Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

‘Africa can feed the world’ Zim agric researcher shares global experience

-

AFRICA has the potential to feed itself and be a recognised exporter of food to all parts of the world if it harnesses all the gifts of natural geography that are at its disposal, but there has been a yawning gap and reluctance in promoting smart agricultur­al techniques that speak to global changes in climate, an agricultur­al researcher has noted.

He submits that the best way for Africa to feed the world is to teach farmers new practices and build technology around agricultur­e and its value chain so that the farmer benefits from being productive.

Inspired by the need to build resilient farming systems in a rural set up from where the nation could be fed through smart farming practices, a young Zimbabwean agricultur­e researcher Ranga Huruba (35) is researchin­g communal and small-scale beef production for rural residents.

Huruba recently toured Southern Alberta, Canada with some of the world’s most curious farmers under a Nuffield Scholarshi­p and says Zimbabwe has a strong agricultur­al foundation which only needs optimisati­on and an improvemen­t of models around market access, funding access, technology, training and genetics.

Huruba is a research manager for Debshan Ranch, an 8 000 - herd private cattle and wildlife operation in Shangani in Matabelela­nd South Province. He says it is important for those in the agricultur­al sector to take advantage of the upward economic trajectory in key economic sectors provided for under the National Developmen­t Strategy 1 (NDS1).

Nothing has disturbed mankind more than the false idea that there was ever one race of people that was superior to another and more glorious than others. There is no temptation that has been stronger than the urge to believe that by one’s blood and totem one should be bigger and better than others. In one of the most telling philosophi­cal essays of her century, Hannah Arendt, in Race-Thinking before Racism, ponders the origins of racethinki­ng in Europe, thinking that eventually spread throughout the world as it became an ideology of imperialis­m and colonialis­m. Racethinki­ng, Arendt teaches us, had its roots in the 18th Century and achieved its explosion in the 19th Century. This was the same time in which virtually all European national identities began to aggressive­ly romanticis­e their origins, their history and the purity of their blood against other nations in Europe.

The people of other places outside Europe, in Asia and especially dark Africa, were lowly classified as primitives and barbarians that could not belong equally to the same mankind, human race, and humanity with white Europeans. So, race-thinking, thinking about the superiorit­y of one’s race against others was the beginning of racism, a cancer that has continued to eat into the human family, causing hatred, conflicts, and even wars. The idea that one people could conquer and dominate another to become a “master-race” is the idea that eventually drove European imperialis­m and the conquest and domination of the world. It is remarkable that as large an event in world history as the conquest of the Global South by the Global North began with an ideology, a false but strong idea, that some races were

NDS1 provides for the funding and continued implementa­tion of transforma­tive measures like the Pfumvudza/Intwasa programme amongst a cocktail of other initiative­s that have spearheade­d growth of these sectors.

With the new dispensati­on emphasisin­g the need for Zimbabwean­s to be masters of their own destinies through the philosophy ‘Nyika inovakwa nevene vayo/ilizwe lakhiwa ngabaninil­o’, Huruba has joined other progressiv­e Zimbabwean­s in ensuring he contribute­s towards the growth of the country through adding value in the agricultur­al sector through various initiative­s.

The recent tour of Canada was part of his quest to learn different farming practices and shared some of his experience­s and lessons with Sunday News which can come in handy in ensuring the country reclaims its bread basket status in the Southern African region.

“We could build resilience in smallholde­r farming systems having seen how our family farm failed to keep up with changing times, I felt there was need to improve rural and village economies. I want to see an average Zimbabwean and African prosper. We should not hustle to fail or suffer but to develop and prosper as a country and a region. We need to keep on improving technologi­es, market linkages and our genetics,” said Huruba on what inspired him to apply for the tour.

“The tour exposed me to different cultures and ways of doing things which is from leadership management, operations management, social management and insights into how farmers interact among themselves as well as associatio­ns and government. The whole experience was a positive one and gets one to realize how much work there is for all of us in order to feed our global growing population.”

Huruba notes that Africa has the advantage of good climatic conditions, abundant land and the major resource which is the people that have a good work ethic.

As such he said, the continent needs to harness all and optimise production on every square inch so that it claims its spot on the world production quota.

“Africa needs opportunit­y, not pity, therefore we should move away from aid and start trading through focused engagement and intentiona­l growth. The global population is growing and we either have to depend on a few commercial farmers to increase their production on a finite land resource or we make a bigger chunk of the population (communal, rural and small scale - Africa) to be self-sustaining through resilient intensive conservati­on farming. I would go for the later for it brings dignity and pride back to the family unit especially an African family unit,” said Huruba.

The philosophy around smart agricultur­e is that of sustainabi­lity, regenerati­ve, and holistic techniques that revolve around zero harm to the environmen­t as one is producing goods and services.

As such, Huruba says, “Increasing production without detrimenta­l effects to the environmen­t is the challenge and we should revisit our indigenous knowledge systems and take a leaf out of that book because the first world is cycling back to those practices and yet we are still chasing what they are leaving instead of moving in the direction of adopting and using our own knowledge systems that promote smart conservati­on agricultur­e.”

Coming to livestock production, Huruba said: “Zimbabwe has about 5 million cattle and 3 million of those are outside commercial production systems.

“They are also being run in multi species systems for example in a rural setting (goats, chickens, pigs, etc.) So, the foundation is there and all we need is optimizati­on and an improvemen­t model around market access, funding access, technology, training and genetics to keep on improving our herds and ensure that we remain unique in our natural beef production because that is what the world is looking for.”

The Nuffield Scholarshi­p requires one to generate a report or project that should have a national impact but with a global focus that mainstream­s and helps farmers and government­s. As such his report is set to benefit the country in various ways. @nyeve14

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe