Agriculture is the way to become wealthy but it can’t happen the way our parents practiced, IITA says
Developing creative messages/methods
that would attract young people to agriculture could help Africa to
attract youth to agriculture and end the rising unemployment in the
continent, says the Deputy Director General Partnership for Delivery,
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Dr Kenton
Dashiell today./
In a message to journalists to mark the
2017 Media Day— part of activities to mark the 50th anniversary of
IITA on 24 July 2017, Dr Dashiell said addressing the food insecurity
question in Africa required collective efforts from the different
institutions operating in Africa, stressing that “IITA cannot
succeed in isolation.”
He underpinned the importance of
creativity in packaging and dissemination of information on
agricultural innovation in a way and manner that would attract youth
into agriculture, and clear illusions about the sector.
Dashiell explained that for IITA, “our
message is this—agriculture is the way to become wealthy. But this
cannot happen if it is practiced the way our parents did.
Fortunately, IITA has advanced technologies that if used could make
farming very profitable and fun for farmers.”
The Media Day was a time for IITA to
appreciate the invaluable contribution of the press to the Institute
in the past 50 years. It was the first time the Institute would
engage members of the press for a full day, showcasing to them its
facilities, projects, and the Institute’s direction for the next 50
years.
As journalists toured the campus,
stories of IITA research breakthroughs reverberated— from the
fields where IITA defeated the Black Sigatoka disease on banana,
cassava mealybug, and maize streak virus; to the labs where
breakthroughs such as the use of Aflasafe is making maize and
groundnuts safer to innovations where researchers are growing yam in
the air and new technologies are being developed to control weeds in
cassava.
Journalists were taken around the
facilities to see research on maize, yam, cassava, cowpea, banana and
plantain. IITA is also piloting the first ever Africa-wide youth in
agribusiness initiative (IITA Youth Agripreneurs), which has received
strong support from the African Development Bank and about 11 heads
of African States.
Dr Kwesi Atta-Krah, Chair, IITA50
Organizing Committee and Director, Systems and Site Integration said
that in the last 50 years, IITA had stood with the people by
providing agricultural solutions that address the constraints to
Africa’s agricultural development.
“And because we are truly
people-centric, our goal in the last 50 years has always been to make
living more fulfilling for even the poorest of the poor farming
households. Even now, IITA will not stop. The Institute will continue
to join hands with relevant stakeholders to do its best to transform
agricultural practices to be able to transform Africa,” Dr
Atta-Krah explained.
The Chair of the IITA50 Organizing
Committee also announced that on 30 June 2017, a press conference
will be held at IITA’s facilities in Lagos, after which IITA’s
senior management team will proceed to ring the closing bell at the
Nigerian Stock Exchange, officially announcing the Institute 50th
anniversary to the public.
Established 1967, IITA is a leader in
agricultural research in sub-Saharan Africa. Innovations from the
Institute have translated to better nourishment, food security, and
livelihood-generating activities for millions of Africans.
The IITA50 celebration received
financial support from IITA staff and the Board of Trustees, Dangote
Group, Bovas, and Inqaba. Other supporters include Punch and the
Guardian Newspapers.
End.
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