Mr. Sunday Wabba |
Internally Displaced Persons are now one of the common features of
the Nigerian horizon. Associated with them are hunger and deprivations in the
camps. However, of recent, a quiet agrarian revolution is going on and the arrowhead of this revolution, Mr.
Sunday Wabba, founder of Smile Again African Initiative chatted with Food-Farm
News on the changes and other issues.
Excerpts.
Could you introduce yourself to Food
Farm News?
My name is Sunday Wabba, CEO and Founder, Smile Again
African initiative, I hail from Mussa Village, Askira/ Uba local government
area of Borno state. We found ourselves in Abuja as a result of the displacement of persons occasioned by Boko Haram attacks on
our villages. We came to Abuja in 2014, and housed by relations just as we
started struggling for survival.
The news making the rounds is that since the beginning of this crisis,
that is the Boko haram crisis, that has resulted to killing and displacement of
rural people being placed in IDPs camps and government claiming support with
foods and other materials, how do you want to agree with this support
intervention by the government?
Thank you very much, since we came to Abuja in 2014, I won’t say government
has not been trying, but because of the increasing population from the North
east alone was more than 2.5 million. So the support we have been getting from
the government was not adequate at sustaining us, and as result, many of us
went into other menial jobs to survive. To this extent, we initiated a programme
with the leaderships of these camps where we have been getting government’s
little support. On our own, we have initiated a training programme where we
have trained quite a number of women,
and it was tagged IDP trains IDPs.
We have trained about 200 women on tailoring
and we are craving the support of good people o f Nigeria especially our sons
and daughters from the state as we are using this medium to thank Senator Ali
Ndume and also the wife of Chief of Naval Staff who give us 50 sewing machines
to empower our women.
Let us be more agriculture-specific because of the mandate of publication.
Earlier you mentioned how you have been farming through cooperative, could you
throw more light to this?
The cooperative farming in the IDPs was as far back as
January-Febraury where the leadership of some of the camps came together and
brainstormed towards helping ourselves through farming. Thereby not waiting
alone for government food support. So we decided on seeking for farmland
support of the traditional chiefs from Nazarawa state who were willing to assist us with land for farming.
This is what led us into cooperative farming whereby we have planted cowpea. As
a matter of fact, we have over 2,000 registered cooperative members with women
forming theirs within the camps, under us.But Yaxaram Cowpea Cooperative covers
all the names of members and we have covered over 5,000 hectares as our harvest
is targeting almost 135-200 trucks this year. Also through this programme we
have introduced market where only our produce will be allowed for sale, through
our women. This market will serves as hub for all the IDPs in and around Abuja
metropolis where all people from the city can buy all their food stuffs and by
doing this, we shall be contributing our own quota to the development of
agricultural and food security development in the country.
How do you want to relate the issue of expired food being brought into
the camps to your going into farming cooperative as you had earlier mentioned?
Of recent, there are expired foods flooding the camps which
we observed as not being healthy and godly for the wellbeing of our people.
Just recently, they brought 200 cartons
of biscuit to one of the camps in October that will be expiring by the next
month which is November. We take this as act of wickedness and decided to take
our destiny in our own hands. Where were they three months ago when the starvation
was intense in the camps? Now that we have started getting the harvest of our
crops, they started bringing expired food stuffs instead of buying our produce.
Just last Saturday from National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA),
headquarters was milk and Golden Morn
that will be expired in December and November respectively, brought for our
children. So we are advising that whoever that want to assist us must not bring
any expired food as any of such matter will be reported to National Agency for
Food and Druds Administration and Control (NAFDAC) for immediate prosecution.
How do you want the issue of expired food resolved or what is the way
forward?
You see, the largest employer of labor in any country on earth
is agricultural sector, and in this regards, since we have vast land, free rain
which made up all good instrument of food production, this has motivated us into farming. So I am
appealing to the relevant authorities to partner with us especially at Yaxaram
Cooperative. Since we have produced large quantity of agricultural produce
especially the cowpea as government can buy all the produce from us to
feed people in the IDPs and others in the North East to augment shortfall in
the region instead of bringing expired food items into the camps.
How do you get the seeds for your members’ cultivation?
You may recall that the largest producer of cowpea in the
county is Borno state, I am from Bornu state, the southern part to be specific,
the entire Lake chad region used to be hub of farming activities and it was
dominated by the Gwoza. It is the Gwoza people that are displaced who live in
Abuja. It is the seeds from our traditional method that those that have them brought for us to plant in Abuja. The chemical aspect, to be honest, we have to
rally round good people especially one Non-Governmental Organization (NGO)
called Life Builder Initiative that gave us loan and bought these chemical with
loan for us. Although the quantity we are able to get did not go round our
members as we got only 200 litres from
the FG and this quantity is far below what we wanted.
We have taken officials
from Federal Ministry of Agriculture & Rural Development (FMARD) to our
sites for them to know the size of our cooperative. They have seen and promised
to make a case for us. But you know government policy always takes time before
it can become effective and the delay in the supply of pesticide has caused a
lot insects damaging our farms. We pray that government should always be
responsive to giving inputs before planting season of any crop to farmers’
associations like ours.
What are the other challenges?
We have many others like lack of storage facility as well as
training on how to practical commercial farming for those among us that have
interest in large scale farming. How I wish that government is sincere by
calling this people that have offered themselves among us to go into large
scale farming, but alas we are still working with the traditional ways of
farming and thereby not being able to get commercial harvest.Let Government
take some us to the other part of the world for training in the use of modern
technologies.
One person from the IDPs can come back to train about 200 people
on modern skill on farming that is train the trainers. And this will give the
whole region food stability and economic empowerment, so we are appealing to FG
and Minister of Agriculture, Baba Chief AuduOgbeh to look into this matter and
render a help for us as our cowpea will grow beyond our storage capacity, we
need storage facility or come up with a better facility or programme thereby
asking NEMA to buy all our produce instead of the expire foods that they always
give to the IDPs.
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