November 22, 2024

All Farmers Association of Nigeria (AFAN) in Niger,  on Saturday, urged the Federal Government to put the right structures in place before banning importation of tomato paste into the country.

Alhaji Shehu Galadima, AFAN Chairman in the state,  gave the advice in Minna during an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

“I am in support of the planned ban on importation of tomato paste into the country by the federal government.

“This is because the importation is not growing our economy in terms of local and foreign trade.

“You also find out that some of these importers import all kinds of substandard tomato pastes that can be hazardous to the public,” he said.

Galadima, however  said that the policy would fail if the right structures are not put in place by government before effecting the ban.

“Government must encourage the private sector to establish more tomato paste industries and also assist the local tomatoes farmers who will provide the raw material before such policy will work.

“Right now we don’t have enough industries to produce the quantity of tomato paste we need in Nigeria.

“The tomato farmers across the country lack modern storage facilities, that is why half of what we produce rots away,” he said.

NAN recalls that recently, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, said in Kano that the government would place final ban on the importation of tomatoes paste before the end of 2019, to encourage massive local production.

Ogbeh who was on fact finding visit alongside the Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Mr. Godwin Emefiele to Dangote Tomato processing plant at Kadawa in Kano state, said that the measure was part the federal government’s tomato revolution initiative across the country.

According to him, N250 billion has already been earmarked by the CBN through the Bank of Agriculture to disburse as soft loans to tomato outgrowers as part of the apex bank’s Anchor-borrower scheme.

The Minister said that Nigeria spend over $22 billion on the importation of tomato paste from China annually, adding that the CBN intervention would not only empower local growers but strengthen the nation’s foreign exchange earnings.

He disclosed that the inspection of Dangote’s tomato facility was part of measures to encourage private manufacturing companies to sustain local production of tomatos.

Ogbeh assured tomato farmers that the Anchor-borrowers initiative would further enhance their capacity to grow massive crops that would enable processing facilities to produce tomato for local use and export.

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