Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State
has urged the Federal Government to declare state of emergency in
agriculture to boost revenue.
Fayose, who spoke while declaring open
the four-day Agriculture Summit 2016, said the emergency must be in the
critical sectors of the economy.
He said, “If a nation doesn’t have a
change of attitude, there is nothing like diversification. Nigeria
deserves leaders not rulers. We must drop the attitude to bring people
down.
“Salaries are not enough to pay workers.
It is sad that the state government can’t diversify again because they
are financially incapacitated. State cannot fund agriculture because
they are under perpetual bailout.
“The federal government should declare a
state of emergency in agriculture. Not a state of emergency that you
want to remove the governor. We must use the power given to us by the
constitution for the people and not against the people.”
The Minister of Agriculture, Audu Ogbeh,
said the government was making efforts to diversify the economy from a
monolithic economy based on oil.
Ogbeh, who was represented by a Director
in the ministry, Mr Kolade Oladipo, said, “A nation that cannot feed his
people is a failed state. Nigeria can’t afford to be among this
therefore the need to reorientate the people.”
In his keynote address, the founder of
Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti, Afe Babalola (SAN), called for
agricultural revolution that will bring about political and economic
stability.
“The old system of using the hoe and
cutlass for farming is most detestable. Politics is now seen as more
lucrative than any other decent jobs in Nigeria. Hence people prefer it
to farming.
“The banks have not made business venture
easy in the Nigeria with interest rate of over 20 per cent. Bank
interest rate on loans have hit the roof to a point beyond which no
investor can venture into agriculture with bank loan and end up with any
profit at the end of the day.
“To cap the problems of agriculture
confronting the nation is the absence of storage facilities for
perishable agricultural products.”
Babalola advocated that agricultural science should be taught as a compulsory subject in elementary and secondary schools.
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