Hunger, analysts say, should be really seen by many people as the greatest of all violence against humanity, just like Mahatma Ghandi of India did long time ago, there is need for a genuine and total war to be declared against it in countries of the world where it is biting hard.
According
to the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations, from
Africa to Asia and Latin America to the Near East, there are 805 million people
in the world who do not get enough food to eat for a normal active life.
Experts
maintain that hunger is the biggest single risk to global health and must be
conquered to ensure healthy living and productive life. Even as concerned
authorities in Nigeria insist that the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of
reducing hunger by half in 2015 has been achieved, it is strongly believed that
many Nigerians still go to bed on empty stomachs.
In
order to properly fight the war against hunger in Nigeria, agricultural
biotechnology researchers maintain that the most needed weapon is genetic
engineering, which can be deployed to generate crop varieties and animal breeds
with higher yield and nutritional content, resistant to pest, diseases, drought
and flood among others.
One
of the researchers, Malam Muhammad Umar Lawan, a plant breeder with the
Institute of Agricultural Research (IAR), Zaria in Kaduna State, told our
reporter that for Nigeria to be food secured and hunger free, agricultural
biotechnology must be used to produce genetically modified (GM) foods to feed
the teeming population.
“Let’s
tell ourselves the truth; in crops where conventional breeding doesn’t work, we
have to apply genetic engineering. It is scientific. GM foods is not only about
food security and hunger, but will yield more income to the nation, lead to
reduction in cost of production and improve nutritional content of crops to
tackle health issues especially among women and children,” the researcher
pointed out.
Lawan
maintained that GM foods are safe as all rules are strictly adhered to by
researchers, adding that the foods will properly address all the indices of
food security including quantity, quality, availability and affordability if
well positioned by the government and other stakeholders.
According
to the Country Coordinator of Open Forum on Agricultural Biotechnology in
Africa (OFAB), Mrs. Rose M. Gidado, who is a microbiologist and director with
the National Biotechnology Development Agency (NABDA), to get a food secure
Africa including Nigeria, “conventional agric cannot do it alone, we need agric
biotechnology as well.”
Mrs
Gidado said all stakeholders must be well informed about agricultural
biotechnology and GM foods so as to allay perceived fears, misconceptions and
opposition among people.
The
Country Coordinator said GM foods were science based, stressing that the
mounting opposition against it were due to various reasons including business
interests of some agrochemical and fertilizer producers, who are afraid of
losing market if crop varieties that don’t depend on their products are
introduced.
She,
however, pointed out that application of agricultural biotechnology in Nigeria
depends on the passage of the bio-safety bill by the National Assembly and its
eventual signing into law by the President.
“Without
the bio-safety bill, all our agricultural biotechnology work will be in vain.
We call on the law makers to pass the bill before they leave office and urge
the President not to delay in signing it into law as well,” she appealed.
The microbiologist disclosed that the African Agricultural
Technology Foundation (AATF) in conjunction with Nigerian researchers, have
developed genetically modified beans, cassava and sorghum, which are currently
undergoing confined field trial, to help
Nigerian farmers overcome various challenges.
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