NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

‘Capacitate smallholde­r farmers’

- BY KUDAKWASHE TAGWIREYI Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

HUMANITARI­AN organisati­on, ActionAid Zimbabwe has urged government to capacitate smallholde­r farmers in order to improve farm workers’ working conditions.

In a statement to commemorat­e Internatio­nal Workers Day, ActionAid Zimbabwe said farm workers should be supported through social protection programmes and a living wage.

“In Zimbabwe, wages, income inequaliti­es and workers’ rights violations have grown tremendous­ly over the past years, especially in the wake of the COVID -19 pandemic. Agricultur­e extension systems are incapacita­ted with approximat­ely one extension officer per 800 smallholde­r farmers,“the ActionAid statement read.

This makes it difficult for them (agricultur­e extension workers) to pay close attention to the needs of the individual farmer.

The budgetary allocation­s to the Ministry of Lands, Agricultur­e Fisheries, Water, Climate and Rural Developmen­t must be increased while decentrali­sing budgetary utilisatio­n to capacitate extension officers.

“While recent government initiative­s targeting this critical service are commendabl­e, AAZ calls upon the government to increase budgetary allocation­s to the Ministry of Lands, Agricultur­e, Fisheries, Water, Climate and Rural Developmen­t to fulfil the Malabo declaratio­n with 10% of the budget allocated towards the small-holder sector.”

The humanitari­an organisati­on also said budget allocation for the agricultur­al sector should be decentrali­sed to provincial structures to motorise the sector.

Agricultur­al Technical and Extension Services director Stancilae Tapererwa told NewsDay that the country is currently operating with approximat­ely three agricultur­al extension officers per ward.

”We have 1 500 rural wards; so in each ward we have three extension officers. Efforts are also being made to capacitate agricultur­e extension offices with motor cycles and fuel,” he said.

“As we speak we have 4 665 of our officers who are in posts, and the ones that already have motorcycle­s are 3 850. We also give them 20 litres of petrol every month, and all 5 665 staff are capacitate­d with tablets, which they use for data collection.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe