Sowetan

‘Farmers must be proactive’

Maile calls for out of the box thinking for success

- By Penwell Dlamini

Gauteng MEC for agricultur­e and rural developmen­t Lebogang Maile says emerging farmers in the province have to learn to stand up and find opportunit­ies on their own to compete commercial­ly. Maile said the department provides a variety of support to farmers, which include seeds and equipment. “Access to markets is not the responsibi­lity of the government. The government can help and facilitate. The farmer must also think outside the box and be creative,” he said. “There’s quite a few things that we do including [helping] people [to] supply government with food. For instance, in the department of education, we feed 1.1-million kids every day. Farmers must go out and find out who is supplying the department and what is being supplied. They can’t sit at home and say I don’t have market access, the government must go and create it …We have been working with retail outlets like Pick n Pay and have agreed that fresh produce must be supplied by township-based entreprene­urs and all that. “It is not easy for anyone. A farmer must also try their level best. If they can’t raise enough money to pay, they must make arrangemen­ts. This is not a bank, it is a government institutio­n. We can always renegotiat­e the terms.” He was reacting to a Sowetan story published last week in which a black farmer in De Deur, south of Johannesbu­rg, received summons from the Gauteng Enterprise Propeller (GEP) after failing to repay R112 000 of the R202 000 loan she received from the agency. The farmer, Ellen Matene, was worried that GEP would ultimately obtain an order from the high court that would allow the agency to repossess her farm in order to recoup the money she owes. But the GEP said it was not its intention to repossess the farm but that it just wanted Matene to pay back the money.

Maile said the responsibi­lity to pay back loans obtained from the GEP was the farmer’s. “There is a grant called Comprehens­ive Agricultur­al Support Programme but obviously there is a process for that. We help more than 3 000 farmers in Gauteng. There is a process where people apply and we help them with irrigation, fencing, boreholes, inputs and all that.”

 ?? / MDUDUZI NDZINGI ?? Helen Matene could possibly lose her De Deur farm.
/ MDUDUZI NDZINGI Helen Matene could possibly lose her De Deur farm.

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