Kaduna State Govt. to address shortage of fertilisers for farmers – Perm. Sec.
The Kaduna State Government says it
will address the artificial scarcity created in the supply of
fertilisers to farmers for the 2017 cropping season.
Dr Abdulkadir Kassim, the Permanent
Secretary, State Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry Development,
said this on Thursday in Kaduna at the state Agricultural Core
Delivery Team (CDT) meeting convened by Synergos Nigeria.
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports
that Gov. Nasiru el-Rufai on June 13 launched fertiliser sales for
the 2017 farming season in Saminaka Local Government Area.
He then assured the farmers that the
fertilisers would be sold to them at a subsidised rate of N5, 500 per
bag and that each smallholder farmer was entitled to four bags.
However, over 50 days after the event,
many farmers have complained that they have yet to access the
commodity, thereby raising fears of poor harvests at the end of the
season.
However, the permanent secretary said
that the state government was making concerted efforts to address
what he described as artificial scarcity of fertilisers and ensure
that farmers had direct access to the commodity.
Kassim blamed the scarcity on certain
developments that cropped up after the state government’s agreement
with private fertiliser suppliers to supply the commodity to farmers
at the subsidised rate of N5, 500 per bag.
NAN recalls that the state government
had announced at the beginning of the rainy season that it had
procured 50,000 tonnes of assorted fertilisers for farmers through an
arrangement with Flour Mills and TAK AGRO.
Farmers, however, complained that the
commodity was not made available by the two companies which the state
government engaged to supply the fertilisers to them.
In his response to a question at the
meeting, Kassim said that the arrangement seemed to be working at
first but the farmers and the suppliers allegedly later colluded to
cause the artificial scarcity.
He said that farmers, who could not
afford the four bags, colluded with the suppliers and sold the
commodity back to the suppliers with N500 interest on each bag.
“Thus, the suppliers ended up buying
most of the fertilisers from the farmers and thereby, created
artificial scarcity of the commodity,’’ he said.
The permanent secretary, however,
assured the farmers that fertiliser supplies would soon resume as the
state government had been striving to address the matter.
On the issue of incorporating women
farmers in the state’s budget line, Kassim said that the ministry
already had a unit, “Woman In Agriculture’’, mandated to look
into that particular issue.
He, however, said that women farmers
should unite and form cooperatives and associations; while
formulating practicable agricultural schemes.
Kassim expressed the determination of
the state government to support the execution of such schemes.
Besides, the permanent secretary
directed the Director Planning in the ministry to revive the
Nutrition Sensitive Agriculture Committee and ensure its inclusion in
the agricultural sector’s budget line.
He urged Synergos Nigeria to articulate
its requests for government’s scrutiny and approval before
inclusion in the state’s budget line, adding: “The state
government is ever ready to support Synergos in the state.’’
Kassim also urged rice farmers, who
asked for farmlands around the Kuzuntu Dam to partner with the
community leaders around the dam site and put up a formal request.
He pledged that the state government
would certainly look into the request.
He commended Synergos for all the
programmes it had executed in the state and urged the target
beneficiaries to show more commitment.
Earlier, Kassim welcomed the new
Synergos Coordinator in the state and lauded the NGO for its efforts
to scale up agricultural production in the state.
Speaking, the Field Manager of
Synergos, Mr Victor Adejoh, urged the state government to review its
agricultural policies to find practical solutions to the challenges
confronting the sector.
He underscored the need to collectively
drive the process along with all stakeholders to achieve the goals of
the State Partnership for Agriculture
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