The
Minister of Agriculture, Dr.
Owusu Afriyie Akoto, asked the Ghanaian Parliament to declare
an “agricultural state of emergency” in the country as the current armyworm invasion jeopardizes
agriculture as a source of food and income.
In a
memo addressed to the Cabinet Monday, Akoto called on Parliament to allow the
Ministry of Agriculture to use unbudgeted funds to carry out a nationwide pest
control and elimination exercise,according to MyJoyOnline.
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Agricultural experts in the West African
country have warned that the invasion poses a serious threat to the ambitious
farming project by the Ghanaian government dubbed the “GHC56om Planting for Food
and Jobs Program.”https://guardian.ng/tag/opera/
The
project was expected to offer a massive boost to food production in the country
by supplying farmers with better-quality seedlings and fertilizer at subsidized
prices as well as making extension services readily available.
The
government hoped to create more than 700,000 direct and indirect jobs with the
program by creating marketing opportunities for farmers.
Ghanaians are now worried that all these
plans will go down the drain due to the destructive caterpillar whose voracious
appetite has left millions of African farmers counting huge losses.
REASOSNS FOR THE DECLARATION:
1. The project was expected to offer a massive
boost to food production in the country by supplying farmers with
better-quality seedlings and fertilizer at subsidized prices as well as making
extension services readily available.
2. The government hoped to create more than
700,000 direct and indirect jobs with the program by creating marketing
opportunities for farmers.
3. Ghanaians are now worried that all these plans
will go down the drain due to the destructive caterpillar whose voracious
appetite has left millions of African farmers counting huge losses.
4. “Farmers
don’t really know what to do…it is so massive that even if one farmer should
spray his farm, the disease [pest] will spread to the other farms,” Programs
Officer of the Peasant
Farmers Association Charles
Nyaaba said.
“One person cannot control it so we need [a] mass spraying
exercise.”
5.
Scientists have warned that most parts of Africa are staring at
a devastating food crisis in the near future due to the widespread invasion by
the crop-eating pest.
The
pest is now present in almost every country in West, East, and South Africa,
where the majority of farmers are yet to recover from the devastating drought that
has been ravaging sub-Saharan Africa since last year.
6. Food
security is a national problem and therefore need urgent action.
7. To curb
further spread of the worm and further detoxification of agricultural products.




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