- FG appeals to states to take over its roads
- Won’t force them to give up land for grazing
L-R; President Muhammadu Buhari, Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Mr Abubakar Malami,Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh, Minister of State Agriculture Hon Heineken Lokpobiri, Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma and Minister of State Budget and National Planning, Hajiya Zainab Ahmed as President presides over July 20th 2016 Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting at the State House in Abuja. PHOTO; SUNDAY AGHAEZE |
Farmers may have to pay for the federal
government to provide them with security against kidnappers and other
intruders who may want to invade their farms.
This was disclosed yesterday by the
Minister for Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, while
briefing journalists at the end of the Federal Executive Council (FEC)
meeting held in Abuja where President Muhammadu Buhari presided.
Ogbeh, who was answering questions from
journalists said he had already held a meeting with the Minister of
Interior, Abdulrahman Dambazau, adding that government was considering
various measures to protect farmers.
The minister said kidnapping would not stop but that government was determined to protect investors.He said: “I had a meeting with the Minister of Interior, we were looking at security situation in agriculture.
Sometime last year, some gunmen went to Olu Falae’s farm, a
Nigerian in status, in age and ranking, and took him away and marched
him around, forced him to trek ten kilometres, even carried him on their
backs.
“Many more farmers are coming in,
including foreign investors, and they stand the risk of being subjected
to this kind of humiliation.
“So, we are talking with Ministry of
Interior that we have to put measures in place. These things are
happening in other countries too, where the civil defence corps may have
to train a special department to protect huge investors and investment
in their farms for a fee, because kidnapping will not stop.
“From the security point of view, we have to take measures to make sure that people who invest are protected.
“In other countries of the world, you may have noticed that people live in their farms, you hardly see a farmer who lives in the city, he lives in the farm with his family, you cannot do that here. They will come and take you, your wife and children in the name of kidnapping, we have to stop it and we have to use the legitimate instrument of state to do it because the farmer has no right to buy a gun to protect himself.”
*He also announced that government has
taken a bold step to achieve its plan to reduce Nigeria dependency on
oil as the Federal Executive Council approves the Agriculture Promotion
Policy (2016-2009).Ogbeh said the policy outlined all that needed to be done to achieve self sufficency in agriculture.
He said: “The document is titled ‘The Green Alternative’ and it outlines virtually everything we need to do, every policy we need to undertake to achieve self sufficiency in agriculture and also to become major exporter of agricultural products.
One is the roadmap for agricultural
operations in the next three years, which we presented to the council
today, a detailed document, it outlines our policies and our objectives
in trying to see agriculture as the next biggest alternative in our
drive to diversify the economy of this country.
“We are working hard on the staples to satisfy local production and we are fully aware that there is a major concern in the country for food self-sufficiency in the country and that there is crisis in many families as aa result of serious shortage of food.
“But we are working hard and thank God
that ours has not become as bad as one South American country, which was
also a major oil producing country, by that, I mean Venezuela which
situation is definitely a 100 times worst than ours.
“But the point is that where we are going we believe that in a short while another year and half in the maximum, we should be reasonably self sufficient in grains like rice, maize, beans, we may not achieve everything in wheat but we will be very close to our targets. Other things are also there in the roadmap. That is what council endorsed this afternoon.”
Also speaking, the Minister of Women
Affairs, Aisha Al Hassan, said the federal government would like states
to take over federal roads in their states and maintain them.
She said FEC had approved a memo
presented by the Minister of the Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde
Fashola, for the re-designation of two roads in Kaduna State from
federal roads to state roads based on the request by the Kaduna State
Governor, Nasir, el-Rufai, to the president to have the two roads
mentioned, the Nnamdi Azkiwe Express Way that is the Kaduna bye-pass
road as is popularly called and the popular Ahmadu Bello Way which runs
across almost inside Kaduna town.
She explained that the roads are
presently federal roads but that Fashola requested that they be
re-designated as state roads so that Kaduna State would have the power
without any inhibition to work on the roads to make them better for
Kaduna indigenes.
Speaking further on the the crisis
between herdsmen and farmers, the agric minister said a pilot programme
was being planned in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) to stop cows
being moved around.
He said: “We have got very good seeds of grass which we are going to start planting. Eventually and in the next one year, I hope we shall move most of our cows into ranches and reserves depending on different terminologies people want to hear.
“Some people don’t want to hear about
grazing reserves and government has no intension of forcing anyone to
surrender one inch of land. Some states are willing, we shall develop
these things in their domain, cows will move in there, they will be
given best grass for cattle. Most of these grasses contain 18 per cent
protein and amino acid, so the cows can feed well, have the good water
to drink and give us the best milk and beef.”
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