Opinion
Farming For The Wrong Reasons
The word ‘farming’ re
fers to series of activities put in place to grow crops or keep livestock. Its practice is geared towards the provision of food and raw materials.
Many people live by carrying out this activity in subsistent scale while others take it to commercial level. Whether it is practised at a subsistent scale or commercial, the bottom line is that farm produce is never entirely consumed by the farmer, but the extra is sold to earn income with which to satisfy wants other than food.
Apart from using the financial proceeds of farming for self sustenance and development, it also serves for the sustainability of the process itself to avoid its abrupt extinction as it is important to produce the needful to keep farming going.
Although it is difficult to state accurately the origin of farming, it is on record that farming is as old as man. Proponents of this idea however, may have hinged their reason on the imperativeness of food to mankind and since man cannot do without food, then, it must be taken that man must have commenced the satisfaction of his hunger needs as soon as he became human.
Whatever that may mean anyway, the need farming seeks to satisfy in the comity of human beings, has given it a prominent position in the world’s government’s development agenda. Hence, issues of food production are placed on the front burner of every leader’s developmental programme.
This no doubt may give credence to why the United Nations made the eradication of extreme poverty and hunger the number one in the arrangement of their Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). It is expected that while the income that accrues from the sale of farm produce tackles the eradication of poverty, the produce itself takes care of the world’s hunger.
Suffice it, therefore, to say that it amounts to an error to have one go into farming just for the fun of it, a situation that relegates farming to mere ‘hobby,’ as against the serious business posture it had ever assumed.
These ones who trivialise the practice of farming, often viewed as impostors in the farming sub-sector, has well infiltered the system, making it challenging for the government to penetrate the real farmers as partners in progress.
They are the first to get wind of government programmes at boosting food production, they are also the first to explore and exploit it without any intention to utilise it for the purpose it was targeted.
The result is that they smear the image of the real farmers who would always come at last only to be told that Jacob has deceitfully taken Esau’s portion of blessing and tagged ‘unfaithful’ and unserious, who eventually risk getting any assistance any longer for the realisation of the goal of the industry.
A system that allows infiltrators in its operations can never stand. Infiltration perforates original efforts thereby weakening its strongholds and defeating the entire aim of the exercise.
Farmers association in Rivers State has remained a victim of this infiltrating practice for a very long time. This has not just made the association appears non-existent in the eyes of the government. This has excluded it from benefits and assistance from the government as worthy partners in the business of hunger and poverty eradication.
While relatives of farmers in the Northern part of Nigeria supply farmers with relevant information from government and even assist them in accessing assistance from the government, the reverse is the case in Rivers State.
Those who are close to the corridors of power in Rivers State, rather than get information about better packages for farmers across to the targeted group, treacherously exploit it for their selfish gains.
Otherwise, why should an adhoc body be constituted simply because there is a poverty alleviation package aimed at aiding farmers attain improved productivity? Farming experience in Rivers State has continued to dwindle and suffer stagnation while their Western and Northern counterparts flourish due largely to the quest to go into farming for the wrong reasons.
As poultry farmers in Rivers State met last month for their regular monthly meetings, the Manager of the Bank of Agriculture in Port Harcourt, Victoria Idoniji, regretted that farmers in the state are not able to take advantage of the opportunities provided by the government to improve their lots through the different products rolled out by the bank.
The manager blamed this situation on the attitude of some so-called farmers who took loans and refused to repay in time. She called on the executives of the poultry farmers association in the state to be wary of the activities of impostors who pose as farmers to exploit the government.
As the year 2015 winds up, evaluation activities are high in different quarters and countries as to the measure of achievement recorded MDGs. If the Rivers State experience is captured in other States of the federation, then, one will be stating the obvious that much would still be desired.
One way the goal of eradicating extreme poverty and hunger could be actualised would be by checking the activities of impostors so as to ensure that every resource put to realise the goal of agriculture would be optimally utilised for the best result.
Sylvia ThankGod-Amadi
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