RE: Nigeria’s Agriculture Minister, Adesina, emerges Forbes Africa Person of the Year

Mukefor,
There are people in Cameroon with enough capital to embark on such projects. An unpatriotic leadership, tribalism, an extroverted mindset and the docility of our people have combined to keep them out of the selection process. We cannot sit back and expect only foreigners to come and invest and develop our own country. We must become the agent of our own development.
 

From: dbtmamfe@hotmail.com
To: cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com; camnetwork@yahoogroups.com; ambasbay@googlegroups.com
Subject: Nigeria’s Agriculture Minister, Adesina, emerges Forbes Africa Person of the Year
Date: Sun, 2 Feb 2014 11:57:05 +0000

“With dwindling oil fortunes, and the end of the telecoms boom, the next big investment frontier is unlocking Africa’s vast agricultural potential to feed the continent and the world,” he added.

Cameroonian detractors of Herakles and their hapless foreign NGOs should take note. We are not going to realize this agricultural potential with neanderthal hoe and cutlass subsistence farming.

We need the capital, machinery, know-how,  tenacity (staying power), corporate management skills and profit motive of foreign investors.  We have abundant land and brawn.


Mukefor



To: camnetwork@yahoogroups.com; cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com
From: tumasangm@hotmail.com
Date: Sun, 2 Feb 2014 11:18:08 +0000
Subject: [cameroon_politics] Nigeria’s Agriculture Minister, Adesina, emerges Forbes Africa Person of the Year

 

Nigeria’s Agriculture Minister, Adesina, emerges Forbes Africa Person of the Year
Published: December 4,2013

Akinwunmi Adesina

The minister has helped eliminate corruption in fertiliser subsidy.
Nigeria’s Minister of Agriculture, Akinwumi Adesina, has been named the Forbes Africa Person of the Year 2013.
Organisers of the award said on Tuesday that Mr. Adesina, who was nominated for his reforms in Nigeria’s agriculture sector, resulting in the empowerment of more than six million farmers across Nigeria, defeated four other nominees for the continent-wide prize.
“I am truly honoured and humbled by this prestigious award, which I dedicate to Africa’s farmers and the new cadre of young business entrepreneurs who have discovered the hidden gem for sustainable wealth creation on our continent – Agriculture,” Mr. Adesina is quoted as saying.
“With dwindling oil fortunes, and the end of the telecoms boom, the next big investment frontier is unlocking Africa’s vast agricultural potential to feed the continent and the world,” he added.
The organisers, who described Mr. Adesina as a passionate defender of African farmers, said the minister works relentlessly in unlocking opportunities for farmers and changing Africa’s narrative on agriculture to wealth creation, away from poverty reduction.
Within two years of his taking office, the organisers said, Mr. Adesina had turned agriculture away from being a development programme into a business activity generating wealth for millions of farmers.
“Africa, with our huge potential, cannot be a museum of poverty” the minister said. “My passion is using agricultural business and finance innovations to turn Nigerian and African farmers and agribusinesses into millionaires and billionaires. Nigeria must become a global powerhouse in agriculture.”
His Growth Enhancement Support Scheme, GES, is believed to have ended four decades of corruption in the fertilizer sector, eliminating the middlemen and scaling up food production by nine million metric tonnes in the first year -almost half of the 2015 production target.
To further enhance the process, Mr. Adesina introduced an Electronic Wallet System, which allows smallholder farmers to receive electronic vouchers for subsidized seeds and fertilizers directly on their mobile phones and enable them to pay for farm inputs from private sector agricultural input dealers.
The system is believed to have enhanced food security for 30 million persons in rural farm households. Women farmers, previously marginalized under the old fertilizer distribution system, now have better yielding fields with subsidized farm inputs received on their mobile phones. .
“We have never seen any Minister who works so hard to improve our lives. He has returned dignity to us as farmers,” Chairperson of Nigerian Women Farmers Association, Lizzy Igbine, said.
With the success of the electronic wallet system, Nigeria has become the first country in Africa to reach farmers with subsidized farm inputs through their mobile phones. The impact is already being noticed beyond Nigeria with several African countries, Brazil, India and China now expressing interest in adopting the electronic wallet system in their agriculture sectors.
Mr. Adesina has championed African agriculture for over two decades, defending the poor and helping several African countries to develop innovative solutions for reaching millions of farmers with finance, farm inputs and supportive policies.
In recognition of Nigeria’s reforms and progress, global and domestic investors signed over $4 billion of executed letters of investments to boost Nigeria’s agriculture, while the World Bank, African Development Bank, ADB, and other global development finance institutions have put up over $2 billion in support of the minister’s bold initiatives.
“Adesina has totally revolutionized agriculture into a business, and banks and private investors are all moving to the agriculture sector. He has made agriculture very exciting, turning it into Nigeria’s new oil,” Chairman of Heirs Holdings, Tony Elumelu, said.
Often referred to as ‘Africa’s leading development entrepreneur’, Mr. Adesina was appointed by the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon, as one of the 17 global leaders, along with Bill Gates, to help the world achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Bill Gates, who sits on the Eminent Persons Group that advises President Goodluck Jonathan on Nigeria’s agriculture, called Mr. Adesina’s policies and agriculture reforms “extraordinary”.
Sharing his vision for a food secured continent, Mr. Adesina said he dreams of a future where Africa’s vast savannas were revived with crops, where large commercial and smallholder farmers co-exist and both prosper; where rail, road and port systems were improved; where open international markets enable more food to move from places of surplus to places of need; where rising incomes bring millions of farmers into Africa’s emerging middle class.
“The results achieved in Nigeria could not have been possible without the immense support of President Goodluck Jonathan. His passion and leadership inspires us that we can achieve even greater results. For agriculture was Nigeria’s past and in agriculture – as a business – lies Nigeria’s greater future,” Mr. Adesina added.

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