farmers |
The nation
yesterday morning awoke to a shocking surprise--the replacement of
Agriculture Minister Moses Zinnah by his Deputy for Technical Services,
Madam Seklau Wiles.
The breaking news came late Wednesday night, in the State radio ELBC's 10 o'clock newscast.
What caused the
sudden announcement is what everyone would like to know. Minister
Zinnah's boss, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, dropped the bombshell
just as she was departing for a private visit to the United States. But
the public would not know until Madam President was far into the skies,
well on her way to Washington.
It is a well-known
fact that the President, in her nearly 11 and a half years in office,
has had hard luck with her Agriculture Ministers, most especially the
first two--Dr. J. Chris Toe and Dr. Florence Chenoweth, both of whom had
been well trained in Agriculture, each having attained the PhD.
So what were the
problems with the first two? Both had had considerable experiences in
the field of agriculture long before Ellen called them to office. Chris
had served in the 1970s and 80s in one of the most successful
agricultural enterprises Liberia had ever known, the Liberia Produce
Marketing Corporation (LPMC). President Sirleaf called him from the
presidency of Strayer College in Washington, D.C. But just as he took up
the new assignment, there was an ongoing boom in the price of natural
rubber, and two major rubber plantations, the Cavalla Rubber Plantation
in Maryland County and the Guthrie Rubber Plantation in Bomi County,
whose original owners having long departed the country, were now in the
hands of the Liberian government. The government contracted the National
Rubber Planters Association (NTAL) to run both plantations, and they
did so with efficiency. But the passing of liquid cash--United States
dollars--seemed too lucrative and NTAL soon found itself out of both
deals. This led to great controversies and confusion between the
Agriculture Ministry and Rubber Planters, which Chris Toe did not
survive.
Then entered Dr.
Florence Chenoweth as Ellen's second Agriculture Minister. It was
Florence's second time holding the post. She served as Agriculture
Minister for many years in the Tolbert government. Dr. Chenoweth was in
office far longer than Dr. Toe's three years, but with the same
difference--not much to account for. In her over six years as
Agriculture Minister, Liberia remained a net importer of food--and we
are talking not only of our staple, rice, but also meat--believe it or
not, chicken and even eggs, massive amounts of these from Holland and
other European countries; and also vegetables, including fresh tomatoes
and even bitter ball, from neighboring countries with the same rainfall
and soil as Liberia.
Nor did Ministers
Toe and Chenoweth, when the rubber price was good, have the foresight to
diversify some of the rubber money--or encouraging rubber planters to
grow coffee and cocoa, whose prices on the world market were great at
the time. Cocoa until recently was over US$2000 per metric ton, and
there were modern varieties of the product that were ready for
production in less than three years, compared to five to six years for
older varieties.
Oh! How we in
Liberia have become so accustomed to wasting our time, for absolutely no
reason except our lackadaisical nature, our penchant for greed,
selfishness and lack of vision. We indulge in shortsighted inaction
while our neighbors forge ahead, leaving us consistently behind.
When Dr. Moses
Zinnah, Ellen's third Agriculture Minister, was appointed in August
2015, this newspaper, the Daily Observer, immediately embraced him and
flooded him with all kinds of advice to help him succeed. When we called
him yesterday to find out what had happened, why his sudden removal, he
said the President did not think he was moving fast enough with the
achievements she had expected. He further complained about 'meetings,
meetings, meetings,' that normally left him only night time to work.
What of time to visit the farmers, and to undertake sustained
supervision to make sure that farmers were receiving the agricultural
extension services required to help them grow better farms?
The new Agriculture
Minister, Madam Seklau Wiles, has less than seven and a half months
remaining on the job. But she has two great advantages: she is a well-
trained Animal Husbandry expert and might be able to address our poultry
and eggs problem by encouraging our poultry farmers to produce more,
and our pig and cattle growers to set the stage for takeoff within the
next few years.
Her second great
advantage is her husband, Dr. Walter Wiles, also a well-trained
agriculturist, who heads the nation's leading agricultural research
outfit, the Central Agricultural Research Institute (CARI).
There is no way he can sit there, in that most critical position, and see her fail.
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