Tag: sweet potato

  • Promoting sweet potato business

    Promoting sweet potato business

    The Federation of Agricultural Commodities Association of Nigeria (FACAN) is promoting sweet potato flour as a viable business. The project is expected to be a source of income for the unemployed, civil servants and retirees. DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    The Federation of Agricultural Commodities Association of Nigeria (FACAN) is exploring a range of agro produce as part of a strategy to expand exports and boost domestic production.

    It believes there is high demand for sweet potato, melon, mango, pineapple, yam, pepper, pumpkin, herbs and spices.

    Specifically, a project to promote sweet potato flour to serve as cassava substitute is in the offing.

    Sweet potato has many uses.  Not only can it be grown as a food substitute for cassava, it can also serve as a potential source of raw materials for industrial uses and food delicacies.

    In addition, it can be processed into feeds, flour, starch, and other products for local and export markets.

    FACAN National President Dr. Victor Iyama, noted that sweet potato is a nutritious vegetable with a lot of potential.

    Apart from this, he noted that there are business opportunities along the sweet potato value chain; from planting to marketing and processing of the crop.

    In view of this, he  said the  association would promote sweet potatoes processing into flour that would be consumed like garri in  homes  and  restaurants.

    He explained that a lot of Nigerians would be trained on how to process sweet potatoes into flour and a wide variety of value-added offerings for the retail market to enable them  start new business along the value chain.

    One advantage that sweet potato provides for the youth considering agro business, according to him, is that it can be harvested within four months. Secondly, startup capital can be as low as N250,000.

    As Nigerians are encouraged to cut sugar intake and eat more fibre and antioxidants, he said sweet potato is full of vitamins.

    To move this project forward, Iyama said the association would  partner Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN), which has promised to provide its members with  special machines that can process  sweet potatoes  into  flour.

    Working with Iyama in the campaign is the National President, Potato Farmers Association Of Nigeria (POFAN), Hon Bayo Agboola, who   wants the public to take advantage of sweet potatoes’ rich vitamins which cure vitamin A deficiency diseases.

    Besides being rich in Vitamin A content, he noted that sweet potato could help in fighting obesity.

    Agboola, also the Southwest coordinator of FACAN, explained that sweet potato  production  is  financially viable, adding that one could go into commercial  production  of  tubers, vines, storage technologies  and  snack  production.

    With small scale processing facilities, he believes a lot of entrepreneurs can process sweet potato into products that can be used in sauces, vegetable/fruit juices, among others.

    He explained that it could be grown in various soils – from heavy to sandy. However, it thrives best in sandy loam soils rich in organic matter in areas with uniform rainfall and good drainage.

    He explained that the crop could be planted throughout the year but the ideal planting time for best varieties was at the onset of the rainy season or immediately after the rainy season when soil is still moist.

    On the whole, according to him, sweet potato is relatively cheap for households.

    Meanwhile, the demand for sweet potatoes has increased country wide with more entrepreneurs venturing into the business.

  • Tackling hidden hunger with orange flesh sweet potato

    Tackling hidden hunger with orange flesh sweet potato

    Hidden hunger refers to the lack of access to micronutrients critical to proper physical and cognitive development. Food fortification is one of the least expensive and most effective nutrition interventions to tackle it on a huge scale. To achieve this, there is a global campaign to distribute sweet potatoes fortified with integrated essential vitamins and minerals to farmers to plant nationwide. The International Potato Centre is championing the campaign, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    Hidden hunger is one of the biggest global challenges of our time. While farmers are making efforts to address hunger that concerns quantities of food, nutritionists and farmers agree that not much has been done to position agriculture to address micronutrient deficiency which has to do with  food quality.

    For them, it is possible, for example, to eat 2,000 calories of starchy foods – unenriched white flour, or white-fleshed potato – and while one won’t be hungry, one’s body would lack the essential nutrients to properly function.

    According to them, the human body needs iron from food sources to build blood cells; vitamin A to support immune system and vision; iodine for cognitive development and thyroid function. Of particular importance are the essential micronutrients, which the body needs for survival but cannot be produced by itself. These are vitamins and metals such as iron and zinc, among others.

    To solve this problem, experts are advocating food fortification to eradicate preventable diseases and improve lives. Consequently, organisations have also started to enhance the nutrients in staples. Examples of these include intensive breeding to develop high iron content beans and pearl millet; high zinc content wheat and rice; and high vitamin A content maize, cassava, and sweet potato.

    Once seeds for biofortified crops are distributed, farmers are then free to plant, harvest, and save seeds as they deem fit. Doing so ideally provides a long-term solution to combat hidden hunger.

    Presenting the annual lecture of the Agricultural and Rural Management Training Institute (ARMTI), Ilorin, Kwara State, the Country Representative and Technical Advisor, International Potato Center (CIP), Dr Mrs Olapeju Phorbee said sweet potatoes are a common staple – but contain little-to-no Vitamin A. To this end, she said her center, is working extensively to introduce an orange-fleshed sweet potato (OFSP) that is high in vitamin to Nigerian farmers.

    According to her, OFSP has shown to be an extremely rich source of bio-available pro-vitamin A, which is largely retained when the sweet potato is boiled, steamed or roasted.

    The CIP she said it is working with the Federal Government to increase the annual production of potatoes put at 3.9 metric tonnes to boost the economy, create jobs and advance the livelihood of Nigerians.

    According to her, Nigeria is the third largest producer of sweet potato in the world after China and Uganda.

    Though with its potential benefits, Mrs Phorbee, said potato has not been unexploited in the country.

    To this end, she said the centre introduced Reaching Agents for Change (RAC) Project to create new awareness focusing on the promotion of OFSP, which is better nutritionally.

    According to her, the market for it has been successfully demonstrated in the Osun State on the school feeding programme.

    Her words: “We are currently on the pilot phase of OFSP pottage in the school feeding menu.”

    According to her, OFSP has huge potential to improve the wealth of the people especially when the whole value chain is well exploited.

    She said:”It’s short production cycle, adaptability in marginal soil and possibility of irrigation farming makes OFSP a cash crop that can be available all year round in Nigeria for various purposes- household consumption, income generation for the grassroots and small-medium processors, and as an industrial raw material.”

    To date, over 20,000 households have received at least one bundle of OFSP vines to plant and access its roots for either consumption or commercialisation. The vine multipliers are obviously making money in vine sales especially from organisations that are using OFSP in their developmental programmes.

    With the growing level of OFSP awareness in Nigeria, raising more commercial multipliers and farmers at all levels, she noted, is worth considering for employment generation.

    The acting Executive Director, ARMTI, Mr Anthony Njoku said the theme of the 18th Annual Lecture of ARMTI, “Food Security, Employment Generation and Wealth Creation in a Developing Economy: The Role of Orange-fleshed Sweet potato (OFSP) Value Chain Development” demonstrated that the institute as a committed agency of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture And Rural Development (FMARD) for strengthening government policies, especially in agriculture and rural development.

    Having been involved since 2012 with CIP and its Reaching Agents of Change (RAC) project in training experts on Sweet Potato Value Chain Development, Njoku said ARMTI chose the title of its 18th Annual Lecture to bring home, the potential and extra-ordinary importance of the sweetpotato value chain development in Nigeria’s efforts to diversify her economy by making agriculture a business.

    He said the “Jumpstarting Project for OFSP Vine Production” is designed to serve the Kwara and Osun states’ farmers.

    He said the institute has undertaken a development initiative, the Village Alive Development Initiative (VADI) to improve the economic well-being of the communities around its operational area.

    Seven communities are involved, they include Fufu, Falokun-oja, Jimba-oja, Elerinjare, Apa-ola, Igbo-owu and Ilota. 53 operational and productive groups have been formed. Seed fund, totalling N10,000,000, he disclosed  has been disbursed to the seven communities; and savings mobilisation in the communities by June this year  stood at  N6,094,865.

    The total loan disbursed by June, in the communities, he said is N11,092,00, while loan repayment stood at N8,378,020 indicating 75.5 per cent loan repayment rate at the time.

    The participating communities, groups and individuals, he disclosed, operate and manage independent bank accounts in the project.

    The Permanent Secretary, FMARD, Sonny Echono said the ministry was also aware of the laudable strides that ARMTI is making.

    Represented by the Director, Human Resources, Mr Itua Aikhoje, Echono, said VADI implemented in seven communities in ARMTI’s operational area has the potential to spread speedy and sustainable development to the rural communities all over the nation, with time.

    “The Jumpstarting Project for Sweet Potato Vines Multiplication that we have just commissioned this morning, I am told, is a pilot project that is being funded by an international partner of ARMTI, the International Potato Centre. Together with the ToT (train the trainers) on orange-fleshed sweetpotato, these initiatives depict the kind of proactiveness we are talking about.”

    He emphasised the importance of agriculture, adding that it has taken the front burner with the dwindling fortunes of oil.

    By this, he said employment would be generated in abundance and the sector would be seen as a major source of wealth creation for the nation.

    Kwara State governor, Dr Abdulfatah Ahmed, said the state has identified the need to take bold steps to develop the agricultural sector to stimulate food security, job creation, wealth creation, economic growth and rural development. Represented by the Special Adviser to Agriculture and Rural Develoment, Hon Anu Ibiwoye, he said the state government has initiated and incorporated agriculture as a major policy-thrust in its Shared Prosperity Agenda, which is the cardinal platform for driving the economic transformation of the state.

    This has culminated in the development of a comprehensive and all encompassing document known as the “Kwara Agricultural Modernisation Master Plan” (KAMP) to fast track the development of Agriculture not only as a major driver of the economy of the state, but also as a veritable tool for youth employment and empowerment, a tool to arrest social ills such as youth restlessness rurla/urban drift.

    He said the state is a trail blazer in the introduction of mechanisation and public private partnership in agriculture. This, according to him, has been yielding tremendous result in terms of increase in agricultural products output, growing export potentials of some products, and ensuring food security in the state. The tremendous success of the commercial farm project in Shonga, Kwara state, being the first of its kind in Nigeria is a good example of this accomplishment, he added.

    The project has engendered the social development of the rural communities in and around Shonga, provided gainful employment for the rural women and youth population as well as facilitated the provision and development of infrastructure in the rural community leading to increased agricultural output, and a reduced rural-urban drift of our rural population.

    In addition, he said the state has established Kwara Agric Mall, a one stop coordination centre for farmers’ needs, providing access to agric inputs, equipments, finance, extension and markets.

    According to him, Kwara State is in the rice producing belt of the country with about 400,000 hectares of land available for rice production. The annual rice production figure for the state, he  said  is estimated at 120,000 metric tonnes. Efforts are being made to increase it through lead farmers under the off-takers Demand Driven Agriculture (ODDA) programme, he assured.

  • How sweet potato can  prevent malnutrition in  children —Research

    How sweet potato can prevent malnutrition in children —Research

    NIGERIA has one of the highest rates of infant mortality in the world. One in seven children dies before their fifth birthday, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). More worrisome is the fact that 13 per cent of Nigeria children are malnourished. This informed the assertion of the United Nations Standing Committee on Nutrition that malnutrition is the largest contributor to non-communicable diseases in the world. These diseases can affect the brain,  the health and the respiratory system, but the most common are gastrointestinal disease.

    Against this backdrop, the first 1,000 days of a child are crucial because this period determines what a child may likely become in the future. Therefore, no normal child can grow into a healthy, strong and happy adult without the intake of dietary diversification, The Nation gathered.

    The cognitive and physical damage caused by malnutrition during the 1,000-day-window between a woman’s pregnancy and her child’s second birthday, is severe and often irreversible, with profound consequences for a child’s future.

    Buttressing this assertion, Prof. Ngozi Nnam, the President, Nutrition Society of Nigeria, pointed out that this period  is when the physical and mental development of the child is developed to achieve full potential with window of opportunity which can have a profound impact on a child’s ability to grow, learn and rise out of poverty is formed.

    Nutrition experts say breastfeeding initiated immediately after birth and continued until two years with appropriate complementary feeding has both short and long-term impact on the health and nutrition of a child. But the big question is, how many nursing mothers can afford to breast feed her baby for two years in Nigeria of nowadays?

    However,  in order to bridge the wide gap of nourishing food that will discourage malnutrition caused by poverty and penury, a recipe in terms of appropriate complementary nutrition for a Nigerian child has surfaced in Orange Fleshed  Sweet Potato (OFSP), The Nation authoritatively gathered.

    In a fact-finding mission to verify the nutrient value in sweet potato in general and OFSP in particular, this reporter was at the National Root Crops Research  Institute at Umudike, Abia State, Federal Polytechnic, Offa, Kwara State and the International Potato Centre, Abuja.

    Since sweet potato is one of the root crops that can grow well virtually in all the states of the federation, according to experts, if it is well harnessed and made available as a daily menu to rural communities, with time, malnutrition in Nigerian child will become history.

    54, 55 SWEET POTATO 14-3-15.Speaking to The Nation about the nutrient value of sweet potato, one of the notable sweet potato breeders in the country and a researcher at the National Root Crops Research Institute, Umudike, Abia State, Mr. Solomon Oluwafemi Afuape, said that the nutrient value in sweet potato is so enormous that if it is well tapped, Nigerian child will not suffer from malnutrition again.

    Afuape, who took this reporter round the sweet potato research field at Umudike, said: “Whether it is white, purple, yellow or orange, every sweet potato is a bundle of vitamins and minerals. It contains Vitamin B6, Vitamin C and other minerals. But the OFSP is orange in colour and tastes like carrots; it is so because of the carotenoid it contains.  It has beta- carotene in abundance. This is what our body converts to Vitamin A.”

    According to him, the beta- carotene helps the brain of a child to develop; it also assists in boosting the immune system so that the body of the child can fight diseases better. “It also has in abundance what smoothens the skin; in fact, it is the artificial one that the women are robbing on the face to make it smooth. It is also a neutraliser of some substance inhaled to the body and makes it harmless. It makes the skin to  flourish and be alive.”

    The researcher pointed out that” the richness of Vitamin A in beta-carotene also makes the eye to be sharper as we grow. Someone who eats sweet potato regularly does not have chances of having cancer-related diseases.”

    He explained that the latest varieties of OFSP that are been duplicated by some dedicated farmers in the country are ‘Mother delight and King J varieties’.

    The Nation intensive investigations revealed that this vitamin if present in a child’s food shortly before weaning, will go a long way to make the baby healthy and full of life with a strong immune system built round her against diseases.

    Speaking in the same vein, a nutritionist at Garki Hospital, Abuja, Miss Yemisi Olowookere, underscoring the importance of sweet potato to nursing mothers advised them to include it in their daily menu because it is good for cardiovascular health.

    Olowookere explains that potato is a rich source of flavonoid anti-oxidants, vitamins, minerals, and dietary fibre that are essential for optimal health.

    According to her, the tuber contains no saturated fats or cholesterol and it is a rich source of dietary fibre, anti-oxidants, vitamins, and minerals. “Potatoes are good source of Vitamin C, it helps ward off cold and flu viruses as well as bone and tooth formation, digestion, and blood cell formation.”

    The nutritionist pointed out that sweet potato helps to accelerate wound healing, produces collagen which helps maintain skin’s youthful elasticity and is essential in helping us cope with stress. “It even appears to help protect our body against toxins that may be linked to cancer.”

    She explained that sweet potato also contains Vitamin D which is critical for immune system and overall health. “Vitamin D plays an important role in our energy level, moods, and helps to build healthy bones, heart nerves, skin and teeth and it supports the thyroid gland.”

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that most nursing mothers could not afford giving their children the needed nutrients due to poverty. Malnutrition, according to experts, is one of the world’s most serious but least addressed problems. It claims the lives of three million children each year, yet it is almost entirely preventable. Close to 200 million children suffer from chronic nutritional deprivation that leaves them permanently stunted -unable to fulfill their genetic potential to grow and thrive – and keeps families, communities and countries locked in a cycle of hunger and poverty.

    More worrisome and pathetic  is the fact that  majority of mothers do not practise breast feeding because they are not fully aware of the benefits of breastfeeding and more importantly, they do not understand the long-term adverse impact of non-breast feeding of their babies. The few that are aware are carried away by the hustling and bustling of economic survival at the expense of their kids.

    Perhaps  against this backdrop, last year November 2014 , over 190 governments gathered in Rome for the International Conference on Nutrition to discuss and advance policy options and strategies to improve food system and people’s diet in order to more effectively address the world’s major nutrition challenges.

    The conference  that launched the first ever Global Nutrition Report, which presents a comprehensive view of global and country- level progress against malnutrition, regretted that one out of every two people on the planet is undernourished, micronutrient deficient, obese or a combination of all three, adding that all hands should be on deck to address the issue.

    The Nation gathered that the importance the country attached to the OFSP made her to go all out to exploit all its wealth and health benefits by naming the project as Rainbow Project, which incorporated all stakeholders in sweet potato value chain, the potato farmers, researchers and processors.

    Speaking to this reporter on the objective of the Rainbow Project, the Project leader, Dr Olapeju Phorbee, said the idea behind the project was centered on health and wealth creation.”The project was to provide the needed Vitamin A which is deficient in pregnant women and children in the country and make it available to them at their door step in terms of OFSP.”

    According to her, the OFSP has been tested, tasted and found suitable, adding that there is a pilot scheme which targeted some selected state where vines are duplicated. These include Ebonyi, Osun, Kaduna, Benue, Kwara, Nasarawa/FCT.

    Phorbee explained that OFSP is rich in Vitamin A, which is particularly good for a child in its 1,000 days of its existence. It will give the baby a high immune system that will assist to wade off diseases which children are facing at this crucial period.”

    She pointed out that due to the high nutrition value in OFSP, the project keyed into the Osun State government school feeding project, which the state is operating to give the children the needed nutrition at such a tender age so that they will be able to build high immune system in their body.

    “We went round the state to educate and train the food vendors the need to include OFSP in the daily menu of the school feeding system; this is a right step at the right time. This will give the opportunity to the school children the right diet that will hasten their growth and discourage all these preventable diseases.

    She said that by the time the project has a complete circle, “we would be able to produce other food items from the OFSP like potato garri, flour, bread and potato chips. This will go to a greater length to assist Nigerian children to grow and have sound health.”

    The project leader, who encourages other states in the country to duplicate what is going on in Osun, said this will give opportunity to eradicate malnutrition which is ravaging the lives of Nigerian school children.

    Corroborating Phorbee’s assertion on the importance of sweet potato, Mr. Emmanuel Ajayi, a food scientist, said “Sweet potatoes are naturally sweet-tasting, but their natural sugars are slowly released into the bloodstream, helping to ensure a balanced and regular source of energy.”

    Ajayi said it is not just sweet to the taste  but the value is one of the highest among the root-vegetables categories, adding that sweet potatoes are a good source of magnesium, which is the relaxation and anti-stress mineral.

    He explained: “Sweet potatoes help in red and white blood cell production, resistance to stress, proper immune functioning and the metabolising of protein, among other things.”

    According to him, there are other products which sweet potato can be used for and which can be duplicated in a commercial purpose and it will be available to all households at giveaway prices, “such products are potato bread, chips, cake, flour, among others.”

    As a processor, who had done a lot of extensive research on what sweet potato could be turned to, Mr. Abraham Oyeyemi Idowu, the Head of Department of Food Science, the Federal Polytechnics Offa, Kwara State, said sweet potato is all rounder in terms of nutrient provision.

    Idowu, who said that the school had been working on sweet potato since 2005, noted that it was the former Rector of the school, Dr Rasak Bello, who saw it in China and challenged the department to produce potato bread with only 10 per cent of wheat. Since we have sweet potato production in Offa and its environ, we went into action.

    He said from that experiment in 2005, the school has not rested on its oars to research deep into what sweet potato can be turned to.”The recent variety called OFSP is so rich in Vitamins A,  C, and D that it was used to produce a lot of products   like potato flour (pie, scot egg chips) juice, jam,  potato corn vita, OFSP sorghum-vita, golden corn and custard at the polytechnics.

    According to him, if all these products are duplicated and commercialised, it will assist nursing mothers and their babies to have good and nourishing intake.”The issue of our children developing a disease like malnutrition will be a thing of the past.”

    He said if the school feeding project that is currently going on in Osun State could be duplicated throughout the country, the project might have succeeded in providing the necessary diet to millions of Nigerians children and could have saved the country from children diseases and stunted growth among our children.

    Admonishing the importance of nutrient inherent in sweet potato, Idowu noted that about 142 sweet potato vendors in Offa were given training on OFSP and how they can package it better and make it available to some of the school children in the vicinity, adding that if the state can also imbibe the school feeding system, it would go a long way to make nourishing diet available to children of school age and avoid future diseases.

  • How sweet potato can  prevent malnutrition in  children —New research

    How sweet potato can prevent malnutrition in children —New research

    NIGERIA has one of the highest rates of infant mortality in the world. One in seven children dies before their fifth birthday, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). More worrisome is the fact that 13 per cent of Nigeria children are malnourished. This informed the assertion of the United Nations Standing Committee on Nutrition that malnutrition is the largest contributor to non-communicable diseases in the world. These diseases can affect the brain,  the health and the respiratory system, but the most common are gastrointestinal disease.

    Against this backdrop, the first 1,000 days of a child are crucial because this period determines what a child may likely become in the future. Therefore, no normal child can grow into a healthy, strong and happy adult without the intake of dietary diversification, The Nation gathered.

    The cognitive and physical damage caused by malnutrition during the 1,000-day-window between a woman’s pregnancy and her child’s second birthday, is severe and often irreversible, with profound consequences for a child’s future.

    Buttressing this assertion, Prof. Ngozi Nnam, the President, Nutrition Society of Nigeria, pointed out that this period  is when the physical and mental development of the child is developed to achieve full potential with window of opportunity which can have a profound impact on a child’s ability to grow, learn and rise out of poverty is formed.

    Nutrition experts say breastfeeding initiated immediately after birth and continued until two years with appropriate complementary feeding has both short and long-term impact on the health and nutrition of a child. But the big question is, how many nursing mothers can afford to breast feed her baby for two years in Nigeria of nowadays?

    However,  in order to bridge the wide gap of nourishing food that will discourage malnutrition caused by poverty and penury, a recipe in terms of appropriate complementary nutrition for a Nigerian child has surfaced in Orange Fleshed  Sweet Potato (OFSP), The Nation authoritatively gathered.

    In a fact-finding mission to verify the nutrient value in sweet potato in general and OFSP in particular, this reporter was at the National Root Crops Research  Institute at Umudike, Abia State, Federal Polytechnic, Offa, Kwara State and the International Potato Centre, Abuja.

    Since sweet potato is one of the root crops that can grow well virtually in all the states of the federation, according to experts, if it is well harnessed and made available as a daily menu to rural communities, with time, malnutrition in Nigerian child will become history.

    Speaking to The Nation about the nutrient value of sweet potato, one of the notable sweet potato breeders in the country and a researcher at the National Root Crops Research Institute, Umudike, Abia State, Mr. Solomon Oluwafemi Afuape, said that the nutrient value in sweet potato is so enormous that if it is well tapped, Nigerian child will not suffer from malnutrition again.

    Afuape, who took this reporter round the sweet potato research field at Umudike, said: “Whether it is white, purple, yellow or orange, every sweet potato is a bundle of vitamins and minerals. It contains Vitamin B6, Vitamin C and other minerals. But the OFSP is orange in colour and tastes like carrots; it is so because of the carotenoid it contains.  It has beta- carotene in abundance. This is what our body converts to Vitamin A.”

    According to him, the beta- carotene helps the brain of a child to develop; it also assists in boosting the immune system so that the body of the child can fight diseases better. “It also has in abundance what smoothens the skin; in fact, it is the artificial one that the women are robbing on the face to make it smooth. It is also a neutraliser of some substance inhaled to the body and makes it harmless. It makes the skin to  flourish and be alive.”

    The researcher pointed out that” the richness of Vitamin A in beta-carotene also makes the eye to be sharper as we grow. Someone who eats sweet potato regularly does not have chances of having cancer-related diseases.”

    He explained that the latest varieties of OFSP that are been duplicated by some dedicated farmers in the country are ‘Mother delight and King J varieties’.

    The Nation intensive investigations revealed that this vitamin if present in a child’s food shortly before weaning, will go a long way to make the baby healthy and full of life with a strong immune system built round her against diseases.

    Speaking in the same vein, a nutritionist at Garki Hospital, Abuja, Miss Yemisi Olowookere, underscoring the importance of sweet potato to nursing mothers advised them to include it in their daily menu because it is good for cardiovascular health.

    Olowookere explains that potato is a rich source of flavonoid anti-oxidants, vitamins, minerals, and dietary fibre that are essential for optimal health.

    According to her, the tuber contains no saturated fats or cholesterol and it is a rich source of dietary fibre, anti-oxidants, vitamins, and minerals. “Potatoes are good source of Vitamin C, it helps ward off cold and flu viruses as well as bone and tooth formation, digestion, and blood cell formation.”

    The nutritionist pointed out that sweet potato helps to accelerate wound healing, produces collagen which helps maintain skin’s youthful elasticity and is essential in helping us cope with stress. “It even appears to help protect our body against toxins that may be linked to cancer.”

    She explained that sweet potato also contains Vitamin D which is critical for immune system and overall health. “Vitamin D plays an important role in our energy level, moods, and helps to build healthy bones, heart nerves, skin and teeth and it supports the thyroid gland.”

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that most nursing mothers could not afford giving their children the needed nutrients due to poverty. Malnutrition, according to experts, is one of the world’s most serious but least addressed problems. It claims the lives of three million children each year, yet it is almost entirely preventable. Close to 200 million children suffer from chronic nutritional deprivation that leaves them permanently stunted -unable to fulfill their genetic potential to grow and thrive – and keeps families, communities and countries locked in a cycle of hunger and poverty.

    More worrisome and pathetic  is the fact that  majority of mothers do not practise breast feeding because they are not fully aware of the benefits of breastfeeding and more importantly, they do not understand the long-term adverse impact of non-breast feeding of their babies. The few that are aware are carried away by the hustling and bustling of economic survival at the expense of their kids.

    Perhaps  against this backdrop, last year November 2014 , over 190 governments gathered in Rome for the International Conference on Nutrition to discuss and advance policy options and strategies to improve food system and people’s diet in order to more effectively address the world’s major nutrition challenges.

    The conference  that launched the first ever Global Nutrition Report, which presents a comprehensive view of global and country- level progress against malnutrition, regretted that one out of every two people on the planet is undernourished, micronutrient deficient, obese or a combination of all three, adding that all hands should be on deck to address the issue.

    The Nation gathered that the importance the country attached to the OFSP made her to go all out to exploit all its wealth and health benefits by naming the project as Rainbow Project, which incorporated all stakeholders in sweet potato value chain, the potato farmers, researchers and processors.

    Speaking to this reporter on the objective of the Rainbow Project, the Project leader, Dr Olapeju Phorbee, said the idea behind the project was centered on health and wealth creation.”The project was to provide the needed Vitamin A which is deficient in pregnant women and children in the country and make it available to them at their door step in terms of OFSP.”

    According to her, the OFSP has been tested, tasted and found suitable, adding that there is a pilot scheme which targeted some selected state where vines are duplicated. These include Ebonyi, Osun, Kaduna, Benue, Kwara, Nasarawa/FCT.

    Phorbee explained that OFSP is rich in Vitamin A, which is particularly good for a child in its 1,000 days of its existence. It will give the baby a high immune system that will assist to wade off diseases which children are facing at this crucial period.”

    She pointed out that due to the high nutrition value in OFSP, the project keyed into the Osun State government school feeding project, which the state is operating to give the children the needed nutrition at such a tender age so that they will be able to build high immune system in their body.

    “We went round the state to educate and train the food vendors the need to include OFSP in the daily menu of the school feeding system; this is a right step at the right time. This will give the opportunity to the school children the right diet that will hasten their growth and discourage all these preventable diseases.

    She said that by the time the project has a complete circle, “we would be able to produce other food items from the OFSP like potato garri, flour, bread and potato chips. This will go to a greater length to assist Nigerian children to grow and have sound health.”

    The project leader, who encourages other states in the country to duplicate what is going on in Osun, said this will give opportunity to eradicate malnutrition which is ravaging the lives of Nigerian school children.

    Corroborating Phorbee’s assertion on the importance of sweet potato, Mr. Emmanuel Ajayi, a food scientist, said “Sweet potatoes are naturally sweet-tasting, but their natural sugars are slowly released into the bloodstream, helping to ensure a balanced and regular source of energy.”

    Ajayi said it is not just sweet to the taste  but the value is one of the highest among the root-vegetables categories, adding that sweet potatoes are a good source of magnesium, which is the relaxation and anti-stress mineral.

    He explained: “Sweet potatoes help in red and white blood cell production, resistance to stress, proper immune functioning and the metabolising of protein, among other things.”

    According to him, there are other products which sweet potato can be used for and which can be duplicated in a commercial purpose and it will be available to all households at giveaway prices, “such products are potato bread, chips, cake, flour, among others.”

    As a processor, who had done a lot of extensive research on what sweet potato could be turned to, Mr. Abraham Oyeyemi Idowu, the Head of Department of Food Science, the Federal Polytechnics Offa, Kwara State, said sweet potato is all rounder in terms of nutrient provision.

    Idowu, who said that the school had been working on sweet potato since 2005, noted that it was the former Rector of the school, Dr Rasak Bello, who saw it in China and challenged the department to produce potato bread with only 10 per cent of wheat. Since we have sweet potato production in Offa and its environ, we went into action.

    He said from that experiment in 2005, the school has not rested on its oars to research deep into what sweet potato can be turned to.”The recent variety called OFSP is so rich in Vitamins A,  C, and D that it was used to produce a lot of products   like potato flour (pie, scot egg chips) juice, jam,  potato corn vita, OFSP sorghum-vita, golden corn and custard at the polytechnics.

    According to him, if all these products are duplicated and commercialised, it will assist nursing mothers and their babies to have good and nourishing intake.”The issue of our children developing a disease like malnutrition will be a thing of the past.”

    He said if the school feeding project that is currently going on in Osun State could be duplicated throughout the country, the project might have succeeded in providing the necessary diet to millions of Nigerians children and could have saved the country from children diseases and stunted growth among our children.

    Admonishing the importance of nutrient inherent in sweet potato, Idowu noted that about 142 sweet potato vendors in Offa were given training on OFSP and how they can package it better and make it available to some of the school children in the vicinity, adding that if the state can also imbibe the school feeding system, it would go a long way to make nourishing diet available to children of school age and avoid future diseases.

    62, 63 SWEET POTATO.NIGERIA has one of the highest rates of infant mortality in the world. One in seven children dies before their fifth birthday, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). More worrisome is the fact that 13 per cent of Nigeria children are malnourished. This informed the assertion of the United Nations Standing Committee on Nutrition that malnutrition is the largest contributor to non-communicable diseases in the world. These diseases can affect the brain,  the health and the respiratory system, but the most common are gastrointestinal disease.

    Against this backdrop, the first 1,000 days of a child are crucial because this period determines what a child may likely become in the future. Therefore, no normal child can grow into a healthy, strong and happy adult without the intake of dietary diversification, The Nation gathered.

    The cognitive and physical damage caused by malnutrition during the 1,000-day-window between a woman’s pregnancy and her child’s second birthday, is severe and often irreversible, with profound consequences for a child’s future.

    Buttressing this assertion, Prof. Ngozi Nnam, the President, Nutrition Society of Nigeria, pointed out that this period  is when the physical and mental development of the child is developed to achieve full potential with window of opportunity which can have a profound impact on a child’s ability to grow, learn and rise out of poverty is formed.

    Nutrition experts say breastfeeding initiated immediately after birth and continued until two years with appropriate complementary feeding has both short and long-term impact on the health and nutrition of a child. But the big question is, how many nursing mothers can afford to breast feed her baby for two years in Nigeria of nowadays?

    However,  in order to bridge the wide gap of nourishing food that will discourage malnutrition caused by poverty and penury, a recipe in terms of appropriate complementary nutrition for a Nigerian child has surfaced in Orange Fleshed  Sweet Potato (OFSP), The Nation authoritatively gathered.

    In a fact-finding mission to verify the nutrient value in sweet potato in general and OFSP in particular, this reporter was at the National Root Crops Research  Institute at Umudike, Abia State, Federal Polytechnic, Offa, Kwara State and the International Potato Centre, Abuja.

    Since sweet potato is one of the root crops that can grow well virtually in all the states of the federation, according to experts, if it is well harnessed and made available as a daily menu to rural communities, with time, malnutrition in Nigerian child will become history.

    Speaking to The Nation about the nutrient value of sweet potato, one of the notable sweet potato breeders in the country and a researcher at the National Root Crops Research Institute, Umudike, Abia State, Mr. Solomon Oluwafemi Afuape, said that the nutrient value in sweet potato is so enormous that if it is well tapped, Nigerian child will not suffer from malnutrition again.

    Afuape, who took this reporter round the sweet potato research field at Umudike, said: “Whether it is white, purple, yellow or orange, every sweet potato is a bundle of vitamins and minerals. It contains Vitamin B6, Vitamin C and other minerals. But the OFSP is orange in colour and tastes like carrots; it is so because of the carotenoid it contains.  It has beta- carotene in abundance. This is what our body converts to Vitamin A.”

    According to him, the beta- carotene helps the brain of a child to develop; it also assists in boosting the immune system so that the body of the child can fight diseases better. “It also has in abundance what smoothens the skin; in fact, it is the artificial one that the women are robbing on the face to make it smooth. It is also a neutraliser of some substance inhaled to the body and makes it harmless. It makes the skin to  flourish and be alive.”

    The researcher pointed out that” the richness of Vitamin A in beta-carotene also makes the eye to be sharper as we grow. Someone who eats sweet potato regularly does not have chances of having cancer-related diseases.”

    He explained that the latest varieties of OFSP that are been duplicated by some dedicated farmers in the country are ‘Mother delight and King J varieties’.

    The Nation intensive investigations revealed that this vitamin if present in a child’s food shortly before weaning, will go a long way to make the baby healthy and full of life with a strong immune system built round her against diseases.

    Speaking in the same vein, a nutritionist at Garki Hospital, Abuja, Miss Yemisi Olowookere, underscoring the importance of sweet potato to nursing mothers advised them to include it in their daily menu because it is good for cardiovascular health.

    Olowookere explains that potato is a rich source of flavonoid anti-oxidants, vitamins, minerals, and dietary fibre that are essential for optimal health.

    According to her, the tuber contains no saturated fats or cholesterol and it is a rich source of dietary fibre, anti-oxidants, vitamins, and minerals. “Potatoes are good source of Vitamin C, it helps ward off cold and flu viruses as well as bone and tooth formation, digestion, and blood cell formation.”

    The nutritionist pointed out that sweet potato helps to accelerate wound healing, produces collagen which helps maintain skin’s youthful elasticity and is essential in helping us cope with stress. “It even appears to help protect our body against toxins that may be linked to cancer.”

    She explained that sweet potato also contains Vitamin D which is critical for immune system and overall health. “Vitamin D plays an important role in our energy level, moods, and helps to build healthy bones, heart nerves, skin and teeth and it supports the thyroid gland.”

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that most nursing mothers could not afford giving their children the needed nutrients due to poverty. Malnutrition, according to experts, is one of the world’s most serious but least addressed problems. It claims the lives of three million children each year, yet it is almost entirely preventable. Close to 200 million children suffer from chronic nutritional deprivation that leaves them permanently stunted -unable to fulfill their genetic potential to grow and thrive – and keeps families, communities and countries locked in a cycle of hunger and poverty.

    More worrisome and pathetic  is the fact that  majority of mothers do not practise breast feeding because they are not fully aware of the benefits of breastfeeding and more importantly, they do not understand the long-term adverse impact of non-breast feeding of their babies. The few that are aware are carried away by the hustling and bustling of economic survival at the expense of their kids.

    Perhaps  against this backdrop, last year November 2014 , over 190 governments gathered in Rome for the International Conference on Nutrition to discuss and advance policy options and strategies to improve food system and people’s diet in order to more effectively address the world’s major nutrition challenges.

    The conference  that launched the first ever Global Nutrition Report, which presents a comprehensive view of global and country- level progress against malnutrition, regretted that one out of every two people on the planet is undernourished, micronutrient deficient, obese or a combination of all three, adding that all hands should be on deck to address the issue.

    The Nation gathered that the importance the country attached to the OFSP made her to go all out to exploit all its wealth and health benefits by naming the project as Rainbow Project, which incorporated all stakeholders in sweet potato value chain, the potato farmers, researchers and processors.

    Speaking to this reporter on the objective of the Rainbow Project, the Project leader, Dr Olapeju Phorbee, said the idea behind the project was centered on health and wealth creation.”The project was to provide the needed Vitamin A which is deficient in pregnant women and children in the country and make it available to them at their door step in terms of OFSP.”

    According to her, the OFSP has been tested, tasted and found suitable, adding that there is a pilot scheme which targeted some selected state where vines are duplicated. These include Ebonyi, Osun, Kaduna, Benue, Kwara, Nasarawa/FCT.

    Phorbee explained that OFSP is rich in Vitamin A, which is particularly good for a child in its 1,000 days of its existence. It will give the baby a high immune system that will assist to wade off diseases which children are facing at this crucial period.”

    She pointed out that due to the high nutrition value in OFSP, the project keyed into the Osun State government school feeding project, which the state is operating to give the children the needed nutrition at such a tender age so that they will be able to build high immune system in their body.

    “We went round the state to educate and train the food vendors the need to include OFSP in the daily menu of the school feeding system; this is a right step at the right time. This will give the opportunity to the school children the right diet that will hasten their growth and discourage all these preventable diseases.

    She said that by the time the project has a complete circle, “we would be able to produce other food items from the OFSP like potato garri, flour, bread and potato chips. This will go to a greater length to assist Nigerian children to grow and have sound health.”

    The project leader, who encourages other states in the country to duplicate what is going on in Osun, said this will give opportunity to eradicate malnutrition which is ravaging the lives of Nigerian school children.

    Corroborating Phorbee’s assertion on the importance of sweet potato, Mr. Emmanuel Ajayi, a food scientist, said “Sweet potatoes are naturally sweet-tasting, but their natural sugars are slowly released into the bloodstream, helping to ensure a balanced and regular source of energy.”

    Ajayi said it is not just sweet to the taste  but the value is one of the highest among the root-vegetables categories, adding that sweet potatoes are a good source of magnesium, which is the relaxation and anti-stress mineral.

    He explained: “Sweet potatoes help in red and white blood cell production, resistance to stress, proper immune functioning and the metabolising of protein, among other things.”

    According to him, there are other products which sweet potato can be used for and which can be duplicated in a commercial purpose and it will be available to all households at giveaway prices, “such products are potato bread, chips, cake, flour, among others.”

    As a processor, who had done a lot of extensive research on what sweet potato could be turned to, Mr. Abraham Oyeyemi Idowu, the Head of Department of Food Science, the Federal Polytechnics Offa, Kwara State, said sweet potato is all rounder in terms of nutrient provision.

    Idowu, who said that the school had been working on sweet potato since 2005, noted that it was the former Rector of the school, Dr Rasak Bello, who saw it in China and challenged the department to produce potato bread with only 10 per cent of wheat. Since we have sweet potato production in Offa and its environ, we went into action.

    He said from that experiment in 2005, the school has not rested on its oars to research deep into what sweet potato can be turned to.”The recent variety called OFSP is so rich in Vitamins A,  C, and D that it was used to produce a lot of products   like potato flour (pie, scot egg chips) juice, jam,  potato corn vita, OFSP sorghum-vita, golden corn and custard at the polytechnics.

    According to him, if all these products are duplicated and commercialised, it will assist nursing mothers and their babies to have good and nourishing intake.”The issue of our children developing a disease like malnutrition will be a thing of the past.”

    He said if the school feeding project that is currently going on in Osun State could be duplicated throughout the country, the project might have succeeded in providing the necessary diet to millions of Nigerians children and could have saved the country from children diseases and stunted growth among our children.

    Admonishing the importance of nutrient inherent in sweet potato, Idowu noted that about 142 sweet potato vendors in Offa were given training on OFSP and how they can package it better and make it available to some of the school children in the vicinity, adding that if the state can also imbibe the school feeding system, it would go a long way to make nourishing diet available to children of school age and avoid future diseases.

    NIGERIA has one of the highest rates of infant mortality in the world. One in seven children dies before their fifth birthday, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). More worrisome is the fact that 13 per cent of Nigeria children are malnourished. This informed the assertion of the United Nations Standing Committee on Nutrition that malnutrition is the largest contributor to non-communicable diseases in the world. These diseases can affect the brain,  the health and the respiratory system, but the most common are gastrointestinal disease.

    Against this backdrop, the first 1,000 days of a child are crucial because this period determines what a child may likely become in the future. Therefore, no normal child can grow into a healthy, strong and happy adult without the intake of dietary diversification, The Nation gathered.

    The cognitive and physical damage caused by malnutrition during the 1,000-day-window between a woman’s pregnancy and her child’s second birthday, is severe and often irreversible, with profound consequences for a child’s future.

    Buttressing this assertion, Prof. Ngozi Nnam, the President, Nutrition Society of Nigeria, pointed out that this period  is when the physical and mental development of the child is developed to achieve full potential with window of opportunity which can have a profound impact on a child’s ability to grow, learn and rise out of poverty is formed.

    Nutrition experts say breastfeeding initiated immediately after birth and continued until two years with appropriate complementary feeding has both short and long-term impact on the health and nutrition of a child. But the big question is, how many nursing mothers can afford to breast feed her baby for two years in Nigeria of nowadays?

    However,  in order to bridge the wide gap of nourishing food that will discourage malnutrition caused by poverty and penury, a recipe in terms of appropriate complementary nutrition for a Nigerian child has surfaced in Orange Fleshed  Sweet Potato (OFSP), The Nation authoritatively gathered.

    In a fact-finding mission to verify the nutrient value in sweet potato in general and OFSP in particular, this reporter was at the National Root Crops Research  Institute at Umudike, Abia State, Federal Polytechnic, Offa, Kwara State and the International Potato Centre, Abuja.

    Since sweet potato is one of the root crops that can grow well virtually in all the states of the federation, according to experts, if it is well harnessed and made available as a daily menu to rural communities, with time, malnutrition in Nigerian child will become history.

    Speaking to The Nation about the nutrient value of sweet potato, one of the notable sweet potato breeders in the country and a researcher at the National Root Crops Research Institute, Umudike, Abia State, Mr. Solomon Oluwafemi Afuape, said that the nutrient value in sweet potato is so enormous that if it is well tapped, Nigerian child will not suffer from malnutrition again.

    Afuape, who took this reporter round the sweet potato research field at Umudike, said: “Whether it is white, purple, yellow or orange, every sweet potato is a bundle of vitamins and minerals. It contains Vitamin B6, Vitamin C and other minerals. But the OFSP is orange in colour and tastes like carrots; it is so because of the carotenoid it contains.  It has beta- carotene in abundance. This is what our body converts to Vitamin A.”

    According to him, the beta- carotene helps the brain of a child to develop; it also assists in boosting the immune system so that the body of the child can fight diseases better. “It also has in abundance what smoothens the skin; in fact, it is the artificial one that the women are robbing on the face to make it smooth. It is also a neutraliser of some substance inhaled to the body and makes it harmless. It makes the skin to  flourish and be alive.”

    The researcher pointed out that” the richness of Vitamin A in beta-carotene also makes the eye to be sharper as we grow. Someone who eats sweet potato regularly does not have chances of having cancer-related diseases.”

    He explained that the latest varieties of OFSP that are been duplicated by some dedicated farmers in the country are ‘Mother delight and King J varieties’.

    The Nation intensive investigations revealed that this vitamin if present in a child’s food shortly before weaning, will go a long way to make the baby healthy and full of life with a strong immune system built round her against diseases.

    Speaking in the same vein, a nutritionist at Garki Hospital, Abuja, Miss Yemisi Olowookere, underscoring the importance of sweet potato to nursing mothers advised them to include it in their daily menu because it is good for cardiovascular health.

    Olowookere explains that potato is a rich source of flavonoid anti-oxidants, vitamins, minerals, and dietary fibre that are essential for optimal health.

    According to her, the tuber contains no saturated fats or cholesterol and it is a rich source of dietary fibre, anti-oxidants, vitamins, and minerals. “Potatoes are good source of Vitamin C, it helps ward off cold and flu viruses as well as bone and tooth formation, digestion, and blood cell formation.”

    The nutritionist pointed out that sweet potato helps to accelerate wound healing, produces collagen which helps maintain skin’s youthful elasticity and is essential in helping us cope with stress. “It even appears to help protect our body against toxins that may be linked to cancer.”

    She explained that sweet potato also contains Vitamin D which is critical for immune system and overall health. “Vitamin D plays an important role in our energy level, moods, and helps to build healthy bones, heart nerves, skin and teeth and it supports the thyroid gland.”

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that most nursing mothers could not afford giving their children the needed nutrients due to poverty. Malnutrition, according to experts, is one of the world’s most serious but least addressed problems. It claims the lives of three million children each year, yet it is almost entirely preventable. Close to 200 million children suffer from chronic nutritional deprivation that leaves them permanently stunted -unable to fulfill their genetic potential to grow and thrive – and keeps families, communities and countries locked in a cycle of hunger and poverty.

    More worrisome and pathetic  is the fact that  majority of mothers do not practise breast feeding because they are not fully aware of the benefits of breastfeeding and more importantly, they do not understand the long-term adverse impact of non-breast feeding of their babies. The few that are aware are carried away by the hustling and bustling of economic survival at the expense of their kids.

    Perhaps  against this backdrop, last year November 2014 , over 190 governments gathered in Rome for the International Conference on Nutrition to discuss and advance policy options and strategies to improve food system and people’s diet in order to more effectively address the world’s major nutrition challenges.

    The conference  that launched the first ever Global Nutrition Report, which presents a comprehensive view of global and country- level progress against malnutrition, regretted that one out of every two people on the planet is undernourished, micronutrient deficient, obese or a combination of all three, adding that all hands should be on deck to address the issue.

    The Nation gathered that the importance the country attached to the OFSP made her to go all out to exploit all its wealth and health benefits by naming the project as Rainbow Project, which incorporated all stakeholders in sweet potato value chain, the potato farmers, researchers and processors.

    Speaking to this reporter on the objective of the Rainbow Project, the Project leader, Dr Olapeju Phorbee, said the idea behind the project was centered on health and wealth creation.”The project was to provide the needed Vitamin A which is deficient in pregnant women and children in the country and make it available to them at their door step in terms of OFSP.”

    According to her, the OFSP has been tested, tasted and found suitable, adding that there is a pilot scheme which targeted some selected state where vines are duplicated. These include Ebonyi, Osun, Kaduna, Benue, Kwara, Nasarawa/FCT.

    Phorbee explained that OFSP is rich in Vitamin A, which is particularly good for a child in its 1,000 days of its existence. It will give the baby a high immune system that will assist to wade off diseases which children are facing at this crucial period.”

    She pointed out that due to the high nutrition value in OFSP, the project keyed into the Osun State government school feeding project, which the state is operating to give the children the needed nutrition at such a tender age so that they will be able to build high immune system in their body.

    “We went round the state to educate and train the food vendors the need to include OFSP in the daily menu of the school feeding system; this is a right step at the right time. This will give the opportunity to the school children the right diet that will hasten their growth and discourage all these preventable diseases.

    She said that by the time the project has a complete circle, “we would be able to produce other food items from the OFSP like potato garri, flour, bread and potato chips. This will go to a greater length to assist Nigerian children to grow and have sound health.”

    The project leader, who encourages other states in the country to duplicate what is going on in Osun, said this will give opportunity to eradicate malnutrition which is ravaging the lives of Nigerian school children.

    Corroborating Phorbee’s assertion on the importance of sweet potato, Mr. Emmanuel Ajayi, a food scientist, said “Sweet potatoes are naturally sweet-tasting, but their natural sugars are slowly released into the bloodstream, helping to ensure a balanced and regular source of energy.”

    Ajayi said it is not just sweet to the taste  but the value is one of the highest among the root-vegetables categories, adding that sweet potatoes are a good source of magnesium, which is the relaxation and anti-stress mineral.

    He explained: “Sweet potatoes help in red and white blood cell production, resistance to stress, proper immune functioning and the metabolising of protein, among other things.”

    According to him, there are other products which sweet potato can be used for and which can be duplicated in a commercial purpose and it will be available to all households at giveaway prices, “such products are potato bread, chips, cake, flour, among others.”

    As a processor, who had done a lot of extensive research on what sweet potato could be turned to, Mr. Abraham Oyeyemi Idowu, the Head of Department of Food Science, the Federal Polytechnics Offa, Kwara State, said sweet potato is all rounder in terms of nutrient provision.

    Idowu, who said that the school had been working on sweet potato since 2005, noted that it was the former Rector of the school, Dr Rasak Bello, who saw it in China and challenged the department to produce potato bread with only 10 per cent of wheat. Since we have sweet potato production in Offa and its environ, we went into action.

    He said from that experiment in 2005, the school has not rested on its oars to research deep into what sweet potato can be turned to.”The recent variety called OFSP is so rich in Vitamins A,  C, and D that it was used to produce a lot of products   like potato flour (pie, scot egg chips) juice, jam,  potato corn vita, OFSP sorghum-vita, golden corn and custard at the polytechnics.

    According to him, if all these products are duplicated and commercialised, it will assist nursing mothers and their babies to have good and nourishing intake.”The issue of our children developing a disease like malnutrition will be a thing of the past.”

    He said if the school feeding project that is currently going on in Osun State could be duplicated throughout the country, the project might have succeeded in providing the necessary diet to millions of Nigerians children and could have saved the country from children diseases and stunted growth among our children.

    Admonishing the importance of nutrient inherent in sweet potato, Idowu noted that about 142 sweet potato vendors in Offa were given training on OFSP and how they can package it better and make it available to some of the school children in the vicinity, adding that if the state can also imbibe the school feeding system, it would go a long way to make nourishing diet available to children of school age and avoid future diseases.

    NIGERIA has one of the highest rates of infant mortality in the world. One in seven children dies before their fifth birthday, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). More worrisome is the fact that 13 per cent of Nigeria children are malnourished. This informed the assertion of the United Nations Standing Committee on Nutrition that malnutrition is the largest contributor to non-communicable diseases in the world. These diseases can affect the brain,  the health and the respiratory system, but the most common are gastrointestinal disease.

    Against this backdrop, the first 1,000 days of a child are crucial because this period determines what a child may likely become in the future. Therefore, no normal child can grow into a healthy, strong and happy adult without the intake of dietary diversification, The Nation gathered.

    The cognitive and physical damage caused by malnutrition during the 1,000-day-window between a woman’s pregnancy and her child’s second birthday, is severe and often irreversible, with profound consequences for a child’s future.

    Buttressing this assertion, Prof. Ngozi Nnam, the President, Nutrition Society of Nigeria, pointed out that this period  is when the physical and mental development of the child is developed to achieve full potential with window of opportunity which can have a profound impact on a child’s ability to grow, learn and rise out of poverty is formed.

    Nutrition experts say breastfeeding initiated immediately after birth and continued until two years with appropriate complementary feeding has both short and long-term impact on the health and nutrition of a child. But the big question is, how many nursing mothers can afford to breast feed her baby for two years in Nigeria of nowadays?

    However,  in order to bridge the wide gap of nourishing food that will discourage malnutrition caused by poverty and penury, a recipe in terms of appropriate complementary nutrition for a Nigerian child has surfaced in Orange Fleshed  Sweet Potato (OFSP), The Nation authoritatively gathered.

    In a fact-finding mission to verify the nutrient value in sweet potato in general and OFSP in particular, this reporter was at the National Root Crops Research  Institute at Umudike, Abia State, Federal Polytechnic, Offa, Kwara State and the International Potato Centre, Abuja.

    Since sweet potato is one of the root crops that can grow well virtually in all the states of the federation, according to experts, if it is well harnessed and made available as a daily menu to rural communities, with time, malnutrition in Nigerian child will become history.

    Speaking to The Nation about the nutrient value of sweet potato, one of the notable sweet potato breeders in the country and a researcher at the National Root Crops Research Institute, Umudike, Abia State, Mr. Solomon Oluwafemi Afuape, said that the nutrient value in sweet potato is so enormous that if it is well tapped, Nigerian child will not suffer from malnutrition again.

    Afuape, who took this reporter round the sweet potato research field at Umudike, said: “Whether it is white, purple, yellow or orange, every sweet potato is a bundle of vitamins and minerals. It contains Vitamin B6, Vitamin C and other minerals. But the OFSP is orange in colour and tastes like carrots; it is so because of the carotenoid it contains.  It has beta- carotene in abundance. This is what our body converts to Vitamin A.”

    According to him, the beta- carotene helps the brain of a child to develop; it also assists in boosting the immune system so that the body of the child can fight diseases better. “It also has in abundance what smoothens the skin; in fact, it is the artificial one that the women are robbing on the face to make it smooth. It is also a neutraliser of some substance inhaled to the body and makes it harmless. It makes the skin to  flourish and be alive.”

    The researcher pointed out that” the richness of Vitamin A in beta-carotene also makes the eye to be sharper as we grow. Someone who eats sweet potato regularly does not have chances of having cancer-related diseases.”

    He explained that the latest varieties of OFSP that are been duplicated by some dedicated farmers in the country are ‘Mother delight and King J varieties’.

    The Nation intensive investigations revealed that this vitamin if present in a child’s food shortly before weaning, will go a long way to make the baby healthy and full of life with a strong immune system built round her against diseases.

    Speaking in the same vein, a nutritionist at Garki Hospital, Abuja, Miss Yemisi Olowookere, underscoring the importance of sweet potato to nursing mothers advised them to include it in their daily menu because it is good for cardiovascular health.

    Olowookere explains that potato is a rich source of flavonoid anti-oxidants, vitamins, minerals, and dietary fibre that are essential for optimal health.

    According to her, the tuber contains no saturated fats or cholesterol and it is a rich source of dietary fibre, anti-oxidants, vitamins, and minerals. “Potatoes are good source of Vitamin C, it helps ward off cold and flu viruses as well as bone and tooth formation, digestion, and blood cell formation.”

    The nutritionist pointed out that sweet potato helps to accelerate wound healing, produces collagen which helps maintain skin’s youthful elasticity and is essential in helping us cope with stress. “It even appears to help protect our body against toxins that may be linked to cancer.”

    She explained that sweet potato also contains Vitamin D which is critical for immune system and overall health. “Vitamin D plays an important role in our energy level, moods, and helps to build healthy bones, heart nerves, skin and teeth and it supports the thyroid gland.”

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that most nursing mothers could not afford giving their children the needed nutrients due to poverty. Malnutrition, according to experts, is one of the world’s most serious but least addressed problems. It claims the lives of three million children each year, yet it is almost entirely preventable. Close to 200 million children suffer from chronic nutritional deprivation that leaves them permanently stunted -unable to fulfill their genetic potential to grow and thrive – and keeps families, communities and countries locked in a cycle of hunger and poverty.

    More worrisome and pathetic  is the fact that  majority of mothers do not practise breast feeding because they are not fully aware of the benefits of breastfeeding and more importantly, they do not understand the long-term adverse impact of non-breast feeding of their babies. The few that are aware are carried away by the hustling and bustling of economic survival at the expense of their kids.

    Perhaps  against this backdrop, last year November 2014 , over 190 governments gathered in Rome for the International Conference on Nutrition to discuss and advance policy options and strategies to improve food system and people’s diet in order to more effectively address the world’s major nutrition challenges.

    The conference  that launched the first ever Global Nutrition Report, which presents a comprehensive view of global and country- level progress against malnutrition, regretted that one out of every two people on the planet is undernourished, micronutrient deficient, obese or a combination of all three, adding that all hands should be on deck to address the issue.

    The Nation gathered that the importance the country attached to the OFSP made her to go all out to exploit all its wealth and health benefits by naming the project as Rainbow Project, which incorporated all stakeholders in sweet potato value chain, the potato farmers, researchers and processors.

    Speaking to this reporter on the objective of the Rainbow Project, the Project leader, Dr Olapeju Phorbee, said the idea behind the project was centered on health and wealth creation.”The project was to provide the needed Vitamin A which is deficient in pregnant women and children in the country and make it available to them at their door step in terms of OFSP.”

    According to her, the OFSP has been tested, tasted and found suitable, adding that there is a pilot scheme which targeted some selected state where vines are duplicated. These include Ebonyi, Osun, Kaduna, Benue, Kwara, Nasarawa/FCT.

    Phorbee explained that OFSP is rich in Vitamin A, which is particularly good for a child in its 1,000 days of its existence. It will give the baby a high immune system that will assist to wade off diseases which children are facing at this crucial period.”

    She pointed out that due to the high nutrition value in OFSP, the project keyed into the Osun State government school feeding project, which the state is operating to give the children the needed nutrition at such a tender age so that they will be able to build high immune system in their body.

    “We went round the state to educate and train the food vendors the need to include OFSP in the daily menu of the school feeding system; this is a right step at the right time. This will give the opportunity to the school children the right diet that will hasten their growth and discourage all these preventable diseases.

    She said that by the time the project has a complete circle, “we would be able to produce other food items from the OFSP like potato garri, flour, bread and potato chips. This will go to a greater length to assist Nigerian children to grow and have sound health.”

    The project leader, who encourages other states in the country to duplicate what is going on in Osun, said this will give opportunity to eradicate malnutrition which is ravaging the lives of Nigerian school children.

    Corroborating Phorbee’s assertion on the importance of sweet potato, Mr. Emmanuel Ajayi, a food scientist, said “Sweet potatoes are naturally sweet-tasting, but their natural sugars are slowly released into the bloodstream, helping to ensure a balanced and regular source of energy.”

    Ajayi said it is not just sweet to the taste  but the value is one of the highest among the root-vegetables categories, adding that sweet potatoes are a good source of magnesium, which is the relaxation and anti-stress mineral.

    He explained: “Sweet potatoes help in red and white blood cell production, resistance to stress, proper immune functioning and the metabolising of protein, among other things.”

    According to him, there are other products which sweet potato can be used for and which can be duplicated in a commercial purpose and it will be available to all households at giveaway prices, “such products are potato bread, chips, cake, flour, among others.”

    As a processor, who had done a lot of extensive research on what sweet potato could be turned to, Mr. Abraham Oyeyemi Idowu, the Head of Department of Food Science, the Federal Polytechnics Offa, Kwara State, said sweet potato is all rounder in terms of nutrient provision.

    Idowu, who said that the school had been working on sweet potato since 2005, noted that it was the former Rector of the school, Dr Rasak Bello, who saw it in China and challenged the department to produce potato bread with only 10 per cent of wheat. Since we have sweet potato production in Offa and its environ, we went into action.

    He said from that experiment in 2005, the school has not rested on its oars to research deep into what sweet potato can be turned to.”The recent variety called OFSP is so rich in Vitamins A,  C, and D that it was used to produce a lot of products   like potato flour (pie, scot egg chips) juice, jam,  potato corn vita, OFSP sorghum-vita, golden corn and custard at the polytechnics.

    According to him, if all these products are duplicated and commercialised, it will assist nursing mothers and their babies to have good and nourishing intake.”The issue of our children developing a disease like malnutrition will be a thing of the past.”

    He said if the school feeding project that is currently going on in Osun State could be duplicated throughout the country, the project might have succeeded in providing the necessary diet to millions of Nigerians children and could have saved the country from children diseases and stunted growth among our children.

    Admonishing the importance of nutrient inherent in sweet potato, Idowu noted that about 142 sweet potato vendors in Offa were given training on OFSP and how they can package it better and make it available to some of the school children in the vicinity, adding that if the state can also imbibe the school feeding system, it would go a long way to make nourishing diet available to children of school age and avoid future diseases.

    NIGERIA has one of the highest rates of infant mortality in the world. One in seven children dies before their fifth birthday, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). More worrisome is the fact that 13 per cent of Nigeria children are malnourished. This informed the assertion of the United Nations Standing Committee on Nutrition that malnutrition is the largest contributor to non-communicable diseases in the world. These diseases can affect the brain,  the health and the respiratory system, but the most common are gastrointestinal disease.

    Against this backdrop, the first 1,000 days of a child are crucial because this period determines what a child may likely become in the future. Therefore, no normal child can grow into a healthy, strong and happy adult without the intake of dietary diversification, The Nation gathered.

    The cognitive and physical damage caused by malnutrition during the 1,000-day-window between a woman’s pregnancy and her child’s second birthday, is severe and often irreversible, with profound consequences for a child’s future.

    Buttressing this assertion, Prof. Ngozi Nnam, the President, Nutrition Society of Nigeria, pointed out that this period  is when the physical and mental development of the child is developed to achieve full potential with window of opportunity which can have a profound impact on a child’s ability to grow, learn and rise out of poverty is formed.

    Nutrition experts say breastfeeding initiated immediately after birth and continued until two years with appropriate complementary feeding has both short and long-term impact on the health and nutrition of a child. But the big question is, how many nursing mothers can afford to breast feed her baby for two years in Nigeria of nowadays?

    However,  in order to bridge the wide gap of nourishing food that will discourage malnutrition caused by poverty and penury, a recipe in terms of appropriate complementary nutrition for a Nigerian child has surfaced in Orange Fleshed  Sweet Potato (OFSP), The Nation authoritatively gathered.

    In a fact-finding mission to verify the nutrient value in sweet potato in general and OFSP in particular, this reporter was at the National Root Crops Research  Institute at Umudike, Abia State, Federal Polytechnic, Offa, Kwara State and the International Potato Centre, Abuja.

    Since sweet potato is one of the root crops that can grow well virtually in all the states of the federation, according to experts, if it is well harnessed and made available as a daily menu to rural communities, with time, malnutrition in Nigerian child will become history.

    Speaking to The Nation about the nutrient value of sweet potato, one of the notable sweet potato breeders in the country and a researcher at the National Root Crops Research Institute, Umudike, Abia State, Mr. Solomon Oluwafemi Afuape, said that the nutrient value in sweet potato is so enormous that if it is well tapped, Nigerian child will not suffer from malnutrition again.

    Afuape, who took this reporter round the sweet potato research field at Umudike, said: “Whether it is white, purple, yellow or orange, every sweet potato is a bundle of vitamins and minerals. It contains Vitamin B6, Vitamin C and other minerals. But the OFSP is orange in colour and tastes like carrots; it is so because of the carotenoid it contains.  It has beta- carotene in abundance. This is what our body converts to Vitamin A.”

    According to him, the beta- carotene helps the brain of a child to develop; it also assists in boosting the immune system so that the body of the child can fight diseases better. “It also has in abundance what smoothens the skin; in fact, it is the artificial one that the women are robbing on the face to make it smooth. It is also a neutraliser of some substance inhaled to the body and makes it harmless. It makes the skin to  flourish and be alive.”

    The researcher pointed out that” the richness of Vitamin A in beta-carotene also makes the eye to be sharper as we grow. Someone who eats sweet potato regularly does not have chances of having cancer-related diseases.”

    He explained that the latest varieties of OFSP that are been duplicated by some dedicated farmers in the country are ‘Mother delight and King J varieties’.

    The Nation intensive investigations revealed that this vitamin if present in a child’s food shortly before weaning, will go a long way to make the baby healthy and full of life with a strong immune system built round her against diseases.

    Speaking in the same vein, a nutritionist at Garki Hospital, Abuja, Miss Yemisi Olowookere, underscoring the importance of sweet potato to nursing mothers advised them to include it in their daily menu because it is good for cardiovascular health.

    Olowookere explains that potato is a rich source of flavonoid anti-oxidants, vitamins, minerals, and dietary fibre that are essential for optimal health.

    According to her, the tuber contains no saturated fats or cholesterol and it is a rich source of dietary fibre, anti-oxidants, vitamins, and minerals. “Potatoes are good source of Vitamin C, it helps ward off cold and flu viruses as well as bone and tooth formation, digestion, and blood cell formation.”

    The nutritionist pointed out that sweet potato helps to accelerate wound healing, produces collagen which helps maintain skin’s youthful elasticity and is essential in helping us cope with stress. “It even appears to help protect our body against toxins that may be linked to cancer.”

    She explained that sweet potato also contains Vitamin D which is critical for immune system and overall health. “Vitamin D plays an important role in our energy level, moods, and helps to build healthy bones, heart nerves, skin and teeth and it supports the thyroid gland.”

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that most nursing mothers could not afford giving their children the needed nutrients due to poverty. Malnutrition, according to experts, is one of the world’s most serious but least addressed problems. It claims the lives of three million children each year, yet it is almost entirely preventable. Close to 200 million children suffer from chronic nutritional deprivation that leaves them permanently stunted -unable to fulfill their genetic potential to grow and thrive – and keeps families, communities and countries locked in a cycle of hunger and poverty.

    More worrisome and pathetic  is the fact that  majority of mothers do not practise breast feeding because they are not fully aware of the benefits of breastfeeding and more importantly, they do not understand the long-term adverse impact of non-breast feeding of their babies. The few that are aware are carried away by the hustling and bustling of economic survival at the expense of their kids.

    Perhaps  against this backdrop, last year November 2014 , over 190 governments gathered in Rome for the International Conference on Nutrition to discuss and advance policy options and strategies to improve food system and people’s diet in order to more effectively address the world’s major nutrition challenges.

    The conference  that launched the first ever Global Nutrition Report, which presents a comprehensive view of global and country- level progress against malnutrition, regretted that one out of every two people on the planet is undernourished, micronutrient deficient, obese or a combination of all three, adding that all hands should be on deck to address the issue.

    The Nation gathered that the importance the country attached to the OFSP made her to go all out to exploit all its wealth and health benefits by naming the project as Rainbow Project, which incorporated all stakeholders in sweet potato value chain, the potato farmers, researchers and processors.

    Speaking to this reporter on the objective of the Rainbow Project, the Project leader, Dr Olapeju Phorbee, said the idea behind the project was centered on health and wealth creation.”The project was to provide the needed Vitamin A which is deficient in pregnant women and children in the country and make it available to them at their door step in terms of OFSP.”

    According to her, the OFSP has been tested, tasted and found suitable, adding that there is a pilot scheme which targeted some selected state where vines are duplicated. These include Ebonyi, Osun, Kaduna, Benue, Kwara, Nasarawa/FCT.

    Phorbee explained that OFSP is rich in Vitamin A, which is particularly good for a child in its 1,000 days of its existence. It will give the baby a high immune system that will assist to wade off diseases which children are facing at this crucial period.”

    She pointed out that due to the high nutrition value in OFSP, the project keyed into the Osun State government school feeding project, which the state is operating to give the children the needed nutrition at such a tender age so that they will be able to build high immune system in their body.

    “We went round the state to educate and train the food vendors the need to include OFSP in the daily menu of the school feeding system; this is a right step at the right time. This will give the opportunity to the school children the right diet that will hasten their growth and discourage all these preventable diseases.

    She said that by the time the project has a complete circle, “we would be able to produce other food items from the OFSP like potato garri, flour, bread and potato chips. This will go to a greater length to assist Nigerian children to grow and have sound health.”

    The project leader, who encourages other states in the country to duplicate what is going on in Osun, said this will give opportunity to eradicate malnutrition which is ravaging the lives of Nigerian school children.

    Corroborating Phorbee’s assertion on the importance of sweet potato, Mr. Emmanuel Ajayi, a food scientist, said “Sweet potatoes are naturally sweet-tasting, but their natural sugars are slowly released into the bloodstream, helping to ensure a balanced and regular source of energy.”

    Ajayi said it is not just sweet to the taste  but the value is one of the highest among the root-vegetables categories, adding that sweet potatoes are a good source of magnesium, which is the relaxation and anti-stress mineral.

    He explained: “Sweet potatoes help in red and white blood cell production, resistance to stress, proper immune functioning and the metabolising of protein, among other things.”

    According to him, there are other products which sweet potato can be used for and which can be duplicated in a commercial purpose and it will be available to all households at giveaway prices, “such products are potato bread, chips, cake, flour, among others.”

    As a processor, who had done a lot of extensive research on what sweet potato could be turned to, Mr. Abraham Oyeyemi Idowu, the Head of Department of Food Science, the Federal Polytechnics Offa, Kwara State, said sweet potato is all rounder in terms of nutrient provision.

    Idowu, who said that the school had been working on sweet potato since 2005, noted that it was the former Rector of the school, Dr Rasak Bello, who saw it in China and challenged the department to produce potato bread with only 10 per cent of wheat. Since we have sweet potato production in Offa and its environ, we went into action.

    He said from that experiment in 2005, the school has not rested on its oars to research deep into what sweet potato can be turned to.”The recent variety called OFSP is so rich in Vitamins A,  C, and D that it was used to produce a lot of products   like potato flour (pie, scot egg chips) juice, jam,  potato corn vita, OFSP sorghum-vita, golden corn and custard at the polytechnics.

    According to him, if all these products are duplicated and commercialised, it will assist nursing mothers and their babies to have good and nourishing intake.”The issue of our children developing a disease like malnutrition will be a thing of the past.”

    He said if the school feeding project that is currently going on in Osun State could be duplicated throughout the country, the project might have succeeded in providing the necessary diet to millions of Nigerians children and could have saved the country from children diseases and stunted growth among our children.

    Admonishing the importance of nutrient inherent in sweet potato, Idowu noted that about 142 sweet potato vendors in Offa were given training on OFSP and how they can package it better and make it available to some of the school children in the vicinity, adding that if the state can also imbibe the school feeding system, it would go a long way to make nourishing diet available to children of school age and avoid future diseases.

    NIGERIA has one of the highest rates of infant mortality in the world. One in seven children dies before their fifth birthday, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). More worrisome is the fact that 13 per cent of Nigeria children are malnourished. This informed the assertion of the United Nations Standing Committee on Nutrition that malnutrition is the largest contributor to non-communicable diseases in the world. These diseases can affect the brain,  the health and the respiratory system, but the most common are gastrointestinal disease.

    Against this backdrop, the first 1,000 days of a child are crucial because this period determines what a child may likely become in the future. Therefore, no normal child can grow into a healthy, strong and happy adult without the intake of dietary diversification, The Nation gathered.

    The cognitive and physical damage caused by malnutrition during the 1,000-day-window between a woman’s pregnancy and her child’s second birthday, is severe and often irreversible, with profound consequences for a child’s future.

    Buttressing this assertion, Prof. Ngozi Nnam, the President, Nutrition Society of Nigeria, pointed out that this period  is when the physical and mental development of the child is developed to achieve full potential with window of opportunity which can have a profound impact on a child’s ability to grow, learn and rise out of poverty is formed.

    Nutrition experts say breastfeeding initiated immediately after birth and continued until two years with appropriate complementary feeding has both short and long-term impact on the health and nutrition of a child. But the big question is, how many nursing mothers can afford to breast feed her baby for two years in Nigeria of nowadays?

    However,  in order to bridge the wide gap of nourishing food that will discourage malnutrition caused by poverty and penury, a recipe in terms of appropriate complementary nutrition for a Nigerian child has surfaced in Orange Fleshed  Sweet Potato (OFSP), The Nation authoritatively gathered.

    In a fact-finding mission to verify the nutrient value in sweet potato in general and OFSP in particular, this reporter was at the National Root Crops Research  Institute at Umudike, Abia State, Federal Polytechnic, Offa, Kwara State and the International Potato Centre, Abuja.

    Since sweet potato is one of the root crops that can grow well virtually in all the states of the federation, according to experts, if it is well harnessed and made available as a daily menu to rural communities, with time, malnutrition in Nigerian child will become history.

    Speaking to The Nation about the nutrient value of sweet potato, one of the notable sweet potato breeders in the country and a researcher at the National Root Crops Research Institute, Umudike, Abia State, Mr. Solomon Oluwafemi Afuape, said that the nutrient value in sweet potato is so enormous that if it is well tapped, Nigerian child will not suffer from malnutrition again.

    Afuape, who took this reporter round the sweet potato research field at Umudike, said: “Whether it is white, purple, yellow or orange, every sweet potato is a bundle of vitamins and minerals. It contains Vitamin B6, Vitamin C and other minerals. But the OFSP is orange in colour and tastes like carrots; it is so because of the carotenoid it contains.  It has beta- carotene in abundance. This is what our body converts to Vitamin A.”

    According to him, the beta- carotene helps the brain of a child to develop; it also assists in boosting the immune system so that the body of the child can fight diseases better. “It also has in abundance what smoothens the skin; in fact, it is the artificial one that the women are robbing on the face to make it smooth. It is also a neutraliser of some substance inhaled to the body and makes it harmless. It makes the skin to  flourish and be alive.”

    The researcher pointed out that” the richness of Vitamin A in beta-carotene also makes the eye to be sharper as we grow. Someone who eats sweet potato regularly does not have chances of having cancer-related diseases.”

    He explained that the latest varieties of OFSP that are been duplicated by some dedicated farmers in the country are ‘Mother delight and King J varieties’.

    The Nation intensive investigations revealed that this vitamin if present in a child’s food shortly before weaning, will go a long way to make the baby healthy and full of life with a strong immune system built round her against diseases.

    Speaking in the same vein, a nutritionist at Garki Hospital, Abuja, Miss Yemisi Olowookere, underscoring the importance of sweet potato to nursing mothers advised them to include it in their daily menu because it is good for cardiovascular health.

    Olowookere explains that potato is a rich source of flavonoid anti-oxidants, vitamins, minerals, and dietary fibre that are essential for optimal health.

    According to her, the tuber contains no saturated fats or cholesterol and it is a rich source of dietary fibre, anti-oxidants, vitamins, and minerals. “Potatoes are good source of Vitamin C, it helps ward off cold and flu viruses as well as bone and tooth formation, digestion, and blood cell formation.”

    The nutritionist pointed out that sweet potato helps to accelerate wound healing, produces collagen which helps maintain skin’s youthful elasticity and is essential in helping us cope with stress. “It even appears to help protect our body against toxins that may be linked to cancer.”

    She explained that sweet potato also contains Vitamin D which is critical for immune system and overall health. “Vitamin D plays an important role in our energy level, moods, and helps to build healthy bones, heart nerves, skin and teeth and it supports the thyroid gland.”

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that most nursing mothers could not afford giving their children the needed nutrients due to poverty. Malnutrition, according to experts, is one of the world’s most serious but least addressed problems. It claims the lives of three million children each year, yet it is almost entirely preventable. Close to 200 million children suffer from chronic nutritional deprivation that leaves them permanently stunted -unable to fulfill their genetic potential to grow and thrive – and keeps families, communities and countries locked in a cycle of hunger and poverty.

    More worrisome and pathetic  is the fact that  majority of mothers do not practise breast feeding because they are not fully aware of the benefits of breastfeeding and more importantly, they do not understand the long-term adverse impact of non-breast feeding of their babies. The few that are aware are carried away by the hustling and bustling of economic survival at the expense of their kids.

    Perhaps  against this backdrop, last year November 2014 , over 190 governments gathered in Rome for the International Conference on Nutrition to discuss and advance policy options and strategies to improve food system and people’s diet in order to more effectively address the world’s major nutrition challenges.

    The conference  that launched the first ever Global Nutrition Report, which presents a comprehensive view of global and country- level progress against malnutrition, regretted that one out of every two people on the planet is undernourished, micronutrient deficient, obese or a combination of all three, adding that all hands should be on deck to address the issue.

    The Nation gathered that the importance the country attached to the OFSP made her to go all out to exploit all its wealth and health benefits by naming the project as Rainbow Project, which incorporated all stakeholders in sweet potato value chain, the potato farmers, researchers and processors.

    Speaking to this reporter on the objective of the Rainbow Project, the Project leader, Dr Olapeju Phorbee, said the idea behind the project was centered on health and wealth creation.”The project was to provide the needed Vitamin A which is deficient in pregnant women and children in the country and make it available to them at their door step in terms of OFSP.”

    According to her, the OFSP has been tested, tasted and found suitable, adding that there is a pilot scheme which targeted some selected state where vines are duplicated. These include Ebonyi, Osun, Kaduna, Benue, Kwara, Nasarawa/FCT.

    Phorbee explained that OFSP is rich in Vitamin A, which is particularly good for a child in its 1,000 days of its existence. It will give the baby a high immune system that will assist to wade off diseases which children are facing at this crucial period.”

    She pointed out that due to the high nutrition value in OFSP, the project keyed into the Osun State government school feeding project, which the state is operating to give the children the needed nutrition at such a tender age so that they will be able to build high immune system in their body.

    “We went round the state to educate and train the food vendors the need to include OFSP in the daily menu of the school feeding system; this is a right step at the right time. This will give the opportunity to the school children the right diet that will hasten their growth and discourage all these preventable diseases.

    She said that by the time the project has a complete circle, “we would be able to produce other food items from the OFSP like potato garri, flour, bread and potato chips. This will go to a greater length to assist Nigerian children to grow and have sound health.”

    The project leader, who encourages other states in the country to duplicate what is going on in Osun, said this will give opportunity to eradicate malnutrition which is ravaging the lives of Nigerian school children.

    Corroborating Phorbee’s assertion on the importance of sweet potato, Mr. Emmanuel Ajayi, a food scientist, said “Sweet potatoes are naturally sweet-tasting, but their natural sugars are slowly released into the bloodstream, helping to ensure a balanced and regular source of energy.”

    Ajayi said it is not just sweet to the taste  but the value is one of the highest among the root-vegetables categories, adding that sweet potatoes are a good source of magnesium, which is the relaxation and anti-stress mineral.

    He explained: “Sweet potatoes help in red and white blood cell production, resistance to stress, proper immune functioning and the metabolising of protein, among other things.”

    According to him, there are other products which sweet potato can be used for and which can be duplicated in a commercial purpose and it will be available to all households at giveaway prices, “such products are potato bread, chips, cake, flour, among others.”

    As a processor, who had done a lot of extensive research on what sweet potato could be turned to, Mr. Abraham Oyeyemi Idowu, the Head of Department of Food Science, the Federal Polytechnics Offa, Kwara State, said sweet potato is all rounder in terms of nutrient provision.

    Idowu, who said that the school had been working on sweet potato since 2005, noted that it was the former Rector of the school, Dr Rasak Bello, who saw it in China and challenged the department to produce potato bread with only 10 per cent of wheat. Since we have sweet potato production in Offa and its environ, we went into action.

    He said from that experiment in 2005, the school has not rested on its oars to research deep into what sweet potato can be turned to.”The recent variety called OFSP is so rich in Vitamins A,  C, and D that it was used to produce a lot of products   like potato flour (pie, scot egg chips) juice, jam,  potato corn vita, OFSP sorghum-vita, golden corn and custard at the polytechnics.

    According to him, if all these products are duplicated and commercialised, it will assist nursing mothers and their babies to have good and nourishing intake.”The issue of our children developing a disease like malnutrition will be a thing of the past.”

    He said if the school feeding project that is currently going on in Osun State could be duplicated throughout the country, the project might have succeeded in providing the necessary diet to millions of Nigerians children and could have saved the country from children diseases and stunted growth among our children.

    Admonishing the importance of nutrient inherent in sweet potato, Idowu noted that about 142 sweet potato vendors in Offa were given training on OFSP and how they can package it better and make it available to some of the school children in the vicinity, adding that if the state can also imbibe the school feeding system, it would go a long way to make nourishing diet available to children of school age and avoid future diseases.

    NIGERIA has one of the highest rates of infant mortality in the world. One in seven children dies before their fifth birthday, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). More worrisome is the fact that 13 per cent of Nigeria children are malnourished. This informed the assertion of the United Nations Standing Committee on Nutrition that malnutrition is the largest contributor to non-communicable diseases in the world. These diseases can affect the brain,  the health and the respiratory system, but the most common are gastrointestinal disease.

    Against this backdrop, the first 1,000 days of a child are crucial because this period determines what a child may likely become in the future. Therefore, no normal child can grow into a healthy, strong and happy adult without the intake of dietary diversification, The Nation gathered.

    The cognitive and physical damage caused by malnutrition during the 1,000-day-window between a woman’s pregnancy and her child’s second birthday, is severe and often irreversible, with profound consequences for a child’s future.

    Buttressing this assertion, Prof. Ngozi Nnam, the President, Nutrition Society of Nigeria, pointed out that this period  is when the physical and mental development of the child is developed to achieve full potential with window of opportunity which can have a profound impact on a child’s ability to grow, learn and rise out of poverty is formed.

    Nutrition experts say breastfeeding initiated immediately after birth and continued until two years with appropriate complementary feeding has both short and long-term impact on the health and nutrition of a child. But the big question is, how many nursing mothers can afford to breast feed her baby for two years in Nigeria of nowadays?

    However,  in order to bridge the wide gap of nourishing food that will discourage malnutrition caused by poverty and penury, a recipe in terms of appropriate complementary nutrition for a Nigerian child has surfaced in Orange Fleshed  Sweet Potato (OFSP), The Nation authoritatively gathered.

    In a fact-finding mission to verify the nutrient value in sweet potato in general and OFSP in particular, this reporter was at the National Root Crops Research  Institute at Umudike, Abia State, Federal Polytechnic, Offa, Kwara State and the International Potato Centre, Abuja.

    Since sweet potato is one of the root crops that can grow well virtually in all the states of the federation, according to experts, if it is well harnessed and made available as a daily menu to rural communities, with time, malnutrition in Nigerian child will become history.

    Speaking to The Nation about the nutrient value of sweet potato, one of the notable sweet potato breeders in the country and a researcher at the National Root Crops Research Institute, Umudike, Abia State, Mr. Solomon Oluwafemi Afuape, said that the nutrient value in sweet potato is so enormous that if it is well tapped, Nigerian child will not suffer from malnutrition again.

    Afuape, who took this reporter round the sweet potato research field at Umudike, said: “Whether it is white, purple, yellow or orange, every sweet potato is a bundle of vitamins and minerals. It contains Vitamin B6, Vitamin C and other minerals. But the OFSP is orange in colour and tastes like carrots; it is so because of the carotenoid it contains.  It has beta- carotene in abundance. This is what our body converts to Vitamin A.”

    According to him, the beta- carotene helps the brain of a child to develop; it also assists in boosting the immune system so that the body of the child can fight diseases better. “It also has in abundance what smoothens the skin; in fact, it is the artificial one that the women are robbing on the face to make it smooth. It is also a neutraliser of some substance inhaled to the body and makes it harmless. It makes the skin to  flourish and be alive.”

    The researcher pointed out that” the richness of Vitamin A in beta-carotene also makes the eye to be sharper as we grow. Someone who eats sweet potato regularly does not have chances of having cancer-related diseases.”

    He explained that the latest varieties of OFSP that are been duplicated by some dedicated farmers in the country are ‘Mother delight and King J varieties’.

    The Nation intensive investigations revealed that this vitamin if present in a child’s food shortly before weaning, will go a long way to make the baby healthy and full of life with a strong immune system built round her against diseases.

    Speaking in the same vein, a nutritionist at Garki Hospital, Abuja, Miss Yemisi Olowookere, underscoring the importance of sweet potato to nursing mothers advised them to include it in their daily menu because it is good for cardiovascular health.

    Olowookere explains that potato is a rich source of flavonoid anti-oxidants, vitamins, minerals, and dietary fibre that are essential for optimal health.

    According to her, the tuber contains no saturated fats or cholesterol and it is a rich source of dietary fibre, anti-oxidants, vitamins, and minerals. “Potatoes are good source of Vitamin C, it helps ward off cold and flu viruses as well as bone and tooth formation, digestion, and blood cell formation.”

    The nutritionist pointed out that sweet potato helps to accelerate wound healing, produces collagen which helps maintain skin’s youthful elasticity and is essential in helping us cope with stress. “It even appears to help protect our body against toxins that may be linked to cancer.”

    She explained that sweet potato also contains Vitamin D which is critical for immune system and overall health. “Vitamin D plays an important role in our energy level, moods, and helps to build healthy bones, heart nerves, skin and teeth and it supports the thyroid gland.”

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that most nursing mothers could not afford giving their children the needed nutrients due to poverty. Malnutrition, according to experts, is one of the world’s most serious but least addressed problems. It claims the lives of three million children each year, yet it is almost entirely preventable. Close to 200 million children suffer from chronic nutritional deprivation that leaves them permanently stunted -unable to fulfill their genetic potential to grow and thrive – and keeps families, communities and countries locked in a cycle of hunger and poverty.

    More worrisome and pathetic  is the fact that  majority of mothers do not practise breast feeding because they are not fully aware of the benefits of breastfeeding and more importantly, they do not understand the long-term adverse impact of non-breast feeding of their babies. The few that are aware are carried away by the hustling and bustling of economic survival at the expense of their kids.

    Perhaps  against this backdrop, last year November 2014 , over 190 governments gathered in Rome for the International Conference on Nutrition to discuss and advance policy options and strategies to improve food system and people’s diet in order to more effectively address the world’s major nutrition challenges.

    The conference  that launched the first ever Global Nutrition Report, which presents a comprehensive view of global and country- level progress against malnutrition, regretted that one out of every two people on the planet is undernourished, micronutrient deficient, obese or a combination of all three, adding that all hands should be on deck to address the issue.

    The Nation gathered that the importance the country attached to the OFSP made her to go all out to exploit all its wealth and health benefits by naming the project as Rainbow Project, which incorporated all stakeholders in sweet potato value chain, the potato farmers, researchers and processors.

    Speaking to this reporter on the objective of the Rainbow Project, the Project leader, Dr Olapeju Phorbee, said the idea behind the project was centered on health and wealth creation.”The project was to provide the needed Vitamin A which is deficient in pregnant women and children in the country and make it available to them at their door step in terms of OFSP.”

    According to her, the OFSP has been tested, tasted and found suitable, adding that there is a pilot scheme which targeted some selected state where vines are duplicated. These include Ebonyi, Osun, Kaduna, Benue, Kwara, Nasarawa/FCT.

    Phorbee explained that OFSP is rich in Vitamin A, which is particularly good for a child in its 1,000 days of its existence. It will give the baby a high immune system that will assist to wade off diseases which children are facing at this crucial period.”

    She pointed out that due to the high nutrition value in OFSP, the project keyed into the Osun State government school feeding project, which the state is operating to give the children the needed nutrition at such a tender age so that they will be able to build high immune system in their body.

    “We went round the state to educate and train the food vendors the need to include OFSP in the daily menu of the school feeding system; this is a right step at the right time. This will give the opportunity to the school children the right diet that will hasten their growth and discourage all these preventable diseases.

    She said that by the time the project has a complete circle, “we would be able to produce other food items from the OFSP like potato garri, flour, bread and potato chips. This will go to a greater length to assist Nigerian children to grow and have sound health.”

    The project leader, who encourages other states in the country to duplicate what is going on in Osun, said this will give opportunity to eradicate malnutrition which is ravaging the lives of Nigerian school children.

    Corroborating Phorbee’s assertion on the importance of sweet potato, Mr. Emmanuel Ajayi, a food scientist, said “Sweet potatoes are naturally sweet-tasting, but their natural sugars are slowly released into the bloodstream, helping to ensure a balanced and regular source of energy.”

    Ajayi said it is not just sweet to the taste  but the value is one of the highest among the root-vegetables categories, adding that sweet potatoes are a good source of magnesium, which is the relaxation and anti-stress mineral.

    He explained: “Sweet potatoes help in red and white blood cell production, resistance to stress, proper immune functioning and the metabolising of protein, among other things.”

    According to him, there are other products which sweet potato can be used for and which can be duplicated in a commercial purpose and it will be available to all households at giveaway prices, “such products are potato bread, chips, cake, flour, among others.”

    As a processor, who had done a lot of extensive research on what sweet potato could be turned to, Mr. Abraham Oyeyemi Idowu, the Head of Department of Food Science, the Federal Polytechnics Offa, Kwara State, said sweet potato is all rounder in terms of nutrient provision.

    Idowu, who said that the school had been working on sweet potato since 2005, noted that it was the former Rector of the school, Dr Rasak Bello, who saw it in China and challenged the department to produce potato bread with only 10 per cent of wheat. Since we have sweet potato production in Offa and its environ, we went into action.

    He said from that experiment in 2005, the school has not rested on its oars to research deep into what sweet potato can be turned to.”The recent variety called OFSP is so rich in Vitamins A,  C, and D that it was used to produce a lot of products   like potato flour (pie, scot egg chips) juice, jam,  potato corn vita, OFSP sorghum-vita, golden corn and custard at the polytechnics.

    According to him, if all these products are duplicated and commercialised, it will assist nursing mothers and their babies to have good and nourishing intake.”The issue of our children developing a disease like malnutrition will be a thing of the past.”

    He said if the school feeding project that is currently going on in Osun State could be duplicated throughout the country, the project might have succeeded in providing the necessary diet to millions of Nigerians children and could have saved the country from children diseases and stunted growth among our children.

    Admonishing the importance of nutrient inherent in sweet potato, Idowu noted that about 142 sweet potato vendors in Offa were given training on OFSP and how they can package it better and make it available to some of the school children in the vicinity, adding that if the state can also imbibe the school feeding system, it would go a long way to make nourishing diet available to children of school age and avoid future diseases.

  • 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.