Tag: Food

  • Nigerian food crops loaded with deadly poisons

    When you read the little report below this introduction, you may become afraid of modern foods and meals because you probably now realise they are armouries of poisons which cause most, if not all, of today’s monstrous diseases…pain and premature death. You may find yourself at a cross-roads: if food, like air and water, is poisoning you every time you eat, and you cannot stop eating or improve the quality of the food available to you to eat, what can you do other than go on eating the food of the time, knowing, as you eat it, that you are consuming loads of poisons with it which, someday, may strike a deadly blow at your health, as it is striking at others all around you? Some of the things that can be done to reduce the risk of being poisoned and prematurely killed by the foods we eat are suggested in the second article in this column titled SOME NATURAL MEDICINES FOR POISONS IN FOOD.Those suggestions are just a few of the things that can be done, as regular readers of this column will readily recall. The first article, which gave rise to this subject, was originally written by Professor Jibrin Ibrahim, a Senior Fellow of the Center for Democracy and Development, and a Chair of the Editorial Board of PREMIUM TIMES. The article was posted by Mr. Dotun Akintoye on the GOLDEN CROWN FARMERS CO-OPERATIVE chat group platform. I am a member of the co-operative. He is the President. The co-operative at present subscribes to the Federal Government’s Anchor Borrowers Project, the aim of which is to enlarge agricultural output and make food abundant and cheap. The ultimate goal of this co-operative is organic agriculture and food production, which is in direct opposition to today’s killer conventional agriculture which the post below exposes. Conventional agriculture tampers with Mother Nature’s Code of Life in the foods it tinkers with, to make them bigger, though not necessarily more nutritious, more resistant to disease and more yield per acre. Thus, you would find apples which can stay on the shelf for more than one year without becoming rotten, one major reason I stopped eating apples a long time ago. Thus, you would find chicken wings and turkey parts massively imported into Nigeria. More than 10years ago, I stopped eating them as well. Chickens and turkeys are injected with drugs which are often meant to be discontinued at least 14 days before slaughter. But, to beat market deadlines, this safety protocol is often unheeded. Fish are now killed with dangerous chemicals. I stopped eating cucumbers when I learned from a Nigerian cucumber farmer in Ogun State of Nigeria that we, too, heavily douse cucumber farms with pesticides. I gave up in banana as night cap snack for potassium and some sugar when carbide-ripened bananas almost killed me three times…thanks to the availability of Diatom and Activated Charcoal. Well, I cannot run from the world. Nigeria is still better in terms of these matters than many countries in Europe and America. In a short while, I will tell you about how I managed to get by. Meanwhile read Prof. Ibrahim’s article…

     

    Eat and Quench: Let’s Listen To What Our Food Is Telling US

    By Jibrin Ibrahim Premium Times, 6/10/ 2017

     

    “Our food is normally composed of a lot of dirt; poison, dangerous chemicals, GMOs, and we are all rapidly eating ourselves to death. The easiest way of demonstrating this is to refer to research by the European Union on what they found in the food we sent them to eat. They discovered that the items from Nigeria contained glass fragments, rodent excreta and dead insects. They also found high levels of chemicals like dichlorvos, diometrate and trichlorphon in the products.

    “Some of these chemicals were used in the planting process; others were used in preservation. The poisonous chemicals did not serve their purpose because microbes such as salmonella, aflatoxins and mould had contaminated the food.

    “Nigeria does not meet basic standards of food hygiene in the planting, growing, preservation and transportation of its food. I remember the shock of a Kenyan colleague who saw meat being carried in the open boot of a rusted taxi and shortly after a man behind a motorcycle carrying the leg of a cow on his head without any covering.

    “He asked me if we have any organisation that set and monitor standards and I confirmed that we had but as always, they do not do the work they are paid to do.

    “It was not surprising that the EU was categorical in its decision in 2015 and 2016 to formally declare that the 42 food items exported from Nigeria were not fit for human consumption. It might well be that the exporters had actually chosen the best from our markets to export to Europe and the reality is that our best is not good enough for human consumption.

    “The items included beans, melon seeds, palm oil, bitter leaf, pumpkin, shelled groundnut and live snails. In other words, the things we eat everyday that we were trying to sell to our compatriots in Europe. Had they passed the sanitation test, then issues of not having labels, improper packaging, lack of health certificates and other entry documents would have arisen?

    “After the incident, Audu Ogbeh, the minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, warned that Nigerians might be killing themselves in installments through the food that they eat.

    “Ogbeh listed several of such poisonous foods, including moin-moin (bean cake) wrapped with cellophane (nylon) and cooked in a manner that transfers dangerous chemicals are released into the beans.

    “Another dangerous habit of millions of us is consuming sachet water that has been exposed to the sun at over 30 degrees Celsius to multiply the number of liver and kidney failures in our society.

    “Currently, there is panic in informed circles that the massive quantities of tilapia fish and frozen chicken consumed in Nigeria have been preserved with chemicals normally used for embalming dead bodies and that’s why they never go bad.

    “Not only are we all accelerating our movement to our deaths, we are already embalming our bodies before time. Talking of meat that never goes bad, I have always wondered what xxx (name of product concealed by this column), which we are told is a sausage is made of. Every other type of sausage I know of goes bad after some time but not xxx.

    “This week, the Nigerian Stored Products Research Institute (NSPRI) revealed that Nigerian peasant farmers spend $400 million annually on the purchase of pesticides. They say that we use them in an improper manner and millions of Nigerians are falling sick due to pesticide poisoning.

    “This information is from the executive director of the institute, Professor Olufemi Peters. He lamented that rather than continue to kill ourselves with these chemicals, there are cheaper and healthier forms of storage such as the inert atmosphere silos for grain storage. Sadly, public health was one of the first victims of the collapse of governance in the country.

    “One of the most serious threats to public health in the country is the grand entry and dangerous plot to takeover our agriculture by Monsanto, the chemical company that produces genetically modified organisms (GMO) and calls their dangerous products food.

    “The Nigerian government has given approval for GMOs to be grown on our land. The National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) into which Monsanto has been pumping dollars has become the advocacy agency for promoting their GMOs and chemicals. Our own governmental institutions are mortgaging our future.

    “The first major Monsanto project in Nigeria is to grow glyphosate infused maize. Recent studies have linked glyphosate to health effects such as degeneration of the liver and kidney, and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. It is unfortunate that Bill Gates with his America First mentality is sponsoring Monsanto’s Water Efficient Maize for Africa, a five-year development project led by the Kenyan-based African Agricultural Technology Foundation, which aims to develop a variety of drought-tolerant maize seeds.

    “Why will he not invest in the Institute of Agricultural Research project in Ahmadu Bello University that is developing draught resistant maize that does not have the dangers of what Monsanto is doing? My fear now is that Aliko Dangote who is planning to invest billions of dollars into Nigerian agricultural production is now sucked into this Monsanto project. There are reports that some of the food aid being currently imported into Nigeria is GMO.

    “As a first step, the ministers of Agriculture and the Environment should call the National Biosafety Management Agency to order and make them withdraw the authorisation issued for the production of GMO crops. Given our fragile ecosystems and stressed environment, we must take our biosafety seriously and avoid the path of introducing crops that are dangerous to the health of our people and our environment.

    “Nineteen European countries that care about the health of their people have completely banned genetically modified crops. Even the Russian State Duma recently passed a bill banning all import and production of genetically modified organisms in the country. We must not allow Nigeria to be turned into a dumping ground for what sensible countries have rejected.

    “Sincere scientists have shown evidence that Monsanto’s crops are genetically enhanced to tolerate the use of the herbicide glyphosate which was declared as a possible carcinogen by the World Health Organisation’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).

    “Everyday, more and more Nigerians are falling sick and dying and as we weep for them, we often wonder why so many young people are going. Maybe the question we should be posing is how come some Nigerians are still alive given the intense and systematic way we are poisoning ourselves.

    “——A professor of Political Science and development consultant/expert, Jibrin Ibrahim is a Senior Fellow of the Centre for Democracy and Development, and Chair of the Editorial Board of PREMIUM TIMES.”

     

    Some natural medicines for poisons in food

    When I was a boy, I hated a meal of beans. It was not for the same reasons as our children do today. Many children of today who hate to eat beans agree to if the meal is garnished with, say, beef, chicken, fish, plantain or those things which gladden the pallet better than just beans in the plate. My aversion for beans arose from those tiny, whitish objects which appeared in the plate and looked like maggots. Who would like to see, let alone eat, maggots in a bowl of food? Apparently, those “maggots” were weavils eating up the beans. Nowadays, those insects are no longer seen in the beans we eat because the grains are preserved with chemicals dangerous to insect and even human life. That is why we often hear reports of people dying after a meal of beans. Apparently, the chemical preservatives were not expired from the beans before the grains were cooked and eaten.

    What we observe in beans occurs in practically every food crop or/and even processed foods and drinks. Only recently, there was a legal uproar about some of the products of Nigerian Bottling Company which were rejected, seized and destroyed in the United Kingdom (U.K.) because they contained higher levels of the preservative Sodium Benzoate than is permitted for the safety of health in European Union (EU) countries.

    When we look left, right, center up and below, as it were, we find there is nowhere to hide, as we are now immersed in an ocean of poisons from food, air, water and even our emotional responses to every-day friction from living experiences. And this has led many health seekers and researchers to the conclusion that, we’d be entombed in these poisons and die prematurely and gruesomely unless we fight back. At present, there are two major ways of fighting back. The first is to abandon these deadly foods and eat organic, that is naturally grown foods, in their places. But organic foods are scarce and expensive, where available. Besides, there is a lot of deceit in the market place where drugged foods are passed on as organic foods. The second way of fighting back, even where one cannot obtain or afford real organic foods is by aiding the body’s organs of elimination to expel these poisons, and by protecting these organs against these toxins. It is from these endeavours that the following ideas have emerged…

    1. Detoxification
    2. Antioxidation
    3. Mineralisation
    4. Oxygenation
    5. Immune boosting

    Detoxification

    This is a broad field that cannot be exhausted here. It may involve high colonic irrigation with coffee (not edible coffee) enemas or other detox herbs. Largely, I always target the liver, the gastro-intestinal tract, the kidneys and the Urogenital system, the respiratory system and the skin. These are the major organs Mother Nature provides the body for the elimination of wastes and poisons. We must support their work thankfully with helpful herbs and foods, and protect them as well. The liver is the apparent commander-in-chief of the detoxification process. One of the well known detoxifiers of the liver is Dandelion. Its bright yellow flowers provide antioxidants and flavonoids. The exert diuretic action on the kidneys but, unlike pharmaceutical diuretics, do not leach potassium from the blood and create heart and other problems. They are rich in Vitamin A, B, C and Zinc. Dandelion root supports bile production in the liver, which helps the transport of toxins out of the body. In the course of its work of eliminating toxins from the blood, a chemical substance known as Acetaminophen causes oxidative stress in the liver. Many studies have reported that the antioxidants found in Dandelion root, Jerusalem artichoke, Turmeric and Rosemary help this condition. The University of Windsor, Canada, in 2011 experimented with Dandelion root extract on skin cancer cells and found that, within 48hours, it began to kill the cells. Another study in Oncotarget was reported to kill about 95 percent of colon cancer cells in 48 hours. Favourable reports are mentioned, also, in respect of Pancreatic breast, prostate cancers and leukemia. The anti-cancer activity is linked to its antioxidant potential. The leaves of Dandelion support vision health because of its high Vitamin A content.

    Another herb good for detoxification is Red clover. It supports toxin break-down in the lymphatic system, the lungs, the blood, the liver and the skin through its diaphoretic (sweat inducing) action. It helps to prevent inflammation in the liver and to help the liver from becoming a fatty liver which cannot process fats because it cannot produce enough bile salts to do the job.

    I often suggest Burdock root as a liver and blood purifier because it has been used for these purpose and more for thousands of years. It is diaphoretic and diuretic as well. With more toxins leaving the body through the skin and the urinary system, the workload of the liver, which is also helped by Burdock root, reduces to such a point that enables this organ to not only become more efficient but to also heal itself as well.

    There are other great liver herbs such as Milk thistle, Carqueja, Yellow dock, Chanka piedra, Greater celedine, Garlic, Beet root et.c, Grape seed extract, Pawpaw (papaya) leaf juice.

    Antioxidation

    Free radicals damage cells. Antioxidants wage wars against them and knocks them out, leaving the cells free of molestation. Practically all the herbs and supplements mentioned in this column have one antioxidant potential or the other. The list is endless…Orange peel, Pawpaw leaf juice or Pawpaw seeds, Spirulina, Kale, Wheatgrass, Chlorella and Cilantro, among others. Chlorella and Cilantro, a great herb the Yorubas call efo ebolo (r:d:d) chelate (drag) heavy metals out of the body. Cilantro is a great kidney herb which doubles in other systemic functions as well. We cannot forget Stinging Nettle, that great detoxifier, antioxidant and nutritive herb.

    Mineralisation

    Poisons in foods make the blood acidic. Acidic blood and tissue make the internal environment inhospitable for the cells, the immune cells and organs inclusive. Green herbs mentioned above bring minerals into the body to neutralize acid. These herbs also introduce oxygen. Germs hate alkaline and oxygenated environment, both of which are liked by the immune system. So, when we aid the organs of waste and poison elimination, when we protect them as well, when we alkalinise and oxygenate the system, thereby empowering the immune system to defend and protect the body, we can overcome the dangers in which we stand in the ocean of poisons in which we live today. People who face prostate gland challenges should clean up with pawpaw leaf powder tea, Stinging Nettle root tea, Cilantro tea and Willow herb tea. Heart conditions need Hawthorn berries tea. The digestive system will run well, for example, on Red Kidney Bean pod powder tea. The list is endless.

  • Transforming food production through technology

    Technology is making farming exciting. It is addressing many challenges of would-be farmers, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    Technology is opening vast untapped potential for farmers, investors, and entrepreneurs to improve the efficiency of food production and consumption. From farming to promoting efficient food supply chain, technology is bringing major benefits to the sector.

    One organisation bringing change to agriculture is Growsel. This is because it offers opportunity to those looking to get involved in agriculture, an opportunity to invest in food production either as farmers or investors.

    Founded by digital entreprenuer, Mr. Jerry Oche, Growsel provides an online meeting point for investors and farmers to work towards a fruitful harvest, where the investor can get from between 15 and 30 per cent of his investment as profit. The farmers, on the other hand, can now have quick access to funds for their farming projects and get exposed to best global agricultural practices, as the company does not seem to be taking chances with quality and the implementation of standard farming practices.

    According to the company, prospective farmers, who registered at the platform, are  screened to ensure that they meet up with the basic accreditation standards stipulated for every local farmer. Some of these include being a member of their local associations and getting a recommendation from other farmers, as well as the local ruler or chief. After a farmer has been approved and registered on the Growsel platform, insurance professionals from partner insurance companies will assess the farm and the appropriate insurance cover that would cover the risk exposure of the farm, and subsequently issues the farmer a policy. Growsel ensures that best practices are complied with by providing the farmers with improved seeds and seedlings, fertilisers, tractors and other farm inputs that would be needed to make the most of each farm project within a given farming season.

    Also, seeds are sourced from experts at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) and are estimated to produce a certain amount of yield, which should guarantee increased returns for farmers and the investors’ profit. In addition, measures have been put in place to ensure that the investor gets the agreed profit, boasted that the seeds used for cultivation are of an enhanced variety.

    With over 150 farmers currently on the platform, and a pull of investors, Growsel is revolutionising agric business in Nigeria, and is still calling on more investors and farmers to join the process.

    When a farmer requests for funding once his registration is complete, the Growsel’s farm location managers moves out to carry out a proper verification of the farm and the farmer, during which an endorsement of the farmer by other farmers and local chiefs or leaders in the community where the particular farm is located, would be required.

    On the other hand, an intending investor would need to sign up on the platform, after which a welcome email would be sent to him or her. Once signed up, an investor can browse through the site to see which farm projects he/she would be interested in. A certificate, showing ownership of a particular farm project, will be issued to the investor once he/she selects a particular farm project to invest in. Afterwards, investors can monitor activities on their farm projects via their dashboards.

    The most interesting thing about all this is that with as low as 50,000 naira, anyone can be an investor on Growsel, with a guaranteed return on the investment at end of the crop cycle.

    FarmCrowdy is an agric-tech platform, which creates middle class Nigerians with small scale farms in order to boost food production.

    On how it works, partners on the platform can sponsor any farm of their choice including maize, poultry (broiler), cassava and tomato farms. The partners then get bi-weekly updates about their farm progress, including pictures and videos from the farmers. Also, Farm Partners can visit their farms if they wish to at any point in time to learn about the farmer they’ve partnered and the farm products they are working on. The organisation has a website that people can visit to buy off maize, rice, cassava, poultry farms. Investors can sponsor  a farmer  and up take the produce at the end of harvest.

    Chief Executive Officer, FarmCrowdy, Onyeka Akumah, explained that unlike the out grower model that gives input and allows farmers to just go and do all the work, what they  do with the input is that the farmer gets money coming from the sponsors, so the sponsor holds them accountable to make sure that the farmer does the work. On their part, the organisation holds the farmers accountable to make sure they deliver what the off-taker wants, so that they can get harvest at the end of the day that the off-taker will buy, and then they will sell and pay the sponsors back in return for their money.

    According to him, his organisation is partnering International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) and others to train farmers to farm while and improve yields.

    Right now, the organisation is handing sponsorship, which is the investment that goes into the farm and the production. The other area they are getting involved in is the logistics of moving the produce to the off-takers and the marketing of the value chain to off-takers.  FarmCrowdy was launched in September last year. The company has attracted over 1000 farmers already.

    Akumah said the organisation has acquired   500 hectares of maize farm in Jos, 280 hectares of rice farms in Edo State, Saboginda-Ora, among other investments.

    Another technology is Cellulant  that worked with the Federal Government to launch an e-wallet programme to aid  farmers directly redeem government subsidised seed and fertiliser vouchers from retail shops and in effect double their income.

    While Cellulant is “transforming” itself to a mobile payment company, Agrikore its agric-focused arm, monitors the implementation of agricultural schemes where every farmer can access financial services, productivity enhancing technologies & best practices, access to markets for inputs and access to output markets, all enabled via the mobile phone.

    Co-Founder of Cellulant Corporation, Mr. Bolaji Akinboro, said the technology, which originated from  Nigeria, is the gift of Cellulant to humanity. According to him, the  technology gives small holder farmers access to agricultural inputs of improved varieties/breeds, fertiliser, and agro-chemicals, making it the backbone of increased productivity and profitability of value-added chains.

    After the success they  recorded in Nigeria, Akinboro  said the Afghanistan government gave Cellulant  to introduce the e-wallet system to  its small holder farmers.

    According to him, the  e-wallet system provides a holistic system to link the farmers to agricultural inputs supply chain, finance and markets through integration with mobile network operators, input markets, extensions services, financial service providers, commodity market, and insurance service providers.”

    Since its launch in 2011, Cellulant’s E-wallet has facilitated the distribution of over $1 billion in fertiliser subsidies to farmers under the Growth Enhancement and Support (GES) programme, a component of the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) of the Federal Government of Nigeria.

    “Over and over again we have seen Africans, through various innovations, prove that the impossible is made possible when the needs of the consumers are at the centre of the solutions provided. GES is certainly a testimony to this. Delivery of a programme of this scale and at this speed is a first for Nigeria considering that the entire agro-dealer network had to be rebuilt from the scratch,”said Akinboro.

  • Group blames youth unrest on food scarcity

    Suliman Arigbaba, Executive Secretary, Human and Environmental Development Agenda (HEDA) Resource Centre, a non-governmental organisation, has blamed youth agitations partly on food scarcity in the country.

    Arigbaba who spoke with The Nation in Lagos also observed that a greater number of the youths in the African sub-region were involved in crimes ranging from kidnapping, armed robbery and other vicious crimes chiefly due to insufficient food in the land.

    He spoke on the sideline of the just concluded 2017 World Food day rally organised by the agency on the theme ‘Change the Future of Migration, Invest in Food Security and Rural Development.”

    He said: “The youths are hungry, no hope for tomorrow and when hungry they are hungry life becomes meaningless to them, and malnutrition becomes the order of the day.”

    According to him, the whole idea of this year 2017 commemoration is to take stock about the situation of food in the globe.

    “Our young able bodied men and women; people who should stay here and develop Africa are dying in the Sahara desert because they want to cross over to Europe to get what to eat. The youths are migrating in droves because they have seen that our government at all levels are not genuinely committed to agricultural development” adding the old people who constitute over 70 per cent of the producers of our food needs today are not being taken care of.

    Arigbaba who expressed dissatisfaction at the low rate of budgetary allocation to agriculture in Nigeria, said contrary to the Maputo declaration of 2003 which according to him stated that Nigeria as a signatory to the declaration ought to allocate at least 10 per cent of her yearly budget to agriculture.

    He however, commended the federal government’s ongoing free food for school children, adding when there is good food for everybody there is the tendency they will be healthier.

  • AfDB targets 513 million tonnes of food production by 2025

    AfDB targets 513 million tonnes of food production by 2025

    The African Development Bank (AfDB)’s new initiative  Technologies for African Agriculture initiative will produce 513 million tonnes of additional food across Africa. It will also lift nearly 250 million Africans out of poverty by 2025.

    A statement from the bank said 25 African countries have written letters, confirming their interest and readiness to participate in TAAT, and help transform their agriculture.

    TAAT, according to the bank, will support its Feed Africa Strategy for the continent to eliminate the current massive importation of food and transform its economies by targeting agriculture as a major source of economic diversification and wealth, as well as a powerful engine for job creation.

    The commodities value chains to benefit from this initiative are rice, cassava, pearl millet, sorghum, groundnut, cowpea, livestock, maize, soya bean, yam, cocoa, coffee, cashew, palm oil, horticulture, beans, wheat and fish.

    AfDB President Akinwumi Adesina, at a TAAT side event in Des Moines, Iowa, United States, said: “TAAT was born out of this major consultation and brings together global players in agriculture, the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research, the World Bank, the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations, the International Fund for Agricultural Development, World Food Programme, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, Rockefeller Foundation and national and regional agricultural research systems.

    “It’s the biggest consolidation of efforts to accelerate agriculture technology uptake in Africa. Technology will address the variability and the new pests and diseases that will surely arise with climate change,” he said.

    Adesina explained that TAAT would help break down decades of national boundary-focused seed release systems. Seed companies will have regional business investments, not just national ones, he said. “That will be revolutionary and will open up regional seed industries and markets.”

    TAAT, he explained, is to be implemented through a collectively agreed central delivery platform, coordinated by the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture, with national, regional and international agricultural research centres.

    “TAAT is a transformative and landmark partnership effort. The African Development Bank, World Bank, AGRA, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and the Rockefeller Foundation intend to mobilize US $1 billion to help scale up technologies across Africa.”

    The Director, External Communications, African Region, World Bank Group, Haleh Bridi, described TAAT as a regional technology delivery infrastructure for agriculture, linking countries across agro-ecological zones.

    Bridi stressed that Africa can learn from Asia, which had made “amazing strides” in its agricultural revolution. “This is why we are involved in the TAAT programme,” she said to resounding applause.

    The Director for Agricultural Development at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Nick Austin, said, “Technology obviously evolves the journey to prosperity, the way economies transform and the way small-holder farmers engage.

    “Locally, there are varieties. Locally, there are new technologies and solutions to small-holder farmers. We are in the position to play a key role in bringing the best technologies available and supporting new ways in delivering this to farmers. We are delighted and excited to be part of this initiative.”

    The President of Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), Agnes Kalibata, stressed that African governments should drive technological development in agriculture.

    “What TAAT is going to have to do is work with the governments. We have lots of institutions that are ready for these technologies. We should work with governments to ensure that the technologies are not just ready to work, but become available to their country people. I think that ensuring that the farmers get all the technologies they need is going to be very important,” she said.

  • AfDB to guarantee food production

    AfDB to guarantee food production

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) has developed a new initiative called the Technologies for African Agricultural Transformation (TAAT) initiative – a knowledge- and innovation-based response to the recognized need to scaling up proven technologies across Africa.

    Already, 25 African countries have written letters to the AfDB confirming their interest and readiness to participate in TAAT, and help transform their agriculture.

    It will support AfDB’s Feed Africa Strategy for the continent to eliminate the current massive importation of food and transform its economies by targeting agriculture as a major source of economic diversification and wealth, as well as a powerful engine for job creation.

    The initiative will implement 655 carefully considered actions that should result in almost 513 million tons of additional food production and lift nearly 250 million Africans out of poverty by 2025.

    TAAT will execute bold plans to contribute to a rapid agricultural transformation across Africa through raising agricultural productivity along eight Priority Intervention Areas (PIAs).

     

    “TAAT was born out of this major consultation and brings together global players in agriculture, the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research, the World Bank, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the International Fund for Agricultural Development, World Food Programme, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, Rockefeller Foundation and national and regional agricultural research systems, “ said AfDB President, Akinwumi Adesina, at a TAAT side event at the 2017 World Food Prize in Des Moines, Iowa.

  • Group cautions against food wastage

    Ahead of the World Food Day, a group, Foodclique Support Initiative, has canvassed against open wastage of foods across at parties.

    Its Media Director, Adeola Adetola, said it saddens the heart to see some Nigerians wasting food when millions of people have nothing to eat.

    He said the commitment of FoodClique Support Initiative to ending hunger will be reinforced by support for families and populace battling with one form of hunger or the other.

    Also, the founder of FoodClique Support Initiative, Bolajoko Fadipe, said they would be providing 4,000 meals to people that are socially disadvantaged in Lagos Mainland Local Government Area.

    He urged the government and corporate organisations to help in reducing hunger through deliberate policies and corporate social responsibilities that trickle down to the lower pyramid of social class.

  • Facebook launches U.S. food order, delivery service

    Facebook launches U.S. food order, delivery service

    Facebook Inc on Friday launched a service through which its U.S. users can order food for take-away or delivery directly through its app or website.

    Facebook said it partnered with restaurants including Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc, Jack in the Box Inc, Five Guys and Papa John’s International Inc.

    The company said in a blog post that it signed on food ordering services such as EatStreet, Delivery.com, DoorDash and Olo.

    Users will have to go to the “order food” section on Facebook’s “explore” menu, which will show them a list of participating restaurants in the vicinity through which they can place their order.

    A year back, the company said its U.S. users would be able to order food through restaurants’ Facebook page.

    Facebook’s shares were up nearly one per cent in early trading on Friday after shares of food order and delivery service GrubHub Inc dropped nearly three per cent.

    GrubHub’s shares had also dropped last month after Amazon Restaurants teamed up with Olo, whose network of restaurants include Applebee’s and Chipotle.

  • Experts call for enhanced food security

    Nutrition experts have urged Nigerians to invest in food security to enhance healthy lifestyle and human development.

    They spoke at a workshop held in Lagos by the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) and the Postharvest Alliance for Nutrition (PLAN) said women and children in Africa were under fed due to poor investment.

    The CEO/Director General of the Federal Institute of Industrial Research, Oshodi (FIIRO) Mrs. Gloria Elemo said Nigeria would feed its citizenry adequately, if the private and public sector ensure food security.

    She said food and nutrition security would ensure that vital ingredients for healthy living were sustained, noting that efforts should not be spared to preserved perishable foods for growth.

    She added that Nigeria’s fresh fruits and vegetables production in the North hardly got to the South due to transportation challenges, stressing that public and private sector must redress the situation.

    “In the process moving these items to its consumers about 50 per cent of these fruits and vegetables are lost due to bad packaging and poor postharvest handling.

    “The country depends so much on importation whereas we have the capability to provide food for the citizenry, so if the necessary infrastructure is put in place to totally reduce postharvest losses we would not have the problem of hunger or malnutrition in the country.”

    Elemo said the recent Nigeria Cold Chain Summit (NCCS) in Lagos, was to review strategies to eliminate losses in food storage, calling on the private sector to join hands with government to accomplish the task.

    “We need to work together as a multi-sectorial unit or we will not be able to achieve most of these objectives.

    “With this awareness and advocacy we are hoping people would see the business opportunity and the money that can be made in this area. Many entrepreneurs would see the import from this advocacy we are making of the cold storage system.”

    Echoing similar sentiments, Senior Technical Specialist, GAIN, USA, Roberta Lauretti-Bernhard said efforts were ongoing to respond to countries that have malnutrition as well as post harvest challenges.

    “Postharvest loss is also nutrition loss. So a platform was drawn that is a combination of the private sector, government and institutions that have a strong objective of ending not just postharvest loss but malnutrition.”

    “About two billion people worldwide do not consume enough micron nutrient food that is critical for proper growth and development. Women and children in Southeast Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa are the most vulnerable with over 40 per cent of women suffering from anaemia and 84 per cent of children with Vitamin A deficiency,” she said.

  • Experts challenged on role of food in medicare

    Experts challenged on role of food in medicare

    Medics have been urged to teach their patients the role of food as medicine for combating daily health challenges, especially oxidative stress.

    They were also urged to recommend Jobelyn, the herbal/medicine food, into mainstream healthcare.

    Medical Director, Lindabel Medical Centre, Surulere, Lagos, Dr David Abia-Okon stated this at this year’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) and Scientific Conference of the Lagos Chapter of Association of General and Private Medical Practitioners of Nigeria (AGPMPN) held in Ikeja,

    Speaking on: ‘Introducing Jobelyn- the botanical/medicine food that resolves major ailments’, Abia-Okon, also the Medical Consultant to Health Forever Product Limited, Ikeja, defined oxidative stress as an imbalance between and overproduction of Free radicals, that is Oxidants, Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS), and Reactive Nitrogen Species (RNS) and underproduction of antioxidants which eliminates, suppresses and neutralises Free Radicals (FRs.)

    “This imbalance leads to excess of free radicals which damage important bio-molecules and cells, with potential impact on the whole organism especially the immune system and ageing process,” said  Abia-Okon.

    Citing Jobelyn, a Sorghum Bicolour-based nutritional medicine-food, as a good suppressant of oxidative stress,  Abia-Okon said most people don’t know about antioxidants and the benefits they offer hence, “general practitioners who are the closest to the people among the ranks of medics should encourage them on holistic preventive and healing by using Jobelyn for its antioxidants.  Jobelyn is produced from the polyphenol-rich leaf sheaths of a West African variety of Sorghum bicolor. These free radicals can lead to severe damage to cells; can cause fatal diseases like cancer because they are highly reactive’’.

    “Antioxidants can be natural substances or man-made that helps to delay or prevent cell damage altogether. They can be found in many food categories, including vegetables as well as fruits. But, sometimes it isn’t just enough so Jobelyn brings out to you the goodness of powerful antioxidants in the form of dietary natural supplements –Jobelyn antioxidants. Our body naturally makes some of the antioxidants. And, there are some others that can only be gained from exogenous sources like the dietary supplements.”

    Rooting for Jobelyn as a supplement, Abia-Okon said: “Clinical research has shown that antioxidants from exogenous sources help you to fight and prevent the free radical damage which can lead to cancer if not stopped.

    ‘’Jobelyn Anti-Oxidant is the most powerful, 100 percent natural antioxidant in the world. It has the highest ORAC value 3123µmoleTE/g. Jobelyn is an all-natural powerful antioxidant containing anthocyanins, bioflavonoids, phenolics and other biologically active compounds that help rid the body of harmful free radicals while supporting and improving the immune system’s natural ability to fight diseases and infections.”

    The participants were told that laboratory an analysis from the reputable GMP Laboratory of United States confirmed that Jobelyn contains carbohydrates, protein, fats and oils, vitamins, dietary fibre, and iron which are classified as food.

    In addition, Jobelyn contains other nutrients which could be medicine/food/amino acids and these include selenium, magnesium, potassium, zinc, calcium, many vitamins, like A, B12, C, Omegas 3, 6 and 9 (in the correct ratio),  and more.

    “It is a well-known fact that medical doctors now prescribe multivitamins in addition to drugs. The US’s GMP showed that Jobelyn is rich in natural vitamins and other essential fatty acids and amino acids. The natural Vitamins and compounds in Jobelyn are by far superior to the synthetic ones in the market. This is a compelling reason doctors should prescribe Jobelyn, as it now a recommended adjunct in the treatment of many diseases including- anaemias,  cancer,   post Chemo/Radio-therapy, post dialysis, pre and post surgery, during severe malaria, some liver and kidney diseases, HIV/AIDS,  diabetes, arthritis, cardiovascular and some neurological problems.

    He implored his counterparts to start treat the simple anaemias in the two million Lagosians, using the simplest but most effective botanical medicine-food, Jobelyn, which increases the quality and life span of the RBCs, by suppressing oxidative stress.

    This is because in the last 20 years Health Forever Product (manufacturers of Jobelyn) has carried out research, clinical and laboratory studies in many institutions, such as Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH),  Obafemi Awolowo University Ile-Ife (OAU),  Vivacell Laboratory, (Germany), Brunswick Laboratory (US), and  MD Biosciences (USA) and other research have been conducted at Texas AM University (US), Natural Immune System (NIS) Laboratory (US), Alcorn State University (US).

    So also at University College Ibadan (UI), University of Benin (UNIBEN), GMP Laboratories (USA), PhytoLabs (Germany), Military Hospital Ikoyi, Police Hospital, Falomo, Lagos and at Lindabel Medical Centre, Surulere Lagos.

    The producer and CEO, Health Forever, Otunba Olajuwon Okubena said his company was doing a promo online and giving 10 percent discount.

    “Jobelyn is online at www.jobelyn.com.ng/promotions, for a 10 percent discount and free shipping. Promotional discount available online only,” he said.

    On Jobelyn as an anti-cancer,  Abia-Okon said Jobelyn activates NK cells and NK-T-lymphocytes that destroy cancer cells and cells infected by HIV.

    “It does this by stimulating the activation marker (CD69 found on Human Immune cells according to NIS Lab. US. It activates Monocytes, which later differentiate into Macrophages and Dendritic cells. These cells play major roles in phagocytosis and cancer immunotherapy. Both activities indicate Jobelyn’s strong anti-cancer and anti-HIV properties.

  • Command investigates ‘food poisoning’ in Enugu

    Enugu State Police Command is investigating the alleged food poisoning of a prominent man at a restaurant in Enugu, spokesman Ebere Amaraizu said in a statement in Enugu yesterday.

    Amaraizu, a superintendent of police, said the incident occurred about 4:30 pm. on September 8 in Akwuke, Enugu.

    “It was learnt a man was allegedly served rice and stew at a popular restaurant in Akwuke,” he said.

    Amaraizu said it took the intervention of police operatives to quell the mob, who besieged the restaurant after the incident.

    “But for the intervention of our men, this would have resulted in loss of lives.

    “The command, through its operatives, has started investigation into an alleged food poisoning at Akwuke in Enugu South Local Government,’’ he added.

    According to him, a man is suspected to have poisoned the food.