The Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations has said the surest route for Nigeria to reach her full potential in agriculture is for the private sector to get more involved.
Speaking to journalists in Maiduguri during the assessment of FAO interventions in Borno State, the
new Country Representative of the UN agency, Fred Kafeero, said Nigeria has great potentials in agriculture but needs the involvement of all stakeholders to achieve this Kafeero said:
"Nigeria
is a very important agricultural country. When you talk about agricultural
potentials, you are talking about the potentials that there is in several
sub-sectors of agriculture."
"This
include fisheries, as the country both has fresh water and the sea, all those
are fishery resources that could be fully harnessed and exploited.
"Livestock
sector; Nigeria has the largest herd of livestock in the Northeast sub-region.
"She
has vast fertile arable land, with which various crops could be produced and
processed to add more values.
"When
you talk of forestry resources, which is part of agriculture, Nigeria has all
that. The point is how we can mobilize each and every stakeholder to support
the government."
He
noted that government alone cannot do all the harness and development of the
agricultural, forestry and livestock resources.
"The
role of private sector, has to be incorporated in the development of
agricultural and livestock resources", Kafeero said.
He
noted that the government can set the enabling environment for all of them to
operate, adding that the drivers of agriculture are the Organized Private
Sector (OPS), as it can contribute to research, development, new innovations
and technologies.
According
to him, the FAO has always provided technical expertise in the agricultural and
livestock sectors of the economy.
He
however, lamented that 600,000 people in the North-east have been added to the
category of those in hunger with the prevailing coronavirus (COVID-19)
pandemic.
It
has been reported that over a decade long, the Boko Haram insurgency has claimed
32,000 lives with property worth $9.2 billion (about N3.42 trillion) destroyed
in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe States.
He
said: "This is a big challenge for all of us. This country has had Boko
Haram insurgency for 11 years. On top of that we got this challenge of COVID-19
pandemic."
Kafeero
disclosed that the UN has assessed the impact of the pandemic on agricultural
livelihoods in terms of how it is impacting on food security.
He
noted that FAO has been working and mobilizing along with NGOs, development
partners and the government to ensure that the hungry people could access food
with nutrition and incomes, adding that: "These are part of our package of
working in the North-East."
The
UN Country Representative said despite the crisis, FAO has been making inroads
into hard-to-reach areas, stressing that: "It is not like we only target
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) or refugees alone, but the host
communities."
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