The
Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Mr Audu Ogbeh says
Thailand has accused Nigeria of being responsible for the collapse of
its seven rice mills following the drastic fall in rice importation from
the country.
The
minister made this known at a meeting of the Presidential Fertilizer
Initiative (PFI) and leadership of the Fertiliser Producers and
Suppliers of Nigeria (FEPSAN) held at the Council Chamber of the
Presidential Villa, Abuja, on Friday.
The meeting was presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari.
Ogbeh said Thailand’s Ambassador to Nigeria made the “accusation’’ when he visited him in February.
According
to the minister, the ambassador lamented that the collapse of the rice
mills has increased the unemployment rate in his country from 1.2 per
cent to 4 per cent.
“Just like two weeks ago, the Ambassador of Thailand came to my office and said to me that we have really dealt with them.
“But I
asked what did we do wrong and he said unemployment in Thailand was one
of the lowest in the world, 1.2 per cent, it has gone up to four per
cent because seven giant rice mills have shut down because Nigeria’s
import has fallen by 95 per cent on rice alone.
“So,
Mr President we thank you for the support and we thank all the agencies
and those of you in the private sector for your resilience,’’ he said.
The
minister, however, alerted the nation on what he described as alarming
smuggling of fake fertilizer and rice along the western borders of the
country.
He,
therefore, called on the Federal Government to take drastic measures to
check the trend as all previous diplomatic measures had failed to
address the menace.
“But
one last request Mr President, we have to take one strong measure
against our neighbour to the West. The smuggling is really compromising
our capacity on our result.
“Too
much rice, too much fake fertilizer is still coming across the borders
into this country in spite of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) we
have with them they are not listening.
“Maybe
if the Federal Government take one tough action, they will come and
renegotiate the terms because good neighbourliness means reciprocity.
“We can’t be allowing them to survive at our own expense and I believe that we will do something about it,’’ he said.
Ogbeh
appealed to FEPSAN to adjust their blending formula using little more
micro nutrients for some crops like cocoa, cashew, plantain, banana and
others that would soon be revived by his ministry.
The minister noted that the agricultural sector had created millions of jobs for Nigerians in the last two years.
He
said: “People may say what they like about jobs. Recently I heard that
we lost four million jobs. Nobody has calculated the millions and
millions of jobs created on the farms.
“So, this programme as it grows can only make us stronger.
“As
soon as more dams and lakes are put in place, you begin to sell
fertilizer all year round and not wait for the rainy season
alone.’’(NAN)
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