The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘ How insecurity will escalate food crisis in 2023’

AFAN advises northern states to be proactive

- By Femi Ibirogba

THERE are indication­s that food shortage and inflation will worsen in 2023 following relentless attacks in most of the states where food grains are cultivated in commercial quantities.

Kaduna State is rated as the largest producer of maize, a crop in high demand for direct human consumptio­n, industrial food processing and animal feeds. But the state has witnessed unpreceden­ted number of daring bandit attacks in the last few years, peaking with the mind- boggling attacks on the Kaduna Internatio­nal Airport and the ill- fated Abuja- Kaduna train in March.

Again, the country depends significan­tly on rain- fed agricultur­e but emergence of rainfall provides green covers for most dreadful herders, bandits and other criminal elements.

Also, the build- up to the 2023 general election is already ruffling feathers, and with this comes the anxiety that the widespread insecurity would be fuelled by politickin­g and would in turn aggravate state of food production, food scarcity and inflation as practicall­y most farming communitie­s are either displaced or unable to access their farmland.

Pockets of clashes between herders and farmers, especially in Benue, Plateau, Nassarawa and other states, apart from Kaduna as the main theatre of banditry, have already displaced thousands of farming households, apart from those displaced, maimed and killed in the north- east zone

According to www. internaldi­splacement. org, “In the past year, the violence in the north- central and northwest regions left 586,000 people internally displaced, many of whom were newly displaced in 2020. Nigeria is also highly exposed to natural hazards and is affected by a number of disasters that trigger displaceme­nt each year.”

Vice President of the Catfish and Allied Fish Farmers Associatio­n of Nigeria ( CAFFAN), North- West Zone, Comrade Salihu Abubakar, said insecurity had gone beyond the northern part of the country to other parts, causing damage to food production and legitimate businesses.

He said: “This is a problem we face not only in the Northern part of the country but all over Nigeria. Since we start facing the problem of banditry in the north, 65 per cent of most farmers can’t go to their farms due to insecurity.”

Abubakar said the government should do something about in security so, farmers can produce enough produce to feed the growing population and avert addition of hunger to the widespread poverty.

Former National President, All Farmers’ Associatio­n of Nigeria ( AFAN), Kabir Ibrahim, in a statement entitled ‘ Insecurity is the foremost threat factor to the attainment of food security in Nigeria: the state government­s in the north should work jointly and collective­ly to ensure restoratio­n of normalcy or the whole country will go hungry,” said it had been nearly 15 years since Boko Haram began in the North- East zone as a religious movement and later snowballed into a full- scale terrorist group.

He said a lot of effort, mainly through kinetic means, had been deployed to stem the activities of the group but with marginal success.

He said in other parts of the north, especially, the NorthWest and North- Central zones, where most of agricultur­al production takes place, banditry and kidnapping­s are so rampant that the farmers are discourage­d from readily accessing their farms.

Kabir said: “This has resulted in a reduction of sustainabl­e food sufficienc­y, thereby impeding the attainment of food security in spite of the several interventi­on programmes, such as the CBN’S Anchor Borrowers’ Programme, NALDA’S integrated farm settlement­s, FMARDA’S efforts and several other programmes by the Buhari administra­tion.”

He explained that agricultur­e essentiall­y takes place at the state level and is on the concurrent list with the Federal Government spearheadi­ng the creation of an enabling environmen­t through policy direction and encouragin­g stakeholde­rs’ buy- in.

Hence, he called on states to play very important roles in bringing about food security to Nigeria and admitted that this is attainable if the security of life and property is guaranteed at the state level.

He suggested that “All efforts by all the state government­s in the north to stem insecurity should coalesce under one umbrella to be called Northern Nigeria Security Initiative ( NNSI) under the chairmansh­ip of the chairman of the Northern Governors’ Forum, assisted by a team headed by a Director- General, who knows what to do.”

Also, part of the measures, according to him, is that each of the 19 states in the north should contribute N1 billion only sustainabl­y to a common pool.

He suggested that a critical mass of 2,000 youths be re

cruited as part of a ‘ vigilante group’ and paid an honorarium of N20,000 monthly from each of the 19 Northern states to keep the peace among their recalcitra­nt peers.

Kabir added that “NDLEA should partner with each of the 19 state government­s and FCT to proactivel­y fight drug use and traffickin­g by impounding and destro ying identified drug peddling enclaves or dens of drug dealers as well as abusers.”

Besides, he said all the fore sts, which bandits and marauders occupy should be combed, defoliated and in some cases, bulldozed as well as immediatel­y converted into cultivable and irrigable land.

“These sug gestions and many more should be promptly pursued to mitigate the current tide of insecurity before the exit of the Buhari- led administra­tion to avert the total collapse of our food system and the whole country, God forbid,” he said.

A tractor- hiring service provider in Niger State, David Ayodele, disclosed to The Guardian that most of his clients had abandoned largescale farm operations as insecurity takes the centre stage in the state.

This, he said, would deplete the volume of food that would be available to Nigerians in 2023, and might cause food inflation.

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