The Minister of
Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, has attributed the
high cost of local rice in the market to the inability of local millers
to get the paddy at reduced cost...
The minister, who spoke at a news
conference in Abuja at the weekend, said government was working on an
arrangement with rice farmers to bring down the price of paddy from
N150,000 to N120,000 per tonne.
He said the drop will help millers sell a 50kg bag of rice at N13,000 which would be affordable to the citizenry.
Ogbeh said: “In 2015, one tonne of rice was sold for N65,000 but in 2016, it was sold for N150,000.
“The millers said that as long as they
were buying a tonne of paddy for N150,000, they could not sell a bag of
rice for less than N17,000 after milling.
“I am begging the farmers to be reasonable. I can’t force them,’’ he said.
Meanwhile, the Federal Government has
commended farmers across the country for their contributions toward
exiting the country from recession.
The National Bureau of Statistics
released a report indicating the exit of the country from recession with
agriculture being one of the contributing factors.
Chief Audu Ogbeh, Minister of
Agriculture and Rural Development, while briefing newsmen in Abuja, said
that both small holders and big time farmers contributed immensely to
the exit.
He, however, appealed to farmers, middlemen and traders to avoid indiscriminate increases in the prices of food items.
He said the Federal Government would not
impose price control on food prices, noting that the only option was to
improve food production.
According to Ogbeh, agriculture is contributory and we will continue to contribute but government is not falling asleep.
“I also want to thank Nigerians,
especially the farmers (big and small), who have heeded to the call of
Mr President to return to the farms. They have done amazing things.
“I am also happy for them because they
are now making money. For a long time, they didn’t make money which is
why many of us ran away from agriculture.
“Few days ago, I appealed to middlemen
and transporters to try and help us out because I have seen tactical
examples of why food prices are so high.
“I am sorry that the food prices are
still high but I am appealing to farmers and middlemen, let all of us
enjoy the surplus so that no sector will put pressure on the other.
“We have tried in two years but we have to work even harder and keep moving because the danger is still ahead.
“We have to increase agriculture, export, processing and value addition and reduce imports,’’ the minister said.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that
agriculture continued its strong and positive growth which it had
maintained throughout the recession, growing by 3.01 per cent in second
quarter of 2017 from 3.39 per cent in Q1 2017 and 4.53 per cent in Q2
2016.
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