Tag: Farmers

  • Govt upgrades farmers’ e-wallet to banking card

    Govt upgrades farmers’ e-wallet to banking card

    To boost its Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA), the Federal Government has  upgraded the e-wallet system used by farmers to get farming input.

    The Nation gatherd that the government is taking the decision to strenghten its reforms in the agricultural sector.

    A Presidency source said: “We are upgrading the e-wallet to the National Agricultural Initiative system, so that each card that a farmer has will become a banking card with no fixed amount, for loans, they can save money, they can do insurance, they can transfer money, get anything they want.This will totally change the face of farming in Nigeria.”

    Though the e-wallet system has been considered to be a success, it was further revealed that the initiative “has faced challenges of poor network in rural areas. In order to address this challenge, the Ministry of Agriculture is working with the UK government particularly DFID to introduce a new technology called TAP (Touch And Pay) which allows us to use near e-communication technology to support farmers to have access to their farm inputs even at home where there are no networks at all”.

    It was also gathered that the government “is trying to harmonise this with National Identity Management Commission’s (NIMC) e-card programme,” adding that all they (farmers) have to do is “take their e-card to the input retailer, tap their cards on the Android phone of the retailer and all information on government allocation of seeds and fertiliser and mechanisation support made available only a few days ago will show up on that application in that particular village.”

    The Ministry of Agriculture has developed Nigeria’s first  National Database for Farmers with over 14 million farmers registered with identification cards. This farmers’ ID cards are also being upgraded into full national biometric cards (e-Cards).

    The source said: “We are already migrating 10.5 million farmers out of the 14 million farmers that we have registered in the e-wallet into this NIMC integrated system. “With e-wallet system, we are reaching farmers with subsidised farming resources over 14 million have redeemed improved seeds and fertilizers since 2012.”

    The Managing Director,  Access Bank, Herbert Wigwe, said the bank has “spent a lot of time over the last two years or more, working on this project (e-card) with NIMC. I don’t know what the financial numbers are but we have supported the government by providing facilities where they can work across the country. They are using our premises, they are using our applications.”

    Partnering with the Federal Government on the e-card initiative, he said: This “means a lot not just to Access Bank but for the entire banking industry.  ID schemes solves a lot of problems. First, it solves the problem of identifying your customers, KYC, (Know Your Customer). It helps in reducing the negative biases we have about Nigeria, just because we have no identity cards, so anybody from anywhere can claim to be a Nigerian.”

    Wigwe added that the e-card “will also reduce some of the security challenges that we have as a country because you can truly identify everybody and thereby determine who comes from which country or not.

    “We are coming from a situation where there was no proper identification. You have fake drivers’ licences and all that. Now because this card is biometric in nature if your name is Herbert Wigwe, you cannot change that name because my thumb print and finger prints are on it.  So, if there is fraud, you can trace who the person is and where he is.”

  • Industrialist urges  protection  for hunters,  farmers over Ebola

    Industrialist urges protection for hunters, farmers over Ebola

    An industrialist and the Group Chief Executive of Origin Group Limited, Prince S.J Samuel, has urged the Federal Government to intervene in the plight of hunters who may have been adversely affected in the wake of the Ebola virus outbreak that has put the consumption of bush meat on hold.

    Prince Samuel said if no step was taken to address the plight of the hunters, whose main source of livelihood is hunting, it would lead to their inability to fend for their families and send their children to school.

    He said many states would suffer the consequence, arguing that the hunters cut across many states.

    He said: “These hunters do basically this business, what do we do about them, I am concerned and worried because that is the only source of their livelihood, that is the only way they send their children to school, that is how they feed their family. “There’s need therefore for government to quickly come up with a policy statement on the issue to address the plight of the hunters.”

    He argued that it is a known fact how Ebola came into Nigeria. “It came through somebody in the city,” he said, stating that the primary source of bush meat is the villages.  According to him, agreed that the viruses that transmit these disease are in the air and can easily be transmitted through animals,  but how many of the people infected are in the bushes and the villages? He said many of those infected are in the cities.

    He admitted that government has done well in the manner the Ebola infection  has been handled so far, but stressed that there was an economic dimension to the situation to which government must address itself.

    He said: “The government has done well in the containment of the situation, but the other economic effect on the  agric sector is where I stand that we should do something, and nobody is looking at it. It’s unfortunate and painful. The challenge we would have is the stigma that will go to the people who rear these things and to the product they sell, may not be quantifiable and measured for many years to come, even after the epidemic is gone.

    “That is why I think government should devote more effort and resources educating people about the bush meat thing and categorise it. For me the challenge is that most of the meat  we eat today is bush meat, including some of our cows.”

    Samuel said there is need for government to be distinctive on its classification on bush meat, so that people’s businesses are not unwittingly destroyed.

    “For me, I believe that there should be a sort of categorisation, more education and treading on the path of caution, so that we don’t destroy the businesses we are trying to build,” he said, adding that people have obtained loans to start some of  these businesses.

  • Assembly wades into herdsmen, farmers clash

    The Enugu State House of Assembly has initiated moves to end frequent violent clashes between herdsmen and farmers.

    The bill, entitled “A law to make provisions for the control of nomadic cattle rearing in Enugu State and other matters related thereto” is being sponsored by Hon. Chinedu Nwamba, representing Nsukka East Constituency.

    The lawmaker, in an interview with reporters, said the bill, when passed into law, would promote symbiotic relationship between the farmers and the herdsmen.

    Nwamba, who lamented several lives and properties that have been lost in different parts of the country owing to the clashes, urged other states to replicate the law.

    “The main reason for this bill is to ensure adequate peace between the two parties- farmers and herdsmen. Nobody in this country is ignorant of some violent clashes which have occurred as a result of disagreement between the farmers and the herdsmen.

    “We have cases where the herdsmen will allow their cattle to graze on farmlands, and when the farmers kill the cows in retaliation, the herdsmen will challenge the farmers.

    “So, it is my belief that when this bill is passed into law, it will end conflict and promote peace between these parties that need the services of each other.”

    The bill provides for the establishment of grazing areas in each of the three senatorial zones of Enugu State and the nomadic cattle rearers shall ensure that the cattle are confined within the grazing areas as provided.

    It further provided that “any person who permits cattle to graze in an area not designated as grazing area, shall be guilty of an offence and shall, on conviction, be liable to six months imprisonment or a fine of N100,000 or both.

    “As from the commencement of this law, the commissioner shall appoint pound masters in all the local government areas whose functions shall include the impounding of cattle found grazing in non-designated grazing areas.

    “Cattle found grazing in an area not designated a grazing area shall be impounded by the pound master or any other person duly authorized by the commissioner.

    “Any cattle impounded under this law, which is not claimed within one week of the impounding, shall be sold in accordance with auction law; the proceeds of the sale shall be deposited in government coffers.”

    The bill, which was mentioned at the House Plenary Session, is expected to be debated later.

  • Incentive for 3,000 Akwa Ibom farmers

    No fewer than 3,000 farmers in Akwa Ibom would benefit from the Federal Government’s Growth Enhancement Support (GES) programme before the end of this year, an official said in Uyo.

    The Federal Director in the state, Dr Peter Umanah, made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    Umanah said that 2,000 farmers would benefit from the oil palm value chain, while 1,000 others would benefit from the cocoa value chain programme.

    “We have just concluded the generic GES scheme in the state. We are about to begin Value Chain GES programme.

    “Under this scheme, we will focus on different commodities; and in Akwa Ibom, we are going to implement the oil palm value chain GES and about 2,000 farmers will benefit from this programme this year.

    “We are going to implement cocoa value chain GES and about ,1000 farmers are targeted. They will receive free seedlings and other chemicals for their operation at subsidised rate.”

    Umanah said that the programme would also be extended to the livestock sector such as goat, piggery and poultry ,to enhance food production in the country.

    The director said that support for oil palm and cocoa farmers would begin this week, while poultry would commence next month and goat and piggery  in November.

    Umanah said that the government would also support aquaculture, adding that a consultative meeting would be held with stakeholders to educate them on the programme.

  • ‘Uncompleted Fed Govt silos programme hinders agriculture’

    ‘Uncompleted Fed Govt silos programme hinders agriculture’

    With less than three months to the end of the raining season, the All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN), has raised the alarm over a looming loss that may befall farmers in the current farming season.

    Its Technical Adviser, Dr Tunde Arosanyin, who spoke in Lokoja, Kogi State, yesterday, said the 800 silos to be located across all the local government areas of the country are not near completion and will greatly affect the output of farmers in the country.

    He said: “This call becomes imperative in view of the fact that there is less than three months to the end of the raining season and the silos are still not near-completion.

    “This means that farmers will still continue to experience the same loss like previous years because inspite of their efforts, and the good nature of the country’s weather, there will be no storage for their crops.”

    While lauding the silos policy, he however raised concerns that until the silos are completed, and the crop processing zones across the country become functional, the government’s Agricultural Transformation Agenda will remain a mirage.

    He also frowned at government’s over dependence on oil, saying it was detrimental to the development of the agricultural sector

    His words: “Nigeria is paying lip service to agriculture. Nigeria has failed to honour its signature to the 2002 Maputo Declaration that African countries should budget 10 per cent of their annual budget to agriculture. This year’s budget was just 3.2 per cent for agriculture, which is a far cry from the Moputo declaration.”

    He warned that until the country sees the need to make agriculture one of the vibrant sectors of the economy, a step he reckons would move the country away from the mono-economic dependence on oil, to a multi-economic drive, the Transformation Agenda of the Federal Government will remain wishful thinking.

  • Cut use of antibiotics in livestock, expert tells farmers

    The Dean Faculty of Agriculture, University of Ilorin, Prof Abiodun Adeloye, has called on farmers to reduce the antibiotics  given to their livestock.

    The advice follows the practice of giving substandard antibiotics to healthy livestock to force animals to put on weight faster.

    Speaking with The Nation, Adeloye said there was need to reduce the use of antibiotics in raising livestock to avoid major outbreaks of food-borne illness with resistance which were reported.

    Report also  said some people are falling sick from antibiotic-resistant infections, causing some deaths.

    He said livestock production is a key incubator of antibiotic resistance and that producers  of poultry and livestock  should commit them to the judicious use of medicines for the care and well-being of healthy animals.

    To this end, he said farmers would need to work with their veterinary doctors to fashion alternative strategies to keep their animals healthy.

    Supporting the global move to  phase out the use of some antibiotics in animals to curb the growing their resistance to human disease, Adeloye said drugs contribute to rise of untreatable bacteria in humans – though farmers say production would be ‘impossible’ without them.

    He noted that though between human and animal pathogens antibiotic resistance has not been  proven, there is a need  to take precautionary measures to ensure that antibiotics are only being used on sick animals.

    But farmers, who routinely add antibiotics to animal feed and water to avoid illness among livestock and boost growth rates believe  that if antibiotics for animals were banned, it would make production pretty much impossible. But it emerged that health authorities  do not know which antibiotics are being used in which animals and where the resistance problems  are.

    Meanwhile , the United  States   Food and Drug Administration has asked pharmaceutical firms to relabel their drugs to prevent them from being used in healthy animals.

    In the United States food supply, antibiotics are routinely fed to healthy livestock to enable them gain weight faster. As many as 23,000 Americans a year die from antibiotic-resistant infection.

    But it is unclear how much of the problem is related to meat. “Because all uses of antimicrobial drugs, in both humans and animals, contribute to the development of antimicrobial resistance, it is important to use these drugs only when medically necessary,” the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said in a statement.

  • Ogun gives farmers free cassava stems

    OGUN State Government  has given free cassava stems to farmers for planting during this rainy season.

    The Commissioner for Agriculture, Mrs. Ronke Sokefun, made this known at the first harvest of cassava at Ibiade, in Ogun Waterside Local Government area.

    Represented by the Director, Planning, Research and Statistic, Rev. Gbile Olugbebi, the commissioner said it was government’s duty to encourage farmers by providing them with farm input which necessitated the giving of 10 bundles of cassava stem each for planting.

    She explained that the cassava varieties were the improved ones, noting that they grow faster and end up good after processing, especially for food produce, such as garri and lafun.

    “This cassava variety is called TMS/92/0326 and TME419, they are the improved variety. They were selected because of their specialties and they fit in well for our conventional products like garri, lafun and others,”she said.

  • Fed Govt mulls insurance for farmers

    Fed Govt mulls insurance for farmers

    The Federal Government is set to launch national crop insurance for farmers following the 2012 flooding which destroyed crops and farmlands, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina has said.

    The minister who spoke in Abuja at a workshop on ‘Water Management Solutions for Flood Recession and Dry Season Agriculture in Nigeria,  said the flooding led to low productivity and severe food loss.

    Adesina said  the programme which will start from next year will target 10 million farmers.

    The crop insurance scheme, he said will insure farmers against shocks and losses from weather related events.

    He said: “Our goal is to insure no less than 10 million farmers. We will also design and implement a flood disaster payment policy that will protect farmers, communities, and states from economic losses due to flood.”

    The minister called for proper management of water to improve production, adding that water will be the most limiting factor affecting food production.

    Adesina said: “We must improve the efficiency with which we use water and get more grains per drop of water. To achieve this, I believe we must focus on small scale water management system, not just the large scale irrigation schemes.

    “Small scale water management systems are more cost effective, easier to implement, reaches millions of farmers, have greater impacts on expanding food production and food security, and empowers rural community.”

    Speaking on International Water Management Institute (IWMI) collaboration in the country, he said the project will be in two phases. The first phase, he explained will focus on creating an evidence-based framework on assessing floods and flooding patterns for decision making purpose while the second phase will focus on agricultural water management solutions which will be sealed up to support and improve dry season farming.

    Director, Africa, IWMI, Dr. Olalekan Williams said the goal of the project in the country is to assist the government to increase agricultural production and achieve food security through sustainable water management.

     

  • 1,805 farmers get input in Katsina

    The Katsina State Government has distributed farm input worth N700 million to 1,805 farmers in the state under its Special Animal Traction Loan Programme, Governor Ibrahim Shema  has  said.

    Launching the programme in Kaita town, Shema said the input included ox-cart, ridger, plough and two work bulls, all valued at N250,000 for each of the beneficiaries.

    Represented by the Commissioner for Agriculture, Alhaji Musa Adamu, the governor said that the animals had an insurance cover, and that the loan was payable in four years.

    He said five farmers were selected to benefit from the package in each ward across the 34 local government areas of the state.

    Shema urged the committee to ensure that only genuine farmers benefited from the programme.

    He urged the beneficiaries to make judicious use of the implements for the development of agriculture in the state.

    The Chairman of the distribution committee, Alhaji Nasiru Abdul, said the implements were manufactured in the state as part of efforts to revive local industries that would provide jobs to the people.

    Abdul said the programme would assist in boosting agricultural productivity and food security in the state.

    One of the beneficiaries, Mallam Mani Dankaba, thanked the state government for the gesture, assuring that the input would be used judiciously.

  • Agony of displaced Taraba Tiv farmers

    Agony of displaced Taraba Tiv farmers

    Hundreds of Tiv farmers in Taraba State have been killed and thousands severely injured in clashes with Fulani herdsmen. Survivors relived their physical and emotional torment, when Senior Correspondent FANEN IHYONGO visited their camps

    They looked hungry, weak and ill. Some looked terrified and emotionally drained. Many were unable to speak. They sleep on the floor in stuffy relief camp rooms. Mosquitoes bite them every night. Tiv farmers of Taraba State who survived the Fulani attacks are having the worst of times in their camps.

    They used to till the land, using the proceeds to look after their families.  They supplied the markets with yams, maize, soya beans, guinea corn, rice and cassava, among others.

    Farming was their life. Now, their means of livelihood is cut off and they have become destitute, terrorised in the central district of the state which they call home.  Today, their Fulani neighbours who once made jokes and merriment with them, have become their assailants and killers.

    “I don’t know the meaning of existence anymore,” one of the victims told this reporter.

    They have become endangered species in their own state. Some of them wonder if they are seen as aliens.

    Since the beginning of this year, Fulani insurgents, sometimes perceived to be largely mercenaries, reportedly numbering over 6,000 besieged the southern and central districts of the state. Tiv villagers became their prey. The insurgents, sometimes clad in military camouflage, attacked anytime of the day or night. They have killed thousands of Tiv farmers, wounded many more and forced the rest from their homes. Not a few Tiv women and girls have been raped and degraded by the herdsmen.

    Even in the relief camps the victims are afraid of discussing what has befallen them for fear of divulging information to perceived spies from the enemy camp.

    Little children who found something to eat were seen playing; some were crying but many generally looked pale and ill.

    Two children and a woman were said to have died, added to the 14 who passed on earlier. They reportedly died of hunger and disease. Their bodies were seen being evacuated, but no one could say exactly where they would be buried.

    An 82-year old man was said to have lost his mind in the camp after reportedly losing his wife and four children to Fulani attacks. Their assailants allegedly burnt them alive in a house where they were hiding.

    Members of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and SEMA, the state arm of the organisation, brought relief materials but they could not serve even a quarter of the camp population in the five locations. Concerned officials from the local government council also prepared food for weak children  but the Fulani militia broke into the camp demanding to be served first. The invaders took the food away with a promise to attack the people in the evening if they remained in the camp. This reporter saw the camp officials pleading with the marauders to have mercy on the children. They did not. The camp’s location near a police station did not deter them.

    Bem Iorleva, 36, has been sleeping in the bush. He furtively goes to the camp only at noon hours to see his people. But these days he could not go as the militants reportedly began to trail him. He is said to be among six on hit list of Fulani herdsmen. The six were reckoned to have incurred the wrath of invaders when they reportedly condemned and resisted their attack.

    “They want to turn us from defencelessness to a worse state. Those of us who are of the active age, enlightened and have some sources of wealth are the major target; they want our heads by all means,” Iorleva said.

    Iorleva who has a wife and three children, has been lucky to have escaped the slaughter, but his sources of livelihood have been wiped out.

    “There is no safety even in the camps. The authorities have told us in clear terms they cannot protect us. You could be fetched and killed right there any time and nothing would be done,” he said.

    He added that some of the culprits who were arrested by security agents have been released.

    “We see them (their attackers) walking freely. They attack us in the villages, and yet they come here to torment us…Look at some of them (pointing to a group of four Fulani youngsters wearing black vests on one motorcycle).

    Iorleva, a principal at Rock Foundation Primary and Secondary School, had also been operating a bookshop and a barbing shop to augment his income. One day, the bookshop and saloon were attacked and vandalised by Fulani assailants. His home in Mai-Haula and the 17-year-old school where he taught were reduced to rubble. His proprietor, Peter Terna Ukpo is also taking refuge in the bush.

    Iorleva said: “Ukpo’s case is worse. They said they will butcher him if they see him.”

    Popularly known as Orlando, Ukpo is the president of Tiv youths in Bali. He is said to have lost “everything” to Fulani fighters.

    “Some of us would have been killed since, but for God. I had to run as I never did since I was born in order to escape death. They came with heavy weapons, some wielding guns, some long cutlasses and axes. They began to shoot and kill any Tiv person they sighted, without provocation.”

    As the Tiv residents ran for their dear life, the attackers looted and set their homes ablaze.

    Now, with the hellish life in the camps, the displaced want to leave for Benue where the bulk of their folks are, but transport fare is ptohibitive, even as some of them do not know where they are really going. The fare, per individual, from the camp St. Paul Catholic Church, Bali, to Zaki-Biam is N2000. From the camp to Gboko is N2,500 and N3,000 getting to Makurdi, the Benue State capital. Cargoes like a nine-inch mattress or a goat are charged N2000. So, one is left with the option of abandoning one’s bags of rice, groundnuts, corn, livestock and household appliances behind if one must survive.

    Meanwhile, their attackers have continued to either take over their properties or destroy them. Even on the road, the Tiv are often attacked  by herdsmen mounting roadblocks.

    Some help has come for them, though. Minister for Niger Delta Affairs, Darius Dickson Ishaku, has donated relief materials and cash to the displaced persons.

    Darius, an architect, is from Takum Local Government Area of southern Taraba.

    His representative, Stephen Ibrahim Agya said the donation, included wrappers, foodstuff and cash.

    The traditional ruler of the Tiv in Bali, HRM David Gbaa, received the items on behalf of the displaced. Gbaa who praised the minister for the gesture said he would share the materials fairly among the five camps in Bali where the displaced are taking refuge.

    Agya added that the minister is making an arrangement to also assist displaced persons from Gassol and Ibi local government areas.

    Agya said he stumbled on the victims fleeing their homes so he informed the minister who quickly disbursed funds and materials to alleviate their deplorable condition.

    “I wept when I saw the Tiv victims in the camps. The old, women and kids; they looked stranded and emotionally wrecked. I saw their homes destroyed. It was pathetic.

    So, when I phoned the minister (Darius) he was saddened over the development. He promptly empowered and directed me to provide relief to the victims,” Agya said, adding that Darius has condemned the attacks and killings.

    In Bali where the minister donated relief materials, over 80 Tiv residents were gunned down and a Catholic catechist axed to death. Police said they recovered 46 bodies and that 6,086 houses were torched when they combed the area in search of the attackers.

    “Many of our people are still missing,” said Torver, one of the 148,036 displaced persons taking refuge in Kungwana area of Bali.