* FG begins recapitalization
Investigations
have revealed that the government had to recapitalize the Bank of Agriculture
(BOA) because non-farmers posing as farmers in connivance with the officials of
the bank defrauded the organisation by presenting fake identity cards, unregistered
Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) cards and other documents which enabled them
to escape repayment of loans collected from the bank.
Findings show that with the cooperation of insiders, the fake farmers simply destroyed their SIM cards and relocated to another address after collecting the money just as cases of shoddy record keeping so as to frustrate future investigation into the matter, were reported. A member of a commodity association told our reporter how the association’s account could not agree with the bank’s record as strange names were discovered to have been added to the list by the bank.
One of such
fake farmers who refused to identify himself told Foodfarmnews that he destroyed his fake identity and SIM cards
after collecting the money and escaped, with insider collusion in the bank.
Recently, the
minister of agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh said during the recapitalization
event for the bank held in Abuja that most of the people who took loans without
repayment were big-time but absentee farmers, who invested in agriculture but
failed to put in place the requirements for good agronomic practice.
He said that
failure of the past has warranted the new beginning of the bank and that the
new arrangement was a crucial step taken to resuscitate the bank as that it will be
able to perform its mandate as farmers’ bank towards making agriculture a
strong sector, adding that the recapitalization of the bank with the sum of
250million naira was with expectation that farmers who are the major owners would
invest by buying shares in the bank.
He stressed
that to help our farmers succeed, the ministry was going to make sure that it “gives
support to the bank including our seed supply to farmers to make sure they
don’t fail and provide support in soil testing and security of investment.”
The
Director-General of BPE, Mr. Alex Okoh in his remarks said that “This event signals the commencement of the
recapitalisation and restructuring of the BOA, which has performed
sub-optimally due to inadequate funding, poor lending philosophy, lack of
robust monitoring and evaluation to recover non-performing loans, lack of
proper governance structure and poor risk management strategy among others. It
has become apparent that the bank cannot in its current status deliver on its
mandate. We have developed a new strategy to transform the bank into a truly agricultural
finance bank, a farmer’s bank, substantially owned by farmers”.
Managing
Director, Lead Capital Consortium had this to say: “We are motivated by the zeal
of the present government to revive the Bank of Agriculture so that it can live
up to its full potential, to empower the entire agriculture value chain in the
country and elevate agriculture to becoming the mainstay of the economy. We are
fully set to move forward with the process”.
Minister of
State, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri said “If capitalized, the Bank of Agriculture
will be able to compete favourably with its counterparts in agric financing and
lending. This is an opportunity to truly access funding not just for
agricultural production but also for processing and value addition”.
The Permanent
Secretary, Dr Mohammed Bello Umar said: “No country in the world can develop
without a clear direction for its agriculture to grow. The restructuring of the
BoA is a welcome development and we look forward to working with the financial
advisers and the BPE to transform the bank into the farmers’ bank”.
The
restructuring and recapitalization of the Bank of Agriculture are expected to
be completed in 90 calendar days.
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