The Federal Government is to initiate an awareness campaign to
sensitise Nigerians on inherent dangers in consuming imported rice, and
accused neighbouring Benin Republic and Cameroon of making policies to
undermine the country’s rice revolution.
Speaking at a briefing
in Lagos, weekend, where he paraded the administration’s successes in
agriculture, the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai
Mohammed, said six million more Nigerians had started rice farming since
the advent of Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.
The increase
in rice production, he said, had in the last three years created
thousands of jobs in direct and indirect jobs, with N250 billion in
investments expected to boost the country’s rice milling capacity in the
year.
Bags of rice Noting that Nigeria was on the way towards
self-sufficiency in rice production by 2020, the minister, nevertheless,
expressed concern that foreign rice producing nations, aided by Benin,
were undermining the plans of the Federal Government.
Mohammed
said: “The agricultural revolution in general and the rice revolution in
particular, have taken millions of Nigerians out of poverty. “As a
matter of fact, today, 60 percent of rice eaten in Nigeria is produced
in Nigeria.
In the words of the rice processors, the rice revolution
alone is enough to guarantee re-election for President Buhari, if he
decides to run again.”
Appeals for local patronage Continuing,
the minister said: “We want to use this opportunity to appeal to
Nigerians to complement the efforts of the government by consuming only
locally-grown and processed rice. It is fresher. It is tastier. It is
healthier. It has not spent months on the high seas and warehouses.
“We
don’t know where or how imported rice is made or how old it is. It is
reported that most of the rice dumped on us are old and probably
rejects. “The citizens of those countries do not eat this rice. The
citizens of Benin also do not eat it. But they send it to us.
Unhealthy
foods are dangerous to health. So let’s eat what we can vouch for.” …
on economic importance Also speaking on the economic importance of
eating local rice, the minister said: “But Nigerians should remember
that every time they eat imported rice, they are eating the jobs that
would have been created for Nigerians and instead funding the creation
of jobs in the source countries.
“Just imagine that less than
three years into the rice revolution, millions of jobs have been created
in the whole value chain. “It is important for Nigerians to know that
when they consume imported rice, they are creating jobs in India and
Thailand and destroying jobs across our country. Today we have rice
farmers in all states and all geopolitical zones.
“In fact, most
of us have friends and relatives who are farming rice. So if we don’t
patronise their product, we are destroying their livelihoods. “We are
embarking on a massive nationwide campaign to sensitise our compatriots
to the need to support the rice revolution by consuming local rice.
Nigerians are patriots.
They want more jobs. “They will support the
rice revolution and Nigeria will become self-sufficient in rice sooner
than we have stated.
The country has never been closer to
self-sufficiency in rice, a national staple, than now. “Our target is to
achieve self-sufficiency in our paddy production in two years— by 2020.
The result is the exponential growth in local rice production that has
now moved us closer to ending rice importation.”
Fall in
importation, smuggling On the how the rice revolution has affected
importation, Mohammed said: “Within two years, rice importation from
Thailand fell from 644,131 Metric Tons (in September 2015) to 20,000 MT
(in September 2017). “That’s over 90 percent drop. Let me put things in
perspective.
So far, less than 100 billion Naira has been spent on
the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme that has achieved so much.” Lamenting
the impact of rice smuggling on the country, he said: “The total demand
for white rice (white rice is consumed in Benin, against parboiled rice
in Nigeria) is 400,000 MT. Yet the country, with a population of about
11 million, imports between one million and 1.2 million MT of rice
annually. Who are they importing for? Nigerians, of course.
“In
fact, as Nigeria’s rice import falls, Benin’s rice import increases.
Most of the parboiled rice imported by Benin eventually lands in Nigeria
through smuggling. “Both Cameroon and Benin Republics have lowered
tariff payable on rice to zero and five percent, respectively, to
encourage importation and subsequent smuggling of the product into
Nigeria.” “At present, smuggled rice costs between N11,000 and N13,000
per 50kg bag.
Nigerian processed rice sells for between N14,500 and
N15,000 per 50kg bag. “Smuggled rice is sourced mainly from Thailand and
India— both countries give a high level of subsidies to rice farmers
and rice processors.”
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Tuesday, 3 April 2018
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Federal Government Accuses Benin Republic And Cameroon Of Sabotaging Local Rice Production
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