Minister
of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, has said Nigeria
will soon sell cashew and tomatoes to the United States of America
retail giant, Walmart, and tomatoes, to a group of companies in Spain...
The Walmart deal, said Ogbeh, is worth $7 billion while the BZ Foods deal is between $30 million to $40 million.
Ogbeh made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), in Abuja, on Monday.
The minister said that BZ Foods, a group
of companies based in Spain has shown keen interest in setting up a
tomato paste production factory in Katsina State.
Ogbeh noted that the investment, between
$30 and $40 million, would require no fewer than 300,000 farmers to
grow tomatoes to meet the raw material needs of the factory.
He added that the country would engage in
the production of yam flour to meet the raw material needs of companies
in the pharmaceutical industry.
“The yam export is going on and we are going to start making yam flour for the pharmaceutical industry.
‘’But then, this is not cheap because we need stainless steel machines, which are very expensive,’’ the minister said.
The minister also frowned at the
increasing number of contract bids in the ministry, and said that it was
responsible for the slow pace of work in the ministry. He noted that
the documents presented by the contractors were still being processed,
to determine their competence for the jobs.
Ogbeh said the ministry was given N30
billion for the 2017 budget and called for a single digit interest rate,
to encourage youths and the public and private sectors to embrace
agriculture and other businesses.
“By law, we have to spend six weeks on
procurement, open and look at people’s bids, process them, cross-check
and ensure that all the companies are registered, as well as know the
names of the companies and their owners.
“10,000 people bidded for contracts in
our ministry this year. There is a team of 10 to 12 people to look
through every document, they haven’t finished yet.
“The N30 billion is still sitting there,
apart from some debt which we paid, we have not been able to apply it
yet to what we want to do. Why are there so many contractors, because the economy is now totally dependent on government?
“There is no country where you see many
people in the ministry wanting to see the minister. In Kenya, South
Africa, Tunisia, Senegal, Uganda, visitors don’t come like they do here.
“There are days in my office that there
are 60 to 70 people, with all kinds of problems; you can’t blame them.
If we had reasonable interest rates, this country would be the
headquarters of private enterprises in the world.
“Every Nigerian wants to do his or her own thing and be free to make money. These delays are happening,’’ he said.
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