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HomeFeaturesHurdles Of Female Farmers In Niger, As Agric Budget Slides

Hurdles Of Female Farmers In Niger, As Agric Budget Slides

By OBINNA UNAEZE

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Grace Disa was discouraged by the fact that no funds were allocated to smallholder women farmers in Niger State. In March 2021, as the coordinator of the Smallholder Women Farmers Organisation of Nigeria (SWOFON) in the state, she had gone to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development to request a copy of the budget.https://scudnewsng.com

“They explained to me that the state government did not allocate funds to the women farmers.”

This, she believes, is the consequence of not carrying women farmers along in formulating policies and preparing the budget on agriculture in the state.

Dr Idris Gbogan, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, confirmed to NAN that there is no special budgetary provision for smallholder women farmers.

“What we do is that we allocate funds to all the agricultural activities involving both male and female together.”

Gbogan said that sometime in 2018 the state chapter of SWOFON held a rally at the Ministry of Agriculture where they presented their demands.

He said the women farmers demanded that they be invited to make input in the preparation of the state budget and carrying them along in all agriculture activities.

The Permanent Secretary said that the women demanded government assistance in the area of production, processing and marketing of agriculture products in the state.

Other demands included request for office accommodation, provision of women friendly equipment and a vehicle for their logistic support.

“All their (SWOFON) demands have since been forwarded to the appropriate authority for consideration.”

Gbogan said that on the issue of office accommodation the farmers were told to liaise with the state chapter of the All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) for a temporary office.

Lack of timely delivery of fertilizers is a challenge commonly experienced by most of the women who spoke to our reporter.

A look at the state capital budget shows that there has been a decrease in agricultural allocations over the years.

In 2020, 16 per cent of the total capital budget [N78,243,549,951.82] was allocated to agriculture which brings the sum to N10,949,873,358.00 while in 2021 only 10 per cent at [N7,604,847,221.00].

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Diversion of interventions meant for women farmers is a problem and Disa feels branding such items can help curb it.

“We want the government at all levels to allocate special branded bags of inputs to the women farmers to stop diversion. A timely delivery of these items would also help in planning farming activities; this is because it is seasonal.”

Disa fears that the insecurity challenges plaguing the state may result in a food crisis because farmers have abandoned their farmlands.

In Gurara, Paikoro and Chanchaga local government areas, the women farmers in efforts to tackle the challenge of finance resorted to generating revenue through registration fees and levies.

Mrs Emily Celomi, President, Diko Goodnews Co-operative, Thrift and Credit Society, under SWOFON in Gurara, said that the farmers fund their farming activities from the N2, 500 registration fees paid by new members and monthly levies of N500 or N2,000 per head.

Celomi explained that it was from the funds raised that they registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission, opened a bank account and also engaged in agri-business and offered soft loans to members.

She said the association has given out N30, 000 each to five members with the interest rate of five per cent payable after five months.

“As of today, five of our members have collected N30, 000 loans to assist them.”

“What we are doing right now started from self-help and individual contributions. It means that if we get assistance to support our agri-business, we will do better.”

Celomi said the 50-member group cultivates maize, soybeans, beans and groundnut on over 10 hectares of land, while some members own poultry farms.

She said that in the 2020 farming season the farmers harvested 12 bags of maize, eight bags of soybeans, six bags of beans and five bags of groundnut with each bag measuring 80kg.

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“We sell the farm produce during planting when their prices must have increased in the market.”

She added that they own a palm plantation with 2,000 palm trees that have started producing fruits.

“If we are assisted we can also expand to produce palm oil for local use and export.”

She said the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and SWOFON once trained the farmers on how to establish poultry, fishery, and livestock farms but observed that many of the women did not have the resources to practice what they learnt.

The story is not different in other communities. Hajiya Hadiza Yahaya, spokesperson of Sati Cooperative Women Association, Paikoro, said that accessing interventions like grants and loans was a hurdle.

“The late disbursement of grants and loans by the financial institutions and government is affecting us negatively because agricultural activities are time bound.

“Another challenge is high interest rates, sometimes market forces determine how we sell our produce to repay loans.”

In Paikoro, the farmers also pay certain levies which are used to prepare the land, purchase inputs, and hire labour.

“Sometimes ago the Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP) distributed improved seeds, fertilisers and agro-chemicals to some of our members. The truth of the matter is that the inputs came late so many did not germinate after planting.

“We also suspected that some of the agro-chemicals given to us were expired, which affected the crops.”

Hajiya Hauwa Mohammed, Coordinator Majidadi Cooperative Association in Chanchaga, said that the process of accessing the Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP) and other intervention programmes was too rigorous for her members.

“We know about the ABP but the processes involved in getting any help there is very difficult because when you start the long process it will not end until the farming season is over. Therefore, we have to help ourselves by contributing money to sustain our farming activities.”

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Women farmers in Kontagora and Mariga Local Government Areas also pointed out delay in getting implements and interventions as a challenge.

Reacting to the challenges faced by these women farmers, Mrs Ruth Saba, Head Women in Agriculture, Niger state Agricultural and Mechanisation Development Authority (NAMDA), said the state government was doing everything possible to carry the women farmers along.

Saba said the body has extension agents who move round the 25 local government areas of the state to assist the women in their farming activities, but concedes that they are not enough.

“Many of the women farmers who are determined to farm do purchase their inputs on their own. In most cases the farmers get their inputs late depending on whether it is coming from federal government, state or Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs).

“You will find out that at the end of the day it will lead to poor yield or harvest.”

Saba said that sometime in 2019 the federal government distributed goats to some of the women farmer groups into livestock and after it gives birth it would be transferred to another group for the same purpose.

Alhaji Abubakar Bello, the state governor, had on June 8 inaugurated the 2021 farming season with 15,000 metric tonnes of fertilisers as part of efforts to increase agricultural production in the state as was done in 2020 with the same number of fertilisers.

Bello said that government has accessed the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Accelerated Agricultural Development Scheme (AADS) facility for the development of some dilapidated agricultural infrastructures across the state.

He assured the farmers that the security of lives and properties remain the utmost priority of the government.

“We will continue to strive toward mitigating security challenges in the state and its repercussions on agriculture and food security.”

There are 14,000 registered women farmers in the state.

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SourceNAN

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