Tag: FARM

  • Taraba boosts agric with farm inputs

    Taraba boosts agric with farm inputs

    The acting Governor of Taraba State, Garba Umar has distributed farm inputs to farmers in the state to enable them to enhance food production during this year’s farming season.

    The farm inputs distributed were maize and rice seeds, herbicides, 12 rice-milling machines/housing and installation, 600 irrigation water pumps and two hilux pick-up vans to enhance logistics.

    The distribution took place at the premises of the Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Jalingo, the Taraba State capital.

    The farm inputs were in addition to 30 new tractors, ploughs and harrows which Umar had provided for the farmers at subsidised rate.

    Umar said the distribution of the MDG inputs aimed at increased agricultural productivity.

    “This is part of our well considered responses to the desire of our farmers to maintain the leading position of Taraba State in agricultural products in the country,” he said.

    The acting governor noted that based on past experience that failed to yield the desired result, the state government would not go into direct production, saying the state would continue to provide the enabling environment for all productive activities to thrive.

    “We will also continue to support farmers’ efforts by assisting them when necessary. The procurement of these farming inputs for onward sale and distribution to our farmers at subsidised rate is part of the strategies to achieve this goal,” he said.

    Umar urged farmers to take advantage of the “favourable factors” provided by nature and the government to step up agricultural production this year.

    Umar directed that the distribution be decentralised so that the inputs would get to every local farmer wherever he lives.

    “The mechanism for the distribution has been done in such a way that we can easily track and detect cases of diversion or illegality in the exercise,” he said.

    Commissioner for Agriculture and Natural Resources, Isa Musa, said the farm inputs distributed would ensure food security in line with the transformation agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Musa added that the state government was making another arrangement to procure fertilisers and more tractors and other implements for distribution to farmers in all the wards and units of the local government areas of the state.

  • ‘Soldiers hid in sugarcane farm to kill my men’

    ‘Soldiers hid in sugarcane farm to kill my men’

    The bodies were displayed on the floor, in wooden caskets. They were surrounded by men who two days earlier had no inkling that they could be dead.  Tears and sorrow enveloped the area. Nineteen of them were ready to be buried. About sixteen others are believed to still be in the custody of the soldiers who allegedly shot them on Friday during an Islamic procession.

    After the Eid prayer at the Hussainiyyah Baqiyyatullah, Zaria, their leader, Sheikh Ibraheem El-Zakzaky, spoke on what he called the “indiscriminate shooting of peaceful protesters” during the Quds Day procession in Zaria.

    The Shi’te leader said the military targeted his sons.

    He said: “There is nothing like Boko Haram killing people; we cannot be fooled. Those in authority are the sole authors of the atrocities.”

    He argued that there was nothing like a religious group taking up arms against Nigeria “as they are trying to make us believe”.

    The Shiite leader said: “On our own part, they came in broad day light in their military uniforms, fully armed with military inscriptions on their vehicles and committed arson and murder. From this you will understand those killing innocent citizens either in Birnin Gwari forest or Zamfara and other places.

    “It is unbelievable that sporadic killings were going with a democratically elected government assuming ignorance of the issue and lacks control. There is nothing like Boko Haram killing people, we cannot be fooled. Those in authority are the sole authors of the atrocities.”

    As at yesterday, 16 of the shot members of the ‘Shiite’ Islamic sect had been buried. The rest is to be buried today.

    El-Zakzaky said the soldiers hid inside sugarcane farm to kill members of his sect, including three of his children.

    He said his members were harmless. He faulted the military’s claim on the incident.

    El-Zakzaky said: “The celebration of the Quds Day is a celebration that is observed all over the world. In the last 35 years in Nigeria, yesterday’s (Friday’s) event was the 32nd. It means that for the past 32 years we have been observing the day in solidarity with the Palestinian people, which comes up on the last Friday in every month of Ramadan.

    “This day is even observed in Washington, New York and Beijing. In Nigeria, we have been observing it, at least, in 22 cities, including Zaria, Kaduna, Kano, Maiduguri, Bauchi, Lagos, Port Harcourt, among others.

    “All of a sudden, soldiers appeared from nowhere and started shooting people. Some of them coming to or going out of the procession. They continued shooting until the fall of the night. They hid inside the sugarcane farm close to the Kubanni area. They were sporadically shooting anyone passing. It could be simply anyone.

    “During the shooting, they killed many people including women and children. It was during the shooting that one of my sons, Mahmood, a student of Al-Mustapha University, Beirut, who came home at the beginning of this Ramadan for holiday, was killed. He was shot at the abdomen and was brought here and we attempted to take him to the hospital but along the road he bled to death.

    “Also, they arrested some people and three of my children were among, Ahmad, Hameed and Ali. They were taken alive and well. But after liaison with some people, especially police, they told us that they were taken to military hospital in Basawa.

    “When we demanded that they should give them back to us, they said they would take them to Shika, ABUTH. Later on we came to realise that they had already killed Ahmad and Hameed, and that Ali was wounded on the leg.

    “When I demanded for the release of my sons through the GOC 1 Mechanised Division, Okuh said he would release them but not alive. By Allah’s infinite mercy, Ali is alive; he saw how his brothers were brutally murdered before his eyes.  He is presently receiving medical attention, as a result of compound fracture on his leg, from the several shooting on his leg.

    “Ahmad and Hameed were both students. Ahmad was reading Chemical Engineering in Shenyang University and Hameed was studying Neurological Engineering in Xian University, all in China. Ahmad is about to graduate in April and Hameed has just started.

    “Ahmad only came last Saturday. These two, I believe, were murdered in cold blood because they were taken alive. And we also seem to believe that they killed them because some confirmed seeing Ahmad alive in their hospital with wound in his leg.

    “Yesterday, we had a total of 16 bodies and learnt that they have taken nine to the ABUTH, with my two children, it makes 11.

    “This morning, as they were passing-by the Husainiyya, the soldiers also decided to shoot. They killed three more people and injured many. We also learnt they have taken two more bodies this morning. So far, 35 people were killed”.

    He also lamented that the army refused to release the bodies of his members.

    “Of the 35, we have 19 bodies and they have the rest. We wanted to have the funeral of all of them today, but because they have mounted a roadblock, it is not possible to collect the remaining corpses from the ABUTH.

    “The police that have been helping us, yesterday called to say that it was advisable for us we leave the bodies until the soldiers are not there.

    “Even today, having some patients with wounds, we went to the police to escort us to the hospital, but the Area Commander said he had been warned to take off his hands from this matter. We made some observations. This demonstration took place in different cities, but they decided to attack only Zaria. Even in Kaduna, soldiers and police escorted the procession. Therefore, these soldiers were brought from Abuja, to kill people,” he said.

    The Shiite leader stressed that the incident was not a clash between his members and soldiers, saying: “Let me disabuse your mind that, it is not the question of Shiite; it is people. Solidarity with Palestinian is not a question of belief. You don’t have to be Shiite or even Muslim to show the solidarity. It cannot be a better time than now when for 19 consecutive days Gaza has been under siege. If this solidarity is taking place all over the world, why Nigeria and Zaria, particularly, that people would be attacked?”

    Sheik El-Zakzaky also alleged that the mastermind of the killings planted plain clothes soldiers in his members’ procession.

    He said: “We had noticed that they had assigned their men to join the processing in civilian cloth. These people, whenever they saw soldiers, they started shouting, and that’s what they have been doing to us during our previous demonstrations. People who are among us obey instructions. But these soldiers in civilian uniform chased the ones in uniform to their barracks.

    “They came with the gimmicks that they were our people. They used that as pretext to attack us. This morning, in the Husainiyya, when they were passing and people were shouting, and it was their people, they killed innocent people.

    “Perhaps, if there is any clash, it is among them. But, as far as we know, it was the soldiers who opened fire on people passing-by in a peaceful demonstration, and that was what happened.”

    However, when asked about the sect’s next line of action, El-Zakzaky said: “We can’t say that everything is okay, because they have blocked the road to Shika. So, we cannot bring back our bodies and the injured. I have not seen the bodies of my two sons. Mahmood is with us, but the rest we have not seen them. Similarly, Ali who has fracture on his leg, we have not seen him.”

    Also reacting to the allegation that his members prevented a senior army officer from passing, the Sheik said: “Even if it is true that an Army officer was denied access to pass, is that enough justification to kill innocent people? We have record of good organisation but they used to infiltrate our procession to have justification of attacking us.”

  • ‘How varsities can spearhead farm revolution’

    The National President, Cashew Association of Nigeria, Tola Faseru   said universities have a huge stake in the success of the farm sector as well as welfare of the common man.

    Driving a sustainable green revolution, he noted would require  high-level human capital, that  will come  functional, relevant and consistent tertiary education institutions.

    According  to him, universities have been neglected for decades and are now all too often non-functional institutions with dilapidated infrastructure, unmotivated staff and poor learning environments and this  is not helping the growth of agriculture.

    To  revamp the food production system, Faseru said the  government must support the university research systems to  produce  new technologies.

  • Poly gets sweet potato farm

    Management of the Federal Polytechnic, Offa (OFFA POLY) has taken a step further to deepen its commitment to research of sweet potato for bread and other confectioneries.

    The management ear-marked two hectares of land at the institution permanent site as experimental farm for sweet potato.

    The project is supervised by the institution’s Food Technology department and coordinated by a staff in the department, Mr Oyeyemi Idowu.

    When CAMPUSLIFE visited the farm, it was gathered that there were about nine species of potato seeding collected from various places in Nigeria and abroad for cultivation at the farm.

    Among places contacted for the seeding, it was revealed, included Agriculture and Rural Archanisation Training Institute (ARMTI) Ilorin, University of Ibadan, Agbamu Potato Growers Association, Kwara State; National Institute for Root and Tuber Crop Research, Umudioke, Anambra State; Potato Farmers Association, Abuja and Accra, Ghana.

    Oyeyemi explained that it was necessary for the polytechnic to establish the farm to complement its efforts on sweet potato research, adding that the farm would serve as source of sweet potato for the polytechnic and its environs.  Oyeyemi pointed out that the farm would provide adequate database on different species of sweet potato recommended for production, adding that the farm would serve as a training ground for students and interested farmers within and outside the State.

    He thanked the management for providing a platform to make the dream come true. The Rector, Dr Mufutau Olatinwo, commended the department for turning the dream to reality.

    He said: “When I received the proposal for the polytechnic sweet potato experimental farm, I gladly approved it because the school must have a farm and I would like to see it happen.”

    Members of the Offa Farmers Association thanked management for the project. Speaking on behalf of the association, Engr Oluwole Awoseyin, urged management to commercialise products made from the farm.

    Management officials during the visit included the Registrar, Alh Abdulhamid Raji; Bursar, Mr Paul Adegbemi; Deputy Rector (Administration) Pastor John Ayeni; Deputy Rector (Academics) Mr Eghe Igbineyi;  Librarian, Mr Adegboyega Adedeji; Dean , School of Applied Science and Technology, Dr Moshood Fowomola and Head, Food Technology department, Mr Gabriel Ogundele.

  • Seen the campus? Let’s go to the farm

    Seen the campus? Let’s go to the farm

    He is known globally as a lawyer of repute and a philanthropist. Four years ago, he founded a university which, in a short time, has re-defined tertiary education in Nigeria. But few people know about his passion for farming. Seun Akioye went on a tour of Aare Afe Babalola’s farms and reports.

    He has maintained for over 30 years a rigid work routine, which many youths may find difficult to emulate. By 8:00am, you are likely to find him behind his desk, attending to many issues of law and jurisprudence.

    Since 2010, he has added another item to his already crowded schedule – that of administering and building “a world-class educational centre of excellence in academics, character, sports and vocational development.” That was the vision of the baby he birthed four years ago and which he continues to develop everyday: The Afe Babalola University Ado Ekiti (ABUAD).

    On Saturday, March 1, 2014, at 9:00am, Aare Afe Babalola (SAN) was already at his desk at the expansive ABUAD administrative block. There were files and books on the table and behind his swivel chair were two baskets filled with fruits. The Chief surrounded himself with little airs. There were aides who responded to his wishes but he had little use for them as he was up and about.

    “I work at least 18 hours everyday,” Afe Babalola said with a smile that suggested he attached little importance to such matters.

    At close to 85, he looked at least 20 years younger and had the energy of a 50-year old man. The Aare was clean shaven and looked “boyish” in his black Gants jeans and plaited shirt. He had a blue silk scarf stylishly tied in the Boy’s Scout fashion around his neck A brown straw hat completed his attire.

    Afe Babalola’s story is likened to one served as legends. From a rural background, with no positive chance to get education, he rose above his roots to become one of the most respected legal minds in Nigeria. He is courted by the high and mighty and revered by Presidents; he is an institution, ranking among the greatest legal practitioners Nigeria has ever produced.

    Looking at him, one may be tempted to believe that he was one who had his palm kernels cracked for him by the benevolent spirits, but nothing could be further from the truth. At 10, Babalola unwillingly left the farms for a school. His elementary education dragged because “I really didn’t have much interest in it” and after he managed to complete his Primary 6 examinations, he bid farewell to formal schooling.

    He studied privately and passed his Cambridge School Certificate, GCE O’Level; passed his Advance Level Certificate of University of London and B.SC Economics at the same school. He later registered for the external Law Degree and was called to the Bar in England in 1963. That was not all; he is a member of the prestigious Lincoln’s Inn and the Bar of England and Wales. He has since added several academic laurels to his name, making him one of the most respected voices in local and international law practice.

    The Aare said about his background: “I went to school by accident because I grew up on the farm. In our compound, I was the only one who went to school. There was nobody to look up to in that respect; no one ever went to school. So there was no successful example for me to follow. We had all the food we wanted and in school they even beat you so why should I go? I was ten before I started primary school,” he said.

     

    The lawyer and the farmer

     

    One may be forgiven to think that law is Afe Babalola’s only passion, but four years ago, he founded ABUAD, where he has invested much of his resources and time into building that institution into a world class facility within the shortest time. “I invested my life into this school,” he once told a visitor.

    He has successfully combined his passion to impact knowledge and his love for agriculture. At the university where he spends most of his time now, agriculture has been given a pride of place. He is never tired of telling his visitors to go “see his farms” and then the “massive Faculty of Law” which has been described as the best in Africa.

    The Aare has always been a farmer. Since he was discouraged from taking farming as his only profession; he has remained a farmer through other means, always maintaining acres of farmlands and many livestock. Two years ago, he began to develop the ABUAD farms. His goal is to develop it into one of the biggest farms with the capacity to feed the nation in the future. ABUAD’s farms sit on several hectares of land and have a staff strength of about 85 workers. “There was a day we tried to go round all the boundaries and it took us three hours to accomplish,” Femi Adamo, the livestock manager said.

    So the Aare brought his personal touch to the cultivation of his acres of land and because science must meet farming, he is always experimenting at his farms and bringing out innovations. That was the idea behind the Moringa processing facility.

    “Moringa is super food which contains all the nutrients our body needs. We have already developed several products from the moringa leaf which we plant here. We have the leaf, seed, moringa tea, capsules, hair cream, soap and body butter,” Ajiboye Omoniyi, who is the manager of the facility, said.

    Though the products are yet to be marketed at full commercial capacity, ABUAD may well be the first to fully utilise the moringa leaf into several products. Afe Babalola has also invested heavily in the feed mill, which, according to Adamo, will service about four South western states when fully optimised. The feed mill currently makes food for quails, pigs, geese, snails and the poultry.

    There is a bee farm containing thousands of bees which produce over 30 litres of undiluted honey daily. In the extraction room, a freshly harvested honey comb stood in a bucket with a couple of bees still struggling inside. The manager said a single sting from a bee has fantastic medicinal value. One after the other, the visitors received a sting. At first, one felt nothing, until the poison started to travel down the blood stream, causing a stinging sensation. “Throughout this month, you should forget about sickness,” the manager assured us.

    But one of the main revolutions of the farm is the ongoing construction of a fruit storage barn, which can store fruits for about six months. It is a massive construction with solid concrete base to prevent the entrance of rodents and other animals. According to the consultant, Ian Bennett of The Harvest Protection Network, Pennsylvania, United States, the storage will have three air drying turbine ventilators and will be able to refrigerate, using solar power.

    Bennett decried the culture of wastage in the country, which was caused by lack of storage facilities. “When I drove from Abuja to Makurdi, I saw women throwing out large quantities of tomatoes by the road side. Nigeria loses about 40 percent of its agricultural products because of this problem; that is why this barn makes economic sense,” he said.

    But the barn is not coming cheap and it is in line with the philosophy of the Aare not to spare any expense at achieving excellence. “This is a massive structure and it is very expensive, with all the materials that has gone into it, this is the first of our buildings in Nigeria, I can tell you this university is extra-ordinary,” Bennett said.

    There are over 600 fish ponds, each having a minimum of 5,000 fishes, and massive artificial lakes scattered all over the farms. There is also the mango plantation. There are over 110,000 trees of Tom Atkinson specie of mango, which produces several thousands of fruits yearly. The teek plantation has over 500,000 trees.

    But the farms are not the only massive structures the Aare is putting up; a new administrative building will face directly the school’s massive gates. “As you are coming in, I want people to see the administrative building,” he said. There is also the sports complex and the massive Talent Discovering Centre, which will contain 26 sports on the ground floor and music, press rooms and other skills on the upper floor.

    The Faculty of Law has received generous accolades all over the world. The uniqueness of the Law programme and faculty prompted the Council of Legal Education to grant the university an increase in the students’ intake from 80 to 180. “We are number three in Africa, with the largest number of Law students. The Nigerian Law School says we are a model and they do send universities here to come and learn,” Afe Babalola said.

    But is law the beautiful bride of ABUAD? The founder laughed. Turned around in his swivel chair, pulled open a drawer and took out a letter written by a parent whose child insisted on ABUAD and began to read. The letter indicated the school has an encompassing excellence in all the faculties. When he was done, he put down the letter and turned to his visitors.

    Afe Babalola disagreed with a small frown on his face. “That question has been asked by some people, but as you take a tour round, you will see there are many big faculties too. Our Engineering faculty is one of those,” he said.

     

    A generous farmer and administrator

    It will not be incorrect to say Afe Babalola has invested billions of naira in building ABUAD and making it what it is today. But the investment has paid off – not in cash but in the enormous goodwill it enjoys internationally. It is ranked as the second best private university in Nigeria and number 16 of all Nigerian universities by the World Universities Webometric ranking, after just three years.

    There is also the affiliation with various foreign organisations and schools. This gives the students internship opportunities at foreign universities. The university has also garnered more than 10 awards and recognitions in various fields. Visitors to the university had words of praise for what Afe Babalola has done.

    “The gesture is notably one of the most outstanding individual contributions towards the realisation of the Federal Government’s educational projection, under the Vision 2020-20,” President Goodluck Jonathan said and counselled other “financially endowed compatriots to rise to the occasion and aim at least to match the excellent standards of which we are, today, privileged witnesses.”

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo said: “Happy to be able to see at first hand a unique sample of private university, with finesse, purpose, commitment and self-sacrifice by the proprietor. More like this will change the panorama of tertiary institution and education in Nigeria.”

    Others said they were simply overwhelmed, “I came, I saw, I am overwhelmed. ABUAD is a miracle, the facilities are splendid,” Prof. Chinedu Nebo, the power minister, said.

    But large heartedness has been a lifestyle of Chief Babalola. Usually, there is always a long line of people seeking his assistance and he makes it a point of duty to meet their needs as much as he is able. In his office, even at weekends, he receives visitors and, irrespective of their mission, “Baba”, as he is fondly called, ensures they leave bearing gifts. A woman walked in, paid her obeisance and as she was about to leave, Baba reached for the baskets of fruits behind his chair and handed them over to her.

    “ No, take more and have this again,” he said.

    The woman was still expressing her gratitude and saying heartfelt prayers as she was led out of the door.

  • Getting set for future

    Getting set for future

    SIX million youths are thrown into the job market yearly, with the only 10 per cent getting employed. With such a frightening figure of unemployment, the onus, many beleive, is on students to stem the tide. Rather than waiting on the government for job, it is believed that they should employ skill acquisition to tackle the problem.

    This was the aim of the examination conducted for students offering Rehabilitation Education after a workshop organised by the School of Special Education, Federal College of Education (Special), Oyo State.

    The Head of the department, Dr A. I. Ajobiewe, said the course would run through the session, during which students would be made to acquire skills of their choice. She said students could specialise in over 33 vocations, depending on their interest. She listed block making, bag weaving, bead making, horticulture, leather works, tiling, barbing, hair dressing, catering and batik making, among others, as skills students could acquire.

    The examination, which started at 8am, was held in the department’s workshop. The students were divided into groups and required to carry out what they learned during the workshop.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that the experts who conducted the training were not lecturers; they were hired by the school to instruct the trainees on various skills.

    Dr Ajobiewe said the institution wanted to open the eyes of its students to entrepreneurship, which was why the course was added to the school’s curricula. She urged the students to acquire lucrative skills during the training, advising them to think beyond academic and seek practical knowledge on how to be productively engaged after graduation.

    After the training which lasted for a session, the students prepared for the test. They besieged the department to unleash the expertise received from the workshop. Some of them who trained in catering appeared in white apron, other groups also came in various shades of aprons.

    Mr Ajayi Olufemi, a lecturer in the department, harped on the importance of skill acquisition. He said entrepreneurship was the way the nation could tackle unemployment. He urged the students to utilise the skills they acquired during the training, saying it would be an added advantage for them when they leave the school.

    At 4pm, the exercise ended. Participants submitted their works for assessment. Some of them completed the task before the time while others could not.

    Mr Emmanuel Ajayi, a lecturer in the department, chided some students who could not complete the task, saying they did not attend the workshop regularly.

    Some of the group leaders spoke to CAMPUSLIFE after the exercise. Joy Umaru, who led the interior decoration group, said the exam tested their practical knowledge of the vocation. She advised her colleagues to explore ways to practise what they were taught at the workshop.

    Adenike Adekunle, bag weaving group’s head, said: “The course has made me to better understand vocational training. I will source for capital to start the business because I just cannot wait anymore.”

    Another group leader, Agnes Ibeh, soap making, said: “I want to start something with the skill I have acquired and make profit from it.”