Issifu Sulemana Jobila |
The Executive Director of Zasilari
Ecological Farms Project (ZEFP) Issifu Sulemana Jobila, has called on the
Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MoFA) to review the core objectives of the Ghana
Commercial Agriculture Project (GCAP) in order to make it “more favourable to local
farmers at the community level”.
In an interview with Savannahnews in
Tamale, he said one of GCAP’s core
objectives is to increase rice production in the country as part of a few
measures by government towards decreasing the importation of the staple which
is largely consumed by millions of Ghanaians.
“Besides rice production, GCAP is also supposed to
assist nucleus or commercial farmers to produce crops such as maize, soya
beans, fruits and vegetables. As I
speak to you now, my observation is that there is over concentration on the
cultivation of rice compared to the other crops especially in the SADA zone. As
much as GCAP’s intent to increase rice production is laudable, I think the
other crops are equally important”, Mr. Jobila said.
GCAP is a seven-year MoFA project, jointly funded by
the World Bank –International Development Association and the USAID with an
investment capital of US$145million.
The project was launched in July 2012 and is expected to end in September 2019.
GCAP seeks to develop agriculture in Ghana in line
with the country’s efforts at poverty reduction and ensuring food security by
promoting inclusive commercial farming along selected commodity value chains.
It ensures increased access to reliable water, secure land, private sector
finance, agricultural inputs and output markets by smallholder and nucleus farmers
in selected project intervention areas.
The project activities are located in the Accra plains
and Savannah Accelerated Development Authority (SADA zone). The Accra plains
area covers the Eastern, Greater Accra and Volta Regions whereas the SADA zone
area covers the Upper West, Upper East and Northern Regions as well as the
northern parts of Brong Ahafo and Volta Regions.
In the SADA zone, GCAP is focusing on crops such as
maize, rice and soya whereas in the Accra plains the focus is on maize, rice,
fruits and vegetables.
Currently, only registered farmer cooperatives or
companies that have the capacity and willing to venture into commercial farming
or are already into farming business are seriously considered during bidding
processes under the GCAP project.
But most of these farmer cooperatives, according to
Mr. Jobila, are companies that do not have their offices in the project
locations and their owners do not also come from the area, thus are in a way
considered strangers.
“An arrangement like this is not favourable and it’s a
recipe for conflict in the future considering the way land is a trigger of many
conflicts in the north. There will definitely be some people who will feel
disgruntled in a way considering the fact that they have relinquished their
total rights of ownership of thousands of acres of land belonging to them to a
total stranger called an investor for a period of 50 years.
“Even though the people feel that they are getting some
support through these investors, who per the project, are also supposed to help
them cultivate an acre or two and give them inputs, they will feel some form of
belongingness and security if the investors were to come from the area. The
local people will feel okay if some of them were supported adequately by MoFA
to move from being smallholder farmers to becoming commercial farmers”, he stated.
Mr. Jobila also urged MoFA and its partners to
endeavour to build the capacity of the local farmers and land owners on how to
negotiate for adequate payment of royalties and other settlements connected to
the GCAP project.
“The people are largely illiterates and lack the
skills and knowledge when it comes to negotiations. Their capacity ought to be
build, or better still, MoFA or GCAP as a project can hire the services of a
competent negotiator preferred by the people to assist them whenever the need arises”,
he suggested.
He however commended MoFA/GCAP for involving civil
society organisations in the monitoring process of the project and also for the
formation of community
land management committees in each project locations. However, he recommended the inclusion of some local CSOs
operating in such areas to be part of the community land management committees
in order to strengthen the knowledge base or expertise of membership of the
committees.
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