Rice farmers under the auspices of Rice Farmers Association
of Nigeria, RIFAN, has assured Nigerians that in June 2017 a 50 kilogramme of
the commodity will sell at N10, 000, against the almost N20,000 it is sold now.
The assurance was given by the National President, RIFAN,
Aminu Goronyo, while speaking on the current development in the rice industry.
Goronyo disclosed that rice farmers under the association
now have direct access to fertiliser.
He said, “Fertiliser was a very big challenge, but today it
has become a history. We have signed MoU where the fertiliser is sold N5, 500
per bag of fertiliser, and is now a government policy. We have more fertiliser
in the country and go direct to the hands of the farmers and is everywhere in
the country.
“We have already achieved rice sufficiency in the last two
years because all the rice we eat is grown here in the country. With the
government through the Nigeria Customs Service on the land borders, including
the high exchange rate no importer can go to other countries and import rice
for profit. I assure you in the next three months a 50kg bag of rice will come
down to N10, 000.
“The Anchor Borrowers Scheme was conceived through
collective effort by the Central Bank of Nigeria, RIFAN and other relevant key
stakeholders, and we are everyday meeting with the CBN reviewing the process.”
He, however, lamented inadequate rice seeds for his over 4.2
million registered members, which according to him said past governments have
failed to provide certified and quality seeds for over 30 years.
“Seed is the most essential component of any commodity that
is going to be produced. We do not have rice seeds in Nigeria. The few
companies we have in the country do not have the capacity to supply the quality
and certified seeds we need. What we have is grossly inadequate and not up to
one percent of the need by Nigerian farmers.
“I blame the previous governments because for the 30 years
we don’t have enough certified seeds. The government has played vital role in
creating this problem for the farmers.
“The research centres are there and they are being paid but
they are not doing what they are supposed to because government rely on them to
come up with certified seeds, and we the end users, the farmers, we know that
we are not getting then real certified seed.
“Even the current Anchor Borrowers Scheme that is going on
we are just managing seeds from few companies that rarely have certified seeds.
“Most of the seeds that are being supplied are from the
companies that do not have all it takes, and we do not have other options than
to use what they are giving to us. The seeds released are not up to five
percent of our total requirement,” he stated.
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