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It’s not cool in the north part 3


While we wait, for positive response to the purgatory conditions, we will continue to accentuate the creeping deteriorating situations in the upper east, upper west, and the northern region. At the end of every farming season, our people harvest their crops that will last them, a couple of weeks,’ maximum few months. So they try to help themselves by cultivating tomatoes in the dry season.


The people in the aforementioned regions struggle to manually dig wells, to water their crops in the dry season, since most of the dams in these aforementioned regions are silted with fine-grained sediments and mud that even the living creatures and critters in the dams including such as fish and crocodiles are also struggling to survive in these dams, and are also feeling the neglect of our governments.


We still remember recently a farmer attempted to commit suicide because, he couldn’t sell his tomatoes. This is somebody who has pulled up his boot straps all by himself, to till the land by dint of hard work and perseverance. The procedure and stages to cultivate tomatoes demand physical and mental exertion; first he has to till the land, followed by nursery, planting, watering, applying fertilizer, and the continuous hands on nature of the (tomato) crop. All this emprise happens in a lengthy period, and then all of a sudden he sees the suppose buyers either buy with pittance or bypass to the next country to buy the same commodity.


Whatever the situation, suicide is not the answer to despondency, however, pause for a moment to empathize with this man. Due to our upbringing, Ghanaians by nature are very sympathetic people. Most of us are from Christian, Muslim, and Traditional homes; we are our brother’s keeper, these are values imbibed in us from infancy. We encourage hard work and most of us are law abiding citizens.

 

These are the putative nature of our people. Rewarding hard work encourages positive results but, to most people in these regions, dejection and indignation is the remuneration of hard work. A typical example is how this indignant man, who tried to kill himself. In the aforementioned part of this country, the vicious circle continues even if you follow the rules and do things right. Assuming this man was able to commit suicide; his family will be wallowing in pain, grief and uncertainty, the country would have lost a hard worker.


Initially, the makola women were buying from these tomato farmers. Then came a time when, greed surmounted their business drive for mutual benefit. Having worked with them for some time, the women realized the vulnerability of the farmers. So they devised inimical strategy to finagle the farmers.

They show up in the morning collectively, to price the tomatoes cheaply and disappear to their hideouts. These farmers will sit in the market, waiting for the makola women till evening, because they can’t go home with those perishable goods. The women will then strut to the market in the evening and pay them pittance, knowing very well, the farmers have no choice but to take whatever is offered.


The level of exploitation of these women became incessant and ultimately one will describe their behavior as criminal, considering the modus operandi used to expropriate the wares from these farmers. It will surprise you to know that, these poor farmers pay taxes on every bowl of tomatoes at the gates of the market. Yet no one intervened to settle what was taking place. I have not seen or heard of a government official, who cares to intervene between these women and the farmers in these regions to facilitate amicable solution to their problems.


Of late, the makola women have even shifted their business to Burkina Faso, neglecting the tomatoes produced in these regions. Wadiya is a village in Burkina Faso, and during tomato season, all the makola women who trade in tomatoes come from Accra, they cross all the three regions, upper east, upper west and the northern regions, cross the Paga border into Wadiya, Burkina Faso, to buy tomatoes.  They neglect what is produced in Ghana and proceed to Burkina Faso to buy the same commodity.


If the tomatoes cultivated in these regions are not suitable for the Makola women, why not get the necessary seedlings for the famers in these regions? In this dire situation, I can’t believe that our borders are open for these women to cross to the next country to assist their famers than ours, but that is exactly what is happening at the Paga border. I have not seen or heard of a government official, who cares to intervene between these women and the farmers to facilitate amicable solution to this problem.


If you happen to see the faces of dejected people who have toiled to get their produce (tomatoes) thinking they might get something out of their emprise, only to see the buyers going somewhere to buy the same commodity. Will somebody empathize with our people? It seems the politicians we send to the Accra do not arrantly elucidate the dire situation our people find themselves.


a)    Now we want to know what happened to the Bolgatanga/Kolugu Tomato Factory.
b)    Has the government devised any plan to retool that factory?                                 
c)    Do we have plans to get expellers to process the shea-nuts into shea butter for export?


We have a lot of shea-nuts in these regions, and most cosmetic companies’ use these products for crèmes in most advance countries.  Government should pragmatically consider doing something about the shea-butter. At this moment, expressivity of our grievances has become very crucial; we the people will no longer keep quiet again while our people suffer unnecessarily. Together we have to lay bare the challenges facing our people for assistance. We will shout until somebody listens and rescue us from this blistering pathetic situation.


All that I’m accentuating in my articles are not stochastic gestures, these are real palpable situations, I have seen up close and they are painful. Witnessing such purgatory situation without any remedial action is troubling. We should not wait till somebody finally kills himself before something is done. Government should please, summarily do something to facilitate the sale of these produce (tomatoes) between the Makola women and the farmers. With proper mediation, it will smoothen rough edges of the iniquitous relationship that exist between them. This will equally pave way for sustainable business atmosphere for their mutual benefit. 


Balemwo Assam                             

Washington DC                                                                                               

balemwo@yahoo.co.uk


 

Government to create development niche in the North- Veep

Tamale, Sept. 25, GNA - The Northern, Upper East and Upper West regions are to benefit from a massive accelerated economic programme, which kicks start next year, with the object of transforming the regions into industrial hubs to tackle the grinding poverty levels among the people.

The multi-million -cedi programme to be partly carried under the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority (SADA) initiative has the vision of creating a green Northern Savannah. Addressing a forum on the Northern Development Agenda in Tamale, Vice President John Dramani Mahama described the proposed programmes as "most ambitious co-ordinated effort towards achieving a forested North by 2030".

It is being pivoted along six broad thematic areas with the intent of bolstering economic activity in the selected regions through modernised agricultural practice to overcome years of under-development, which has spawned high levels of unemployment and poverty among the people.

Vice President Mahama said the SADA strategy was to be used as "one of the major efforts aimed at transforming the structure of the Ghanaian economy", by improving production of food for domestic and export trade. It would also to develop the shea and cotton industries among other interventions to help diversify the economy over a 20-year period. A component of the agenda is to advance the North as a model for the modernisation of agriculture to stimulate farmers to produce, using a marketing based out-grower system with improved technology and timely inputs.

"By this strategy, farmers do not wait to find markets after they have produced, rather the market defines their production targets and quality," Vice President Mahama said. He said a pinnacle of the strategy was the proposed circular road network that would link the three regions to ensure that the large production plains that lied between them were opened up for brisk farming and economic activities.

The circular arterial link road will stretch from Bimbilla through Yendi to Bawku, then spanning Bole-Bamboi, Hamile, Navrongo, Tumu and Wa.

The network will be accompanied by an appropriate irrigation infrastructure, especially drip-irrigation, which can be owned by small-holder farmers to facilitate the cultivation of cereals, fruits and vegetables all- year- round as part of the concept of a green North. Vice President Mahama said it was significant for government to open up Ghana's markets and develop strong linkages between Northern Savannah and the Sahelian countries of Burkina Faso, Niger, Mali and Northern Ivory Coast, to promote regional market for goods and services. Mr S.S. Nayina, Regional Minister, appealed to the people to stop the ethnic and factional conflicts that retard the progress of the area. He observed that there are chieftaincy problems throughout the country but the people do not take to arms. "Why should we (North) be the only part of the country where we resolve our differences through the taking of arms?" he queried.

Dr Emmanuel Akwettey, Executive Director of IDEG, a development think tank, expressed the hope that the new policy initiatives of the government in the North could help to transform the lives of the people. Mr Samuel Zan Akologo, Country Director of SEND Ghana, a non-governmental organisation, which organised the forum, intimated that previous efforts at stimulating development in the North had ended in failure and asked for a paradigm shift that focuses on "empowering the citizens of the area to take ownership of their own development". 25 Sept. 09
Source:
GNA

 

Ministry of Agriculture launches farmers' platform

Accra, Oct. 23, GNA - The Ministry of Food and Agriculture has officially launched the Ghana Federation of Agricultural Producers (GFAP). The federation comprises four major apex farmers associations - the Apex Farmers Organisation of Ghana (APFOG), Farmers Organisation of Ghana (FONG), Peasant Farmers Association of Ghana (PFAG and the Ghana National Association of Farmers and Fishermen (GNAFF) under one umbrella.

 

A statement from APFOG said the mission of the federation was to unify all agricultural producers and related actors in the agricultural value chain in Ghana, to advocate agricultural and environmentally friendly policies at the local and international levels for sustainable livelihoods.

 

Mr Vesper Suglo, who read the keynote on behalf of the sector Minister, expressed gratitude to the farmers organisations at the function for the initiative of coming together as one entity, with one voice and taking their destinies into their own hands to champion the cause of farmers, through advocacy, food security and service provision.

The minister expressed the frustrating circumstances that usually bedevilled the ministry in determining which of the several apex associations to serve, refer to, or engage in addressing issues that demanded the input of farmers.

He said at last farmers would heavily weigh in all major decision-making processes for the development and improvement of agriculture in Ghana.

Also at the ceremony, a 20-member National Council, National President and Vice President of the federation were sworn into office. In his acceptance speech, Dr. King David Amoah, President of the federation, said the group had finally adopted a constitution.

 

He said the unity of purpose would inspire members to stay focused and contribute to an environment where agricultural producers would be recognized, respected, appreciated and involved in policy formulation and implementation of agricultural projects.

Dr Amoah called for a sustained partnership with government to help accelerate agricultural and development programmes more especially on the Expanded Rice production, the Northern Rural Growth Programme, Savannah Accelerated Development Authority and the fertilizer subsidy programme, among other things.

 

 

Source: GNA