Agriculture
PH Fruits Traders Call For Market Reconstruction
With the rains setting in and no sign of the Kaduna fruits market receiving a facelift in sight, traders and customers have once more expressed worry about when the rains would set in fully.
A cross-section of the traders who spoke to our correspondent on the impending flooding of the market expressed regret that over the years, the market has been neglected.
Felicia, a dealer on assorted fruits said she has been selling in the market for the past fifteen years and instead of the sanitation situation in the market being looked into, it seemed, “they are playing politics with it.”
According to her, she was aware that authorities of the market have been having meetings with the Port Harcourt City Local Government to come to their aid without any result so far.
A loader who gave his name as John Walson said he has been doing business in the market for a long time and has always wondered why the market has not been repaired.
He said the efforts of the market authorities and the State Environmental Authority in sanitizing the market has been remarkable even as he said that total sanity of the market could only be achieved when the market is reconstructed.
For Mrs Joy Peters, the market should be relocated as there was no room for expansion on the present site.
She said the present site has made it impossible for more traders to be engaged in business at the market thereby reducing many prospective business people, “especially the widows and single mothers,” she said.
Efforts to speak with the executive members of the union proved abortive as officers at the secretariat who craved anonymity said it’s chairman and one of the elders travelled out of the state on official matters.
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FG, Ogun Distribute Inputs To 2,400 Farmers
Federal Government and the Ogun State Government, on Wednesday, distributed farm inputs to farmers as part of effort to address food security challenge.
The State Director, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Dr. Toyin Ayo-Ajayi, during the flag-off ceremony of Inputs Redemption Under The National Agricultural Growth Scheme-Agro Pocket (NAGS-AP), in Ogun State, disclosed that beneficiaries of the gesture were primarily rice, maize and cassava farmers across the State.
Ayo-Ajayi commended the Ogun State Government for partnering with the government at the centre for the effort in supporting farmers with inputs that would bring about yieldings for local consumption and likely exportation.
She noted that government is supporting rice, cassava and maize farmers with inputs worth N212,000; N189,000 and N186,000 respectively.
The Permanent Secretary in the State Ministry of Agriculture, Mrs Kehinde Jokotoye, who represented the Commissioner in the Ministry, Bolu Owotomo, stated that traditional farmers are critical in food production, hence the need to encourage and support them with inputs that would bring about desired results during harvesting.
Owotomo said: “Let us make good use of this opportunity, so that the success of this phase will make farmers benefit more from the state and federal governments of Nigeria.”
Earlier, State Coordinator, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Dr. Oluwatoyin Ayo-Ajayi, appreciated the present administration for partnering with the federal government for the initiative, adding that the programme is designed to support farmers at the grassroots level in cassava, rice and maize with inputs such as, seeds, pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers, to boost their production and enhance their livelihood.
