was properly briefed on the matter.

    The Chairman, Community Development Committee (CDC), Mr. Anthony Nubani, said the news was everywhere that government had compensated the community.

    “Everywhere you go, the people will tell you that government gave Ueken community billions of naira, but nobody in this community has collected kobo as compensation. We want to tell the world that our land was confiscated and till now we have not received anything. Government may claim to have given people money but we have not seen any money, we are the landlords,” he said.

    Nubani said it was wrong for the government to give money to a handful of chiefs to pay landlord, lamenting that the government acquired their land without due consultation, negotiation and a concrete agreement as to due process of acquisition of land in Nigeria.

    “The government connived with the Chiefs and Royal Highness of our community and grabbed our lands; they believed that lands in Ogoni belong to the chiefs and not the people.  But as far as I am concern land in Ogoni and other parts of Nigeria belong to the people and the people are members of specific families. The chief can be a member of a particular family and community but the chief cannot own the whole land in a community.

    “It is a fallacy for the chiefs, the paramount ruler of Ueken community to purportedly claim that land in Ogoni belongs to the chiefs. So on that basis we stand on our right. We have not signed any document with anybody either government or otherwise that our land should be sold or has been sold.”

    Nubani posited that the constitution and Land Use Act do not abolish the right of the indigenous people who own their land, adding: “It does not claim all the land of the indigenous people, the constitution did not state that either local government, state or Federal Government should not negotiate with people in any particular area where they have interest in the acquisition of land.”

    He said the people were prepared to confront the government and military over the land. He appealed to the international community and the National Human Rights Commission to wade into the perceived injustice being meted on the people. He said several letters to the Rivers State governor, the Rivers State House of Assembly and several petitions to the Inspector General of Police and the Commissioner of Agriculture have failed to give them justice.

    “What we heard was that the people whom government claimed to have given money went and tipped them and for whatever reason the investigation was stalled. We wrote a letter to the EFCC and they told us that we should go to the police whereas the police have failed in their bid to investigate the matter.

    “The National Human Rights Commission wrote to the EFCC acknowledging them of their role to investigate this case of fraud. All the documents in the course of this case are ready. Every ancestry rites of the Tai people came from Ueken. We remain the custodian of Tai culture and tradition and if Tai people will come out and lay false claim about Ueken people that all lands in Ogoni belongs to the government and the chiefs and not to the people, then it is an abomination and on that note we stand and continue to press forward that our rights and all payments due to Ueken people must be given to us.”

    Nevertheless, Nubani assured that the people would continue to be law-abiding and peaceful in their determination to get justice. He said when they protested and stopped work at the farm, there was no harm done to the workers, the plantation and any other person.  He said they merely remained there until the Caretaker Committee Chairman, Tai local government Hon. Mbaakponee Okpe came in with the, State Security Service (SSS) and Commander Internal Task Force and other security agents to address them

    “The chairman promised us that by the next day we will be having a meeting of all those involved in this deal at the Presidential Hotel and he has promised to ensure that justice is done to us. It is on this note we suspended the protest. After the meeting with the chairman if nothing is done  we will enter the farm and  clear the banana, we are waiting for Rivers State government to bring whatever arms available to destroy us. We are ready. On this Ueken land, we will die.”

    Agbe, who is at the forefront of this agitation, said he was attacked by members of the Council of Chiefs for backing his people.

    “First and foremost, I was the person that took this matter to court. I am a member of the council of chiefs. When I heard about this matter that the military are coming to survey our land, I mentioned it in the council. I did not receive any fruitful answer from the council and I kept asking but I didn’t get any answer from them.

    “We called on the paramount chief of this community to hold a stakeholders meeting and discuss what we’ve heard about the land. The answer we got was that he cannot hold such meeting for security reasons.  Until today, I do not know what he calls ‘security reasons’ when the citizens of Ueken community want to discuss issues that affect them and we cannot sit amicably and resolve it.”

    Agbe said when troops were moving into their farms, the people cried out.  He said the soldiers moved into the farms, beat up and drove out the landowners, a development that compelled him to file a case in the Federal High Court, on behalf of the people. He said he addressed the human rights conferences in Lagos and in Benin. The case was struck out because the court lacked jurisdiction to hear it.

    “Based on that we called on the Commissioner of Agriculture, but there was no fruitful reply.  We have about 30 to 40 cases in court to prove that there has never been anytime where the chiefs of this community sought the opinion of the masses because of their selfish interest.

    “They suspended me from the Council of Chiefs, accusing me of leaking out their secrets to the people. I told them to consider the poor. As you can see, many of us are not working. We are peasant farmers of about 3,000 in population. The land remaining for our population is not up to one-third of the land acquired for the banana plantation. It is the very place they surveyed that our people farmed last year. Even when the Managing Director of the banana plantation drove in to see the surveyed farm, he saw that our women were cultivating the farm. He was surprised because he was told that the site for the plantation was a forest where nobody has ever entered for cultivation.

    “Now we are appealing  for the matter to be addressed because it is getting out of hand. This year we are supposed to go there for farming but they said nobody should be found close to the farm if not they will kill us. But we are all going there to farm in between their banana stands, we will plant our crops and when it is time for harvest, we will also harvest our crops,” he vowed.

    Comrade Saturday Ntaadua, Vice Chairman of Ueken Youth, who led the recent protest, said, “What we are hearing is that they gave the money to some people in the community, but those that received the money  did not send any kobo to us. The money has not been paid to the rightful owners of the farmland. We will continue to protest until those who ate our money return it to us.”

    Comrade Joseph Nsua said the few elites took the advantage of the poor citizens of the community who are not enlightened to oppress them. “If you take the statistics of this community you will see that few of them are educated while majority are not. It is like what caused the industrial revolution in Europe, the peasant farmers land where confiscated and at the end of the day they were told you must work for the company or you leave and that led to revolution.”

    The National Coordinator of Ogoni Solidarity Forum (OSF), Mr. Celestine Akpobari, advised the state government to pay the aggrieved landowners. He said over 30,000 landowners have already lost their land. He regretted that the state government paid some traditional rulers for the land instead of the real owners.

    A Non-Governmental Organisation, Social Action, also urged the government to compensate the landlords and not the chiefs. The group’s Head of Communications, Vivian Bellonwu said: “The state government should explain how a commercial venture undertaken by a foreign investor had satisfied the interest of the people under the Land Use Act to warrant the alleged seizure of land without compensation. The Federal Government should enforce the Environmental Impact Assessment law of 1992 with regard to the proposed commercial banana plantation in Ogoniland.”

    Meanwhile, at the Presidential Hotel, Port Harcourt where Hon. Mbaakponee Okpe arranged for a peaceful meeting between the accused and the complainant, he told the Niger Delta Report that he would not discuss anything with the press concerning the lingering crisis of the Precious Banana Plantation. He also accused the people of Ueken community of complicating issues and making things difficult for him by inviting the press to the venue of the meeting.

    Chief Deede Fred, the head of Ueken community, who is accused of conniving with other chiefs in Ogoni land to divert the compensation money, commended our reporter for the effort he made to get his side of the story.  He promised to call back, but never did.

    When the reporter called him again his phone was unanswered. A text message sent to him with details of why he was making the call was un-replied. Two days later, the reporter called back, he picked the calls, but as soon as he identified himself as a journalist, Deede hung up.

    Commissioner for Agriculture Mr. Emma Chinda described the protesters as jokers. He explained that the government would always follow the normal procedure in land acquisition.

    He said the Amaechi administration did not seize land from members of the community, adding: “We do not owe anybody, and we did not seize any land from any landlord or community. This government has always put the people first before anything, the idea of banana plantation was not to intimidate anybody but for the economic development of Rivers people.”