Abdou Tenkouano, PhD |
Nowhere
in Ghana are leafy vegetables from plants and trees consumed more than Northern
Ghana comprising – the Upper West, Upper East and Northern Regions. Arguably, about
80 percent to 90 percent of soups eaten by citizens of these regions are
prepared with dry or fresh leafy vegetables produced locally.
Leafy vegetable soups are highly regarded by
the people of these regions, both at home and wherever they travel to live. If
there is any cultural practice that is hardly thrown away by a northerner (a
person from any part of Northern Ghana), then it is leafy vegetable soup.
Leafy vegetable soups, the commonest one
being bira, aleefu, moringa and pumpkin leaves cooked with groundnuts powder/paste,
dry herrings, meat of any kind, dawadawa, fresh tomatoes and pepper, are mostly
served with the revered tuo-zaafi food prepared with corn, millet, rice or
guinea corn flour. However, one can also choose to eat bira, aleefu or any of
the soups alone or with rice, gari (eba) and akple.
Notwithstanding the fact that, Traditional African
Vegetables (TAVs) are the most affordable and sustainable dietary sources of
vitamins and micronutrients that are supplied through the diet among the rural
poor, their potential for increased household income and nutrition is
insufficiently exploited.
It is no wonder that CORAF-WECARD is
funding Ghana’s Centre for Scientific and Industrial Research of the Savanna
Agriculture Research Institute (CSIR-SARI) and AVRDC-The World Vegetable Centre
to boost improved ways of growing more indigenous leafy vegetables in Northern Ghana
and parts of the country for increased household income and nutritional
benefits.
Under
a three-year project dubbed: “Enhancing Productivity, Competitiveness and
Marketing of Traditional African (Leafy) Vegetables for Improved Income and
Nutrition in West and Central Africa”, beneficiary countries including Cameroon,
Burkina Faso and Ghana, would have majority of their citizens incomes and
livelihoods as well as poverty and food security improved.
The project seeks to increase production
and consumption of TAVs by overcoming constraints such as low productivity of farmers,
lack of good quality seeds, limited knowledge of postharvest and processing
options and opportunities, poorly developed value chains and a lack of
awareness of nutritional benefits.
At
a four-day review workshop organised at Nyankpala in the Northern Region by
CSIR-SARI in collaboration with AVRDC-The World Vegetable Centre, Project
Coordinator Dr. Abdou Tenkouano expressed serious concern over increasing
non-availability of land and water that are thwarting efforts of many household
farmers in their quest to grow more vegetables.
He
called on governments to ameliorate the challenges confronting farmers especially
women farmers, decisively with adequate funding for new research work,
provision of water sources, land and incentives for farmers to enable them
cultivate more TAVs to feed the increasing number of food insecure people.
The
review workshop, which brought together project implementers from all
beneficiary countries, focused on a number of issues including discussion of
progress reports of project implementation of the first year (December 2013 – November
2014) and 2015 work plan.
Furthermore,
there were discussions regarding project monitoring plan, review of challenges
facing implementation in each country and lessons learned from the
implementation of activities by way of knowledge sharing and learning
experiences with a view to creating more visibility to the project in each
country.
A Director at the CSIR Dr. Naamwinnon
Karbo, who read a speech on behalf of the Director-General of CSIR Dr. Abdulai
Baba Salifu, commended CORAF-WECARD for their increasing and sustained support
for research in Ghana. According to him, CSIR-SARI alone has been a beneficiary
of four major projects since 2011 with a total funding amount of US$577,000, citing the TAVs project as
the fourth project.
A.B. Salifu, PhD |
Dr.
Salifu lauded the TAVs project particularly for the crucial importance it attaches
to smallholder farmers and households because of the huge food, nutritional and
income security impact outcomes it has on most vulnerable populations.
On his part, the Deputy Northern Regional
Minister Alhaji A.B.A. Fuseini noted that, food security is one of the major
banes of Africa. Adding, he said “we can’t continue to go cup in hand begging for
food from foreigners when we as Africans have the capacity to produce more than
enough to feed our people”.
But he indicated that, one of the factors
militating against agriculture and food production is the farmers’ lack of improved
variety of seeds to sow in order to recoup their investments and also enable
them to feed their families.
Alhaji Fuseini, however, urged farmers in
Northern Ghana to take advantage of the expansion and upgrading of the Tamale
Airport and produce more vegetables for export to Europe and other parts of the
world when work is completed, since there is a high demand for such produce.
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