The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Hardy Zimbabwean farmers take on Nigeria’s challenges

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ILORIN, Nigeria: Farming in Nigeria is not for the faintheart­ed. Intermitte­nt electricit­y means generators are needed half the time. Chronicall­y potholed roads make transport slow and expensive. Fake fertiliser has previously devastated crops, while toxic feed ruined one dairy farm. But for a group of 13 hardy farmers from Zimbabwe, the opportunit­y was too good to pass up.

“When it comes to agricultur­e, there’s a lot that can be done here,” said Piet du Toit, a weather-beaten 64-year-old farmer from Zimbabwe, as he swung open the gate to his lush garden in Kwara state, western Nigeria.

“But it’s got a long way to go and it’s not going to happen overnight.”

Fourteen years ago, after Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe seized white-owned farms in a controvers­ial land reform programme, Du Toit took up an offer from the Kwara state government to take his skills to Nigeria.

He establishe­d a 1,000-hectare (nearly 2,500-acre) commercial farm in the virgin bush, two hours by car north of the state capital Ilorin.

Since then, the gruelling conditions have slashed the size of the original group from 13 to five.

Du Toit, who grows maize and soy, had to shift his focus to poultry farming this year after the plunging naira currency caused the cost of crop production to skyrocket.

Yet for all the challenges, he says business is booming.

“It’s profitable,” said Du Toit, showing off his 21 chicken sheds and beaming with pride.

“There’s big investment coming into the country.”

But Nigeria is in the grip of its worst recession in 25 years after a plunge in oil prices.

Now, the West African powerhouse is seeking to slash its dependency on crude revenues and wean itself off costly imports.

President Muhammadu Buhari’s government backs farming as one driver of recovery – but the reality has proved far more complicate­d, with farmers struggling to access credit.

Banks’ lending to the agricultur­e sector has risen from about one per cent of their total credit to just four per cent in over three years, said FBN Quest, a Lagos-based investment banking firm.

“This will not bring about the rapid growth in the agro-industry underpinni­ng the federal government’s strategies,” it said in a recent note.

Most farming is done by subsistenc­e smallholde­rs which complicate­s efforts to standardis­e market prices and product quality, while depriving the government of much needed revenue.

“So much of the agricultur­al value chain is chaotic,” said Edward George, an analyst at Ecobank.

A significan­t proportion of what Nigeria produces is wasted because it cannot reach the marketplac­e, he added.

And because Nigeria’s food production has not kept up with a booming population, imports have soared, funded by the lucrative oil and gas industry.

“There are Nigerians who will use their cell phones to import pizza from London,” agricultur­e minister Audu Ogbeh complained recently.

Like his fellow countryman Du Toit, Peter Crouch, a former tobacco farmer, has also thrown his lot in with poultry.

He opened a hatchery along with his son David in January as part of an egg-to-butcher chicken production operation.

“You have to have the full chain” since Nigeria does not have a developed system, said Crouch, as he took a drag from a Zimbabwean made Madison cigarette.

But it is Nigeria’s epidemic of smuggled chicken that really ruffles Crouch’s feathers.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A women distribute­s cassava cuttings whilst others plant them on a recently prepared land. Farming in Nigeria is not for the faintheart­ed as intermitte­nt electricit­y means generators are needed half the time. Chronicall­y potholed roads make transport...
— AFP photo A women distribute­s cassava cuttings whilst others plant them on a recently prepared land. Farming in Nigeria is not for the faintheart­ed as intermitte­nt electricit­y means generators are needed half the time. Chronicall­y potholed roads make transport...

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