
We hear your cry of hunger, but it’s not our fault, FG tells Nigerians
The Federal Government is very much aware of the cry of hunger
ravaging the people, but we are not the cause, the Minister of
Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh, has again told Nigerians.
Ogbeh
said this at a town hall meeting in Abuja, which was attended by nine
ministers and organised by the alumni of the National Institute for
Policy and Strategic Studies.
“There is a cry in
the air that Nigerians are hungry and we hear them loud and clear. There
are also unbelievable stories about people taking their children as
human collateral for food with no intentions to pick them up.
“This
situation in Nigeria today was going to happen; whether it is this
administration or another. We headed this way a long time ago.
‘‘In
1986, we were forced to devalue and deregulate. We were forced to open
our doors to importation. We began devaluing the naira. We have done it
steadily for 30 years. We are now N400 to one dollar and we are told to
continue devaluing; that devaluation will bring wonders. I don’t believe
it.
“I hope we don’t hit N1, 000 to $1 someday
because the demand for dollars is $2.5bn a week and I have this from
high authorities within the system.
“We simply
don’t have it. We don’t print dollars, but the people are angry that we
are not making dollars available. We became importers of rice; $5m a
day; wheat, $6m a day; tomato paste, $400m a year; and $20bn a year on
food.’’
Ogbeh
in July, while playing host to Anambra state Governor Willie Obiano in
Abuja, said that about 15,000 broken down tractors, out of the 30,000
available in the country would be rehabilitated to support farmers in
Nigeria as the government works hard to meet its food sufficiency target
by 2018, indirectly saying that Nigerians should fasten their belt
against hunger till 2018.
Earlier before that he
said, “We are fully aware that there is a major concern in the country
for food self-sufficiency in the country and that there is crisis in
many families as a result of serious shortage of food.
“But
we are working hard and thank God that ours has not become as bad as
one South American country, which was also a major oil producing
country. By that I mean Venezuela, which situation is definitely a 100
times worse than ours.
And much recently, he noted
that Nigerian may soon start exportation of special grasses to Saudi
Arabia to feed their cows. “The Saudi Arabia is asking that if Nigeria
can grow enough grass, they will buy to feed their cows,” he said.
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