FMITI
promises rebirth
The visiting Executive Director, International Coffee
Organization (ICO), Mr. Jose Sette has joined other stakeholders in Nigeria to
demand for national policy on coffee that will galvanise the neglected crop towards wealth
and more economic empowerment of farmers just as the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and
Investment (FMITI) immediately promised to call for a rebirth conference in
order to reposition the crop to more economy viability.
Mr. Sette who hammered on the need for nation policy to
drive the produce at one of the conference rooms of FMITI yesterday said that
his organization would be ready to give technical support to the better
repositioning of the crop through assistance to National Coffee and Tea
Association of Nigeria (NACOFTAN) adding that wealth would be more created
along the value chains as soon as awareness to more consumption and production
of the produce are increased in the country.
Following the call for national policy, the National
Assembly member from Taraba state, Senator Yusuf Abubakar Yusuf also stressed
the need for why a working document with well guided statistics must be put in
place by both the government and private sectors, pointed that the policy paper
is what the legislative arms of government would work with towards a better legislation
for the crop at all the value chains.
Sen. Yusuf who lamented on why Nigerian coffee is yet to be
domesticated in the ICO being the second largest traded commodity in the world
market after oil, pointed that effort would be made to represent the bill on
coffee that could not get to public hearing level after passing through the
first and second readings of the last 9th National Assembly, thereby
promised that the bill would be represented for signing by the executive.
The Secretary General (SG) of the Federation of Commodity Associations
of Nigeria (FACAN) Dr. Bello Dongodangi apart from stressing on need for
national policy also admonished NACOFTAN to be more organised and very
responsive to meeting demand for coffee consumption considering 200 million populations
of the country.
Dogodangi however advocated for improved seeds through
government intervention and inputs for post harvest handling and processing for
farmers, therefore asked the association to leverage on the Central Bank of
Nigeria (CBN) anchor borrower programme to attract financial support like other
crops.
The two females off takers among the farmers also lamented
on non availability of quality coffee as they both wanted new improved varieties
of seeds for the replacement of the old ones for better commercial yield to
meet demand.
Miss Mary Jean Igbu said she usually buy in large quantities
which many of them got spoilt during storage as there was only one season of harvest adding
that ‘’ i get order that i cannot meet and farmers need training for capacity ’.’
Also Princess Adeyinka Tekenah, also an off taker wanted more improved
technologies where there will be interface
with both farmers and off takers’’ saying this would enhance the value
chain system of the crop in terms of needs and production.
All other farmers present all pointed that coffee farming in
Nigeria has been relegated due to non support in terms of improved seeds and other
inputs that could give encouragement, thereby querying why Nestle Nigeria
Plc would be leaving them behind to be
training 200,000 of their counterparts
in Cote d’ Ivoire.
However, the FMITI through its Director of Commodity
Protection Inspectorate, Mrs. Opeoluwa Opeewe has therefore declared a
conference for the rebirth of the crop where all stakeholders from both the
private and public sectors will be brought together to chat a way forward for
the crop adding that both Nestle and other off takers shall all be invited to
interface with farmers.
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