The second reason is that the little food we produce has been reduced with the Boko Haram and Fulani herdsmen’s attacks. Our farmers have been displaced from their lands as a result of these two issues, and we now rely mostly on food importation to keep our people from starving.
Now, since the middle of last year, food prices have been going up astronomically, thereby making more Nigerians fall deeper into poverty.
If the government must curb the rise, then it must first ensure that every part of the Nigerian territory is safe for habitation. While this may be a Herculean task, it is something that can be achieved. When everywhere is safe in the country, then farmers who have been displaced by violence will return to their lands.
Government must begin to encourage backyard farming; we need to utilise available spaces around us to grow food.
Nigerians should look at the spaces beside them to grow corn, tomatoes, vegetables, bananas, among others.
This will go a long way in reducing the prices households pay for food. A family that has vegetables at a backyard farm will not go to the market to buy vegetable again.
Also, a family that has corn planted at the space beside the family house can make do with cooked corn for lunch.
The Federal Government should also encourage wealthy Nigerians to go into farming, as this set of people has the financial muscle to establish large farms that will provide food for millions of people at a time. We must begin to see ourselves as the solution to our problems.
If the truth must be told, foreign investors will not invest in any country that is facing security challenges.
- Uju Nicolas,
Abuja.