Africa can feed not only itself, but the world

Much of the continent’s food perishes before it gets to the market, because its farmers are starved of knowledge and of resources. That can change, says Usman Ali Lawan

In the village of Kura, in Kano State, Nigeria, where I grew up, my grandfather would lose half of his tomatoes after each harvest.

He was not a bad farmer. But bad roads made it difficult for him to get his tomatoes to market, and he had never learned modern methods of preserving them.

To salvage some of his produce, he often dried his tomatoes on the sand.

This is still true of about 80m farmers in Nigeria. Across Sub-Saharan Africa, 50% of harvested fruits and vegetables, 40% of roots and tubers, and 20% of cereals, legumes, and pulses are lost before they reach a market.

Less than a half-mile away from a major tomato-paste factory in Kadawa, Kano, Nigeria, 200 rural farmers dry 40 trailer-loads of fresh tomatoes in the sand every week.

This lack of knowledge and resources contributes substantially to global food insecurity. After all, in the developing world, rural smallholders — most of whom own less than four hectares of farmland — comprise the majority of all farmers.

In fact, rural people produce three-quarters of the world’s food, yet they constitute 80% of the world’s poor.

Delivering enough food to feed the world’s population requires farmers to overcome challenges related to climate change, water scarcity, lack of access to extension services, and armed conflict.

As a result, millions of people have been driven from their homes, prevented from working their fields, unable to get their products to markets, or cut off from supplies of improved seedlings, fertiliser, and financial services.

And the challenges escalate. The number of food emergencies — when disasters such as drought, floods, or war lead to food-supply shortfalls that demand external assistance — has risen from 15 per year, on average, in the 1980s, to more than 30 per year since 2000.

The result is widespread food insecurity. According to the Food and Agriculture Organisation, 820m people worldwide lacked access to sufficient food in 2017; more than two billion people are deficient in key micronutrients; and more than half of the people living in low-income countries are not sure of their next meal.

If current trends hold, by 2050 the amount of food being grown will feed only half of the world’s population.

But these trends can be changed, and Africa is a good place to start. As Akinwumi Adesina, president of the African Development Bank and winner of the 2017 World Food Prize, has put it.

Any strategy to boost food security must increase productivity and reduce post-harvest losses.

To that end, governments and agro-processing companies should be advancing cost-effective measures that take advantage of new technologies, strengthening infrastructure, and offering training and support to rural smallholders.

Governments, through their various agricultural programmes, can help rural farmers to form cooperatives, where they can leverage their collective strength. Private firms, for their part, can provide those farmers with extension services and inputs, and serve as major bulk buyers of produce.

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This is a proven approach. In Kebbi State, Nigeria, the Anchor Borrower scheme for the Rice Farmers’ Association of Nigeria — implemented in collaboration with the Central Bank of Nigeria and a government loan programme — has boosted rural farmers’ output and incomes, by helping them to form cooperatives, providing training and inputs, and guaranteeing a buyer.

When designing any such scheme, policymakers must make sure to promote sustainable farming practices that minimise agriculture’s use of natural resources, including soil and water.

All governments should commit to ensuring that their agriculture, food, and nutrition policies are aligned with modern dietary guidelines, which emphasise variety and sustainability in largely plant-based diets.

The international community’s goal of ending hunger by 2030 is achievable. But success will require a commitment from both governments and the private sector to help rural farmers shift to sustainable — and profitable — agricultural practices.

If that happens, then not only will we end food insecurity, but Adesina’s prediction that “the next generation of billionaires in Africa will be farmers” may come closer to being realised. (Source- Irish Examiner)

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Kisumu boda-boda riders in standoff with county over Ksh20 daily levy

Kisumu boda-boda riders are at loggerhead with the county government over taxation.

Governor Anyang’ Nyong’o’s administration wants them to pay Ksh20 daily. Finance executive Nerry Achar made the announcement last week. This is part of efforts to boost revenue collection. Achar said the levy took effect on June 1 and defaulters will be penalised.

“We will not hesitate to take action against the defaulters. Even our mothers selling vegetables are paying tax,” he added.

For the past five years, Kisumu has been struggling to meet its Ksh1 billion revenue target. The county has more than 35,000 boda-boda riders and its agencies have been notified of the taxation.

The riders are required to pay and get stickers to enable them to operate — Ksh 20 daily or Ksh 500 monthly. They have not been paying taxes since the inception of devolution. Last year, attempts to have them pay hit a snag as they vehemently rejected the idea.

They are not ready to budge. They say their input was not sought.

The county says it will deal with Saccos to collect the cash weekly or monthly. Achar told the riders to join Saccos to ease the work. Those who will not comply will be expected to make a daily remittance.

Senator Fred Outa said the taxation can only work if the money is collected through Saccos. He said the sector has at least 48,000 members who can make a major contribution to Kisumu’s economy. The senator urged riders to join Saccos for easier management.

The majority of the riders are, however, not ready to comply. County Boda Boda Riders’ Association leader Jacob Ochieng said there was no public participation. He said they are not ready to pay.

They want a clear explanation of how the money will be used if they have to part with the cash.

“Public participation must be done before imposing the new taxation law,” Ochieng said.

Moses Ogola said they will not pay the proposed tax until the Kisumu government fully accounts for all the money it has collected from residents. “We’ve not been consulted. First, let the county explain the whereabouts of money alleged to have been lost. We cannot pay tax to enrich a few corrupt county officials,” he said.

Joseph Omondi accused the county government of exploiting vulnerable citizens, instead of fixing their problems.

“Instead of imposing taxes on riders, let Governor Anyang’ Nyong’o and his team look into our security first. He must also be able to explain to us how the money is going to be used,” he said.

Kennedy Ambumbi said the county administration is hell-bent on exploiting residents.

“Before introducing the new taxes, the county government must be fully responsible for public resources. They should stop squandering taxes we pay from our hard-earned money,” he said.

But Achar said the money will help the county to build bodaboda sheds and improve roads.

(Source/ The Star)

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Rwanda’s “Blue” Village is cooperating to address poverty, with inspiring results.

KAYONZA, Rwanda: Striking sky blue houses hit your eyes as you descend in Nkondo 11, Nkondo cell, Rwinkwavu sector, a few kilometers from the Akagera National Park main entrance gate.

The striking thing about this village, located some 38 kms from Kayonza town is the unity among the villagers. The villages are united as one, in all that they do, from the construction of their houses, tilling the land, to saving.

So united they are, they decided to paint all their houses blue so as to look uniform as one family.

Twite ku Buzima was the first group to be formed in 2009. Its name means “Let’s take care of health,” and members contributed money amongst themselves, to start a mini-insurance scheme for themselves. It inspired the formation of 3 other savings groups, and today, all the 90 households that make up the village are grouped amongst the four groups.

According to M/s Ingabire Joselyne, the in-charge charge social welfare in the village, each household contributes Rwf1,000 (Ugx5,000) per month. This is used to cater for transport for patients, especially pregnant women who may need to travel to the health facilities for antenatal services.

Ingabire told New Times Rwanda that Twite ku Buzima also covers coffin expenses for deceased members.

Other groups are ‘Tugire Umutekano,’ for paying community security guards, and Umusingi w’Amajyambere’ or ‘pillar of development’, through which they are able to buy various goods. Through the latter, the villagers also decided to transform their houses from mud and wattle to cemented structures, as a way of improving sanitation in their neighborhoods.

“Every month, a truck brought sand, which was shared by two households, and then we gave them two sacks of cement,” Ingabire said, adding that they also covered payment for the masons.

Then they decided to paint their houses, a project that cost them Rwf1.6 million (Ugx7m), according to the village leader, Laurent Batibuka. The painting was followed by construction of toilet facilities for needy households, and a general greening exercise that saw each household plant mango, avocado, and orange fruit trees.

Complementing their savings are sales from a tomato plantation they established together through a series of the community work known as Umuganda, in the neighborhood of their village office. The tomatoes have yielded Rwf360,000 (Ugx1.2m) this season according to the village chairman, in spite of the volatility of the climate in the area.

The residents also joined Igiceri program or coin program, established by the sector(parish) in partnership with a Savings and Credits Cooperatives (SACCO) in. Rolled out nine months ago, the program allows residents to save Rwf100 (Ugx4,000) in the box at the sector’s offices, which they can withdraw or borrow whenever in need.

Jean Baptiste Twizeyimana, 36, told The New Times: “We are not really rich people, but we have the same understanding. We achieve something more meaningful than what rich people do.”

As a result of this multi-pronged cooperation, Maria Mukamvunabo, 60, says that each household has been able to own a radio, a mattress and one or two livestock such as goats.

The Mayor of Kayonza District, Jean Claude Murenzi, says that Nkondo village has been “exemplary.”

“It is a good example of leadership. It shows you what people-centered leadership combined with community collaboration can achieve,” he observed. “When they have problems, they take time and talk about them and all of them participate in finding solutions,” he added.

Murenzi says the district is facilitating other village leaders to go to Nkondo and benchmark. The residents of Nkondo now say electricity is the only “missing link” from their village. And the district has committed to help them get connected to the national grid in the next fiscal year, in a bid to generate more jobs and income for the residents.

(Source New Times)

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