Amidst Harvest Presidency Laments Rising Food Prices
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READ: NEMA to Nigerians: Brace up for food, water shortages
“The combined negative effect of COVID-19, recession and security challenges have come together to create very frightening proposition for food insecurity in this country. “Anybody who thinks that talking about food insecurity is just academic…needs to be examined. The truth is that I have lived long enough in this country to realise that this the first time in the history of Nigeria that food prices have refused to go down at harvest time.” He said: “This is the danger that is facing us today. This is the first time in the history of this country that more than 70 per cent of farmer have received buyers for their farms to buy it before it is harvested; meaning that this is a year where if we are not careful, comfortable people will end up going to the streets to beg for food to feed their families. So we cannot afford one-grain wastage. “Someone would say when last did you see a bag of onions. In our own life time, we know that when the weather is cold, prices of onion would somehow go up but it has never gone up at the level it has gone up today. “So, that is just one item, there are many items that are going off the shelves gradually and we are just sitting down comfortably for those of us that are in the cities- we do not know the crisis our brothers and sisters go through in the rural areas.” According to him:”And to add salt to injury, they now have to face security challenges…they have to pay ransome to harvest their farms, they have to promise a portion of their harvests so that bandits and insurgents would allow them to go and harvest their farms.” He said, “It is important that all of us, men and women come together and start discussing not just preservation but how do we avoid the impending crisis that we are going to face with respect to food security.” He, however, commended FFAP for pioneering initiatives towards addressing current challenges of food preservation and storage and described the workshop as one of the most laudable initiative to be championed in the country.READ: West Africa facing worst food insecurity in decades
Meanwhile, FFAP President, Mrs. Christy Sani Yakubu, said the main objective of the training was to provide step by step practical assistance on proper post harvest handling to reduce wastage leading to huge losses adding that this is a major challenge faced by smallholder farmers in the country and Africa in general. Citing figures by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), Yakubu said one third of food produced globally for human consumption is lost or wasted along the supply chain, due largely to lack of post harvest handling knowledge, skills and infrastructure. ThisDayDiscover more from NewsBreakers
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