The Guardian (Nigeria)

When Green Chamber Converged On Tackling Food Crisis

• Access To Food Is Our Fundamenta­l Human Right – Onyaga • If This Trend Continues, There’ll Be Chaos In The Country – Dikwa • Solutions To Food Price Crisis Challenges Are Not Monetary But Structural – Adesina • The Main Challenge For Food And Hunger Sol

- From Adamu Abuh ( Abuja) and Gbenga Akinfenwa ( Lagos)

DESPITE Federal Government’s ‘ interventi­ons’, Nigerians will need to brace up for more weeks of hunger and high cost of food items.

Berating government for its inconsiste­nt policies, which stakeholde­rs in agric sector have described as lacking focus, the Founder, Izanu Africa, Mrs Comfort Onyaga, said goverrnmen­t’s policies aimed at tackling the crisis have failed to address the issue.

“If the government is not ready to address these problems, there is no point intervenin­g at all,” she said.

Also expressing shock that interventi­ons by government have not impacted the people, the Chief Executive Officer, Green Saharan Farms, Jos, Plateau State, Suleiman Dikwa, warned that there may be chaos in the country if this continues.

Two weeks ago, the House of Representa­tives held a debate on Agricultur­e and Food Security, which attracted the Minister of Agricultur­e and Food Security, Minister of State of Agricultur­e and Food Security, Minister of Blue Economy, Comptrolle­r- General of Customs, Director- General of NEMAHA, the Country Representa­tive of Food and Agricultur­al Organisati­on ( FAO), Managing- Director of NIRSAL, Managing Director of Bank of Agricultur­e, and Chief Executive Officer of the Agricultur­e Developmen­t Programme ( ADP).

The engagement between the lawmakers, with the Deputy Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Mr Benjamin Kalu, presiding, is seen as a response to hunger protests in parts of the country recently.

The developmen­t is coming on the heels of United Nations reports, which estimates that 25 million Nigerians — or about 15 per cent of the total population — are food insecure.

The third in a series of sectoral debates, in line with the legislativ­e agenda of the Speaker, Rt. Hon Abass Tajudeen- led 10th Assembly, it came barely a month after Speaker Abass promised to put in place measures aimed at ensuring availabili­ty of essential food items at affordable rates to Nigerians.

It is against this background that the lawmakers took turns to raise issues surroundin­g the farmers herders clashes, incentives available to farmers to boost food production, availabili­ty of capital incentives, revitalisa­tion of dams, supply of fertiliser­s, the rationale behind the seizure of agricultur­al produce within the country’s territory, distributi­on of palliative­s, and the menace of disgruntle­d security officials that extort money from trailers conveying food items within the length and breadth of the country among others.

Mr Esset Mark Udo, representi­ng Uyo Federal Constituen­cy of Akwa Ibom State wondered why there are e delays in the distributi­on of food items meant to be shared to vulnerable Nigerians in line with the directive of President Tinubu. .

The chairman an House committee on Custom, Mr Leke Abejide, ide, who also lent his voice on the issue, tasked the Minister to ensure the utilisatio­n of dams built when the late President Shehu Shagari ari held sway in the second republic.

Kalu directed ed the Minister to ensure cultivatio­n of 500,000 000 hectares of land based on the directive from m President Tinubu.

The Abia- born orn lawmaker stressed the need to reposition sition the Bank of Agricultur­e ( BOA) and nd Bank of Industry ( BOI) to offer r capital incentives to farmers as part art of ongoing effort to boost food d production in the polity.

The Deputy Speaker who decried the loss oss of over $ 70 million yearly owing to Illegal gal fishing activities harped on the he need for the BOI to offer incentives ves to small scale farmers armers to boost poultry y and fish production ion in the country.

In his presentati­on, entation, the Minister, Agricultur­e and Food Security, Senator Abubakar Kyari, stated that Nigerians are currently facing tough times but President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has begun to tackle the problem by declaring a state of emergency on agricultur­e.

He commended President Tinubu for the robust plans for ensuring food security for Nigerians, stressing the role insecurity has played in causing food insecurity due to the problems between farmers and herdsmen/ bandits that has raged past administra­tions.

The minister also stressed the negative impact of such factors as the COVID- 19 pandemic; flooding activities, as well as the Naira redesign policy of the Central Bank on food production by agricultur­alists.

He particular­ly referred to the 2023 Supplement­ary Budget, which provided a N200bn palliative package, mainly for grains, seeds, agricultur­al inputs and equipment for farmers to reinforce President Tinubu resolve to address the challenge in the country.

“This momentum has been sustained in the 2024 Budget, which has significan­tly improved budgetary allocation­s to all critical sectors of the economy, especially defense, healthcare, education and infrastruc­ture,” he said.

“In 2023, the President declared a state of emergency on food security, focusing on improving both availabili­ty and affordabil­ity. Some immediate measures approved the release of fertiliser­s and grains to farmers and households, particular­ly given the fallouts from the removal of fuel subsidies.

“Others include boosting the national strategic food reserve and introducin­g a price stabilisat­ion mechanism, especially for critical food items. And just a few days ago, President Tinubu also constitute­d a special presidenti­al committee headed by the Chief of Staff to take immediate steps to arrest the worsening food situation.”

Kyari stated that the ministry has put in place some policies to

ensure the availabili­ty and affordabil­ity of food provisions, adding that the President has also directed the mitigation of the hardship of Nigerians and the ministry has in response carved out long- term, mid- term, as well as short term solutions such as the launching of the dry season farming to make farming an all year activity.

On his part, the Comptrolle­r– General of Customs, Bashir Adeniyi, said the role of the Nigerian Customs in ensuring food security in Nigeria can be seen in its functions under the renewed hope programme of President Tinubu.

Adeniyi stated that through a mix of policies and framework, the Customs have ensured its contributi­on to battling food insecurity, saying that levies have been either removed or reduced for appliances and machinery imported into Nigeria for agricultur­al developmen­t.

On Monday, after weeks of foot- dragging, Kyari announced that distributi­on of grains would begin nationwide during the week, but The Guardian checks revealed that the said grains were yet to reach their destinatio­ns as at the weekend.

“We shall commence the distributi­on of 42,000 metric tons of grains, as approved by Mr. President, across the 36 states of the federation as one of the programmes to be rolled out this week,” he had said.

“We are working in hand with NEMA and the DSS to ensure that the grains get to the right people in the right packages and quantities. Furthermor­e, 58,000 metric tons of milled rice from mega rice millers will also be released into the market for stabilisat­ion.”

Also, just last week, the Monetary Policy Committee ( MPC) – the interest fixing arm of the Central Bank of Nigeria ( CBN), raised the already- re high anchor rate by the 400 basis points to a multi- decade high of 22.5 per cent.

The apex bank has also been involved in aggressive bond auction since the beginning of the year in a separate attempt to improve money supply to ease pressure on naira and prices. But all these interventi­ons, according to experts, have made little or no impact in addressing the food price crisis, adding more pains to plight of already- distraught Nigerians.

According to Onyaga: “The country has a lot of interventi­on programmes currently going on, but most of them are driven by organisati­ons and institutio­ns that are working in the Silos. Until they come together with collective efforts to address the food security challenge in the land, it’s just going to be like a wild wind chase.

“Without the implementa­tion of the Maputo Declaratio­n agreement – mandating to ensure that 10 per cent is allocated in the yearly budget for agricultur­e, there isn’t going to be any significan­t change or improvemen­ts in the food system.

“With the current food prices, the approach the government has taken to address the food problem is not the way to go, it’s not sustainabl­e. Let’s take the cash transfer initiative – the interventi­on within the food system as an example, if a bag of rice costs more than the amount being disbursed to vulnerable groups, to what extend do you think that the fund will be able to cater to their needs, knowing that these are families that have children who are in school, children to feed?” She said food security is not only about food access, noting that there are four pillars to food security – availabili­ty, access, utilisatio­n and stability, saying these pillars cannot be undermined in addressing the problem. “If the government is not ready to address these problems, building on these pillars or using the pillars as a framework, there is no point intervenin­g at all. If the people don’t have access to quality of food that’ll give them the dietary requiremen­ts for their daily survival, you’ll rather put them in the danger of falling sick because they don’t have the required nutrients, hence malnutriti­on will become the order of the day.

“If the government does not increase its budgetary allocation­s for agric, and if those budgets are not well utilised and even the loan received from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ( IMF) or the World Bank, the country will not record any progress.”

Onyaga regretted that the country is not any way near to the end of food crisis, saying till now, Nigeria still rely on rain fed agricultur­e for cultivatio­n of food, “it’s only within few value chain that you have farmers cultivatin­g food and it cannot be one- sided, Nigeria needs protein not calories, so we need to be able to put in place infrastruc­ture that will become an enabler for farmers – smallholde­r farmers and large scale commercial farmers to be able to provide sufficient foods to feed the people.

“Access to food is our fundamenta­l human right, if the government is not able to guarantee access to quality food that meets the dietary requiremen­ts of every individual, they have not started. Nigeria should go back to the target of the SDGS 2 and look at these targets critically, look at the pillars of food security critically and design an interventi­on that will ensure that people can access quality and affordable food.

Dikwa said: “You can’t keep doing the same thing and expect a different outcome. I want us to take a look at purchasing power, while in the West and other countries, wages and salaries are chasing inflation from the UK to the United States, Nigerian government­s at all levels have budgeted and expended for their comforts, they always ask us to be patient while they rush to meet their transporta­tion, food and accommodat­ion at tax payers’ expense.

“So where are the leaders willing to sacrifice? I see chaos like we have never seen if this trend continues. Let’s not ignore the skirmishes here and there, for the first time Nigerians are protesting hunger, not wages or human rights or policies, but because people cannot afford to feed.

“If we don’t take revolution­ary approaches by the leaders, the masses will do it and it’s not the best time to lower our gaze and strip ourselves, the leaders of our privileges and sacrifice for the benefit of all. Leaders should not only be heard but to be seen to sacrifice for the common good.”

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