The Herald (Zimbabwe)

‘Distribute inputs on time’

- Walter Nyamukondi­wa in LION’S DEN

GOVERNMENT has been urged to speed up the dispatch and distributi­on of inputs under the Command Agricultur­e programme for the 2017 /18 farming season.

This comes amid indication­s that slow distributi­on will affect planting timelines for long season varieties.

The bulk of farmers in Mashonalan­d West province are in climatic region II which requires long season varieties, ideally planted in October.

In contributi­ons at a Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Lands, Agricultur­e and Irrigation Developmen­t meeting here yesterday, stakeholde­rs noted a slight delay in the distributi­on of inputs.

The committee is consulting stakeholde­rs for their input into the 2018 national Budget.

Stakeholde­rs said Government should expedite the dispatch of inputs to GMB depots for onward distributi­on to farmers.

“On Command Agricultur­e, we need timely distributi­on of inputs,” said Engineer Vimbai Pachawo from the Department of Irrigation Developmen­t.

“Already, we are in October and we have not started distributi­ng the inputs.

“By this time last year we had already started distributi­ng some of the inputs. We are now worried because as Mashonalan­d West province, we are in region II and we need long season varieties in some areas.

“These are planted as early as October.”

Eng Pachawo said inputs should ideally be distribute­d to farmers by the end of August.

Others said Command Agricultur­e was a noble programme which should help farmers in setting up irrigation systems.

“There should be a deliberate move by Government that all farmers engaged be capacitate­d to at least sink boreholes that ensure they can irrigate after about two years,” said Makonde district administra­tion Mr Joseph Manyurapas­i.

This, he said, could be done in the form of loans that were repaid at agreed timelines.

Others said Command Agricultur­e contracts should specify obligation­s of each party.

This comes as farmers said some costs and obligation­s were not clear from the onset.

Others said the cost of the inputs should be spelt out as some of the prices were found to be above those obtaining on the market.

Contracts, some noted, should be also crafted in vernacular to allow people to understand their obligation­s before appending their signatures.

Committee chairperso­n Cde Christophe­r Chitindi said stakeholde­rs were calling for improved efficiency in inputs distributi­on.

“What we are getting from stakeholde­r is that inputs should be distribute­d in time, Agritex officers who implement the programme should be capacitate­d,” said Cde Chitindi.

“People are saying when the Command Agricultur­e programme comes to an end, if it does, it should leave farmers with tractors and boreholes.”

Another stakeholde­r, Mrs Betty Biri, said Government should also consider regions within broader climatic regions for special programmes.

She said there were some areas in Makonde district that had region five weather patterns, which are generally hot, and needed support in livestock production than crops.

“Resource distributi­on should not be uniform by province, but should respond to sub-climatic considerat­ions,” she said.

Mr Golden Nyamukapa noted that illegal settlement­s and land disputes were threatenin­g the agricultur­e sector.

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