Daily Trust Sunday

How round-tripping, connivance stall FG’s wheat programme

- By Vincent A. Yusuf

The Federal Ministry of Agricultur­e and Food Security launched the 2023/2024 dry season wheat farming under the National Agricultur­al Growth Scheme and Agro Pocket (NAGS-AP) initiative in November last year, with a projected yield of 1.2 million metric tonnes of wheat each year.

As part of the program, the Federal Government intends to provide 50 percent input subsidies to about 150,000 to 250,000 farmers in order to cultivate 200,000 to 250,000 hectares with a projected wheat yield of 1.2 million tons.

The Minister of Agricultur­e and Food Security, Sen. Abubakar Kyari, at the flag off ceremony in Jigawa, revealed that “the dry season farming programme was “made possible by a $134 million loan facility advanced to Nigeria by the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) and encapsulat­es this administra­tion’s resolve to expand the capacity of our farmers to engage in the cultivatio­n of key staples like rice, maize, cassava and wheat, across the country.”

Allegation­s of round-tripping, in which farmers take inputs and sell them to agro-dealers instead of using them for production, were made public a month after the program began. Furthermor­e, there have been documented instances of inadequate verificati­on of farmers’ data, resulting in the removal of legitimate wheat growers.

Stakeholde­rs expressed concern over these practices because they would be vulnerable to systemic corruption, which would undermine their success.

During a recent meeting with Abiodun Abayomi Oyebanji, the governor of Ekiti State, the agric minister acknowledg­ed the existence of corruption issues related to farmers being enticed by agro dealers and poor farmers’ data.

“These challenges include reported cases of round-tripping in connivance with agro-dealers and poor validation of farmers’ data in parts of performanc­es and sustainabi­lity particular­ly in the areas of wheat seeds local production.

FG turns to ICT as solution

The minister is taking a different tact when it comes to the problems, hoping to assign officers to oversee and coordinate the supply chain operations and strictly follow the establishe­d guidelines and regulation­s. However, this could prove challengin­g because some of the collusion is carried out with knowledge of ministry officials.

“The ICT platform provider are to deploy the best and reliable system that can capture and trace all the transactio­ns under the agro-pocket, being the primary purpose government decided to utilize technology in the inputs delivery process to promote transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and easy tracking of the impacts and performanc­e,” Kyari said.

Senator Kyari is also focusing on the input producers to ensure that the fertilizer­s, seeds, agro-chemicals supply meet with the prescribed set standards in terms of quantity and quality, the input distributo­rs or agro-dealers to sell only certified and approved products sourced from the registered input producers.

The Minister of Finance, Mr. Wale Edu, who attended the meeting, stated that “there is a substantia­l interventi­on fund for the agric sector, in terms of food production, to produce more rice, maize wheat and cassava. It will help to bring down rate of inflation. Successful dry season farming will bring down cost of food production and will bring down inflation.”

The Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Alhaji Atiku Bagudu, also said “Nigeria’s agricultur­al space is one of the most elastic in the world. Every cropping season can produce a miracle, if there is more investment in the sector.”

Bagudu added that the present administra­tion is committed to the agricultur­e sector in terms of improvemen­t in budget allocation and other interventi­on funds to achieve food and nutrition security.

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