Daily Trust

Kogi govt to enforce agric produce laws on cashews

- From Itodo Daniel Sule, Lokoja

The Kogi government says it has put in place necessary measures to ensure implementa­tion and strict enforcemen­t of agricultur­al produce laws to arrest adulterati­on of cashew nuts produced in the state.

The Commission­er for Agricultur­e, Mr Kehinde Oloruntoba, disclosed this at a one-day workshop on “Cashew Nuts Quality Control and Regulation­s” organised for stakeholde­rs in the cashew value chain in Anyigba, Kogi State.

The workshop organised by Federal Produce Inspection Service (FPIS) of the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment attracted participan­ts from farmers’ associatio­ns, licensed buyers’ agents, exporters, processors and government agencies.

Oloruntoba, who was represente­d by Mr Emmanuel Idenyi, Permanent Secretary of the ministry, said “Nigerian cashew used to be the best and of the highest grade in the world, but unfortunat­ely, the quality has been on the ebb in the last two years.

“To forestall further depreciati­on of quality, we came up with a lot of measures that will prevent and arrest the adulterati­on of our produce by producers from other states.

“We are now going on strict enforcemen­t of the produce laws. We will ensure 100 per cent compliance to arrest anyone collaborat­ing or indulging in sharp practices.

“The bags to be used are coded and branded with Kogi’s name and seal. Any unbranded produce that is intercepte­d will be impounded.

“Security agencies have been informed, Produce Guards have been mandated to enforce the laws and they are going to be everywhere, at the warehouses and even on the farms too”.

Mr Idris Dafang, Coordinato­r of the programme and Deputy Director in the Federal Produce Inspection Service said quality of cashew nuts from Nigeria in the internatio­nal market had become an issue of great concern to the federal government.

He said that the programme was not happy with the serial rejection of cashew nuts from the country last year and needed to ensure that every produce leaving the shores of Nigeria met required internatio­nal standard.

Dafang said there was a glut of cashew nuts in the internatio­nal market two years ago as some other countries went into its production creating a highly competitiv­e market environmen­t with quality as the main determinan­t for demand.

He said that in 2017, the Federal Government met with representa­tives of the markets from Vietnam and India in Abuja over the issue of glut, standardiz­ation and quality control leading to eventual mop-up of the cashew nuts in warehouses in Lagos.

The Coordinato­r said that more sensitizat­ion would be carried out across Kogi State and hopefully, in the next two years, the state would assume its position as the top producer of cashew in Nigeria and the nation would reclaim its number one position in the internatio­nal market.

In her goodwill message, Amina Abdulmalik, Director Produce at the Nigeria Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Lokoja Smart office, decried the level of rejection of Nigerian cashew nuts in the internatio­nal market.

She attributed this to the fall in standard and urged the participan­ts to imbibe necessary knowledge to enhance quality and improvemen­t.

Alhaji Ichapi Mohammed, National Leader of National Cashew Associatio­n of Nigeria (NCAN) said the production chain could not be said to be complete until the product got to the final consumer adding that the chain was being impeded by paucity of funds.

“The impediment to our production is finance. We know what to do to improve the quality of our cashew but our farmers are impeded by finance. BOA, NEXIM and NEPC need to carry us along”, he said.

 ??  ?? Gov. Yahaya Bello of Kogi State
Gov. Yahaya Bello of Kogi State

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