Alhassan Andani, Board Chairman, SADA |
The biggest
weakness or challenge facing the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority
(SADA) at the moment, is the lack of appropriate human resources to do the work
that will bring results; Executive Director of the Centre for Agricultural and
Rural Development (CARD) Naresh Shukla, has observed.
According to Mr. Shukla, his involvement with SADA as
a service provider since 2012 has opened his eyes to a lot of knowledge-gaps in
terms of implementation and coordination of projects, stressing that persons
who are charged with certain responsibilities are seemingly ineffectual and
thus cannot also manage incompetent people under them.
In an interview with The Advocate, he also says there
is the need to employ the services of capable people as service providers.
“What is being done currently is that, many of those who have been hired, the
criteria used in selecting them was based on “I know this man…” rather than
you’re capable and so am hiring you to do the job”, he claims.
He says for instance, the whole of Northern Ghana is
dominated by smallholder farmers, and this requires professionals who are
highly conversant with agriculture to be able to deal with farmers and not the
calibre of people SADA has engaged as service providers, because some of them
lack the appropriate skills to do the job.
Mr. Shukla however, maintains that, SADA has not
deviated from its mission or objectives as some people claim and that it is on
course, but rather the implementers are the problem.
He also laments that service providers are being
frustrated in their bid to succeed in the task assigned them, saying
“fertiliser is needed in the month of June but it comes in the month of August
when crops are already dead. Seeds are supposed to come in the month of May……
but it comes at the end of July. So the resources of the country is wasted due
to bad timing”, he states.
According to him, he was given an amount of GH¢25,000.00 as capital to plough 500 hectares for farmers in the Yendi,
Mion and Tamale districts, adding that, the stated amount is in addition to
seeds, fertiliser and tractors. “A bag of fertiliser is equal to a bag of
maize. So last year, I gave SADA 5000 bags of maize as payment in kind for the
money, fertiliser, seeds and tractor support given to me” he explains.
In some cases, he says, farmers who were supported by
some service providers sold their produce to other buyers and spent the money.
“As soon as harvesting starts, we (service providers) need to go with sacks,
fill the sacks and take them to SADA; but many of the service providers lack
the capacity to do that.”
Dr. Charles Jebuni, C.E.O, SADA |
Mr. Shukla also disclosed to this paper that, several
bags of maize harvested from last year’s cropping season and stored at the SADA
warehouse went bad. Other service providers did not fumigate their maize when
they realized they would not be compensated for fumigating them, he said. “The
corn shellers procured for the service providers were also not of good quality
and therefore could not do the shelling properly”, he reveals.
He suggests that, tractors, fertilizers and seeds
should be released to service providers at the right time, noting that that
will make a greater impact if seriously considered. SADA, he notes, must also
hire the services of experienced and capable people who understand farm
management and not people they know by face or relation.
Mr. Shukla also criticizes the manner in which farmers
were cutting down shea trees because they have been encouraged by SADA to go
into grafted mango plantation saying “Ghanaians don’t need grafted mangoes
because they cannot withstand the weather. Shea nuts have been exported very
well as compared to mangoes and so SADA should expand the commercialization of
shea nuts instead of mangoes”, he opined.
He recommends that, service providers also need basic
training on tractor services so that when they develop technical faults on the
field, owners will be able to repair them themselves rather than waiting on
SADA Secretariat to send mechanics to repair the tractors by which time the
deadline would have beaten them.
Meanwhile, Director of Programmes for SADA Dr.
Emmanuel Abeere-nga, in response says, the delay in recruiting technical staff
and the usual bureaucracy involved in procurement processes also led to the
delay in releasing funds on time to purchase farm inputs for service providers.
He also maintains that the processes used in
recruiting service providers for SADA is a rigorous one, adding that, experts
from savannah agricultural research institute, ministry of food and agriculture
and representatives of civil society organisations among others, are put
together in a team to do the selection. “Thus, I don’t doubt at all that these
service providers we’ve engaged have the capabilities to do the job given
them”, he stressed.
Nonetheless, Dr. Abeere-nga states that after
recruitment, some people in for instance in the Upper West and Northern Regions
were later brought on board as service providers and perhaps it is the ability
of such persons that can be questioned, adding that as they move forward,
anyone who fails to meet the standards set by SADA, will be dropped.
He also confirms that, the locally manufactured corn
shellers procured for service providers were of inferior quality. However, he
explains that the manufacturer admitted he could not get the right measurements
because it has been long they manufactured some for sale and promised to
improve upon the quality in subsequent production.
Undoubtedly, Northern Ghana has the greatest
percentage of people living in extreme poverty with more than 60 percent of the
population living on less than US$1 a day. The region’s environmental,
epidemiological and geographical challenges including low agricultural
productivity, a high disease burden rate and high transportation cost makes
villagers who are the most vulnerable to live in extreme poverty. This means
that to collect safe drinking water and firewood for domestic use, people must
walk several miles every day.
With
these rural communities trapped in a poverty web, they are unable to make the
investments in human capital and infrastructure required to achieve
self-sustaining economic growth.
Based on these facts, SADA, a government policy
initiative established by an Act of Parliament (Act 805, 2010) is aimed at
addressing the development gap that exists between Northern and Southern Ghana.
SADA’s mandate is to accelerate the socio-economic development of the Savannah
belt through strategic investment in resource development. It envisions a
“Forested North” by 2030, where agricultural production is modernised and
oriented towards a larger market.
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