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Food Insecurity: Ayatse urges FG to address attacks on famers in Benue

Food Insecurity: Ayatse urges FG to address attacks on famers in Benue

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By Joshua Olomu

Prof. Felicia Ayatse, wife of the Paramount Ruler of the Tiv nation (Tor Tiv), Prof. James Ayatse, has urged the Federal Government to address incessant attacks on farmers in Benue State to curb food insecurity.

Ayatse made the call at the 2025 Mba’ Apostoli Festival, a fiesta that highlights food and cultural heritage, in Abuja.

The festival, with the theme, “Seeds of Prosperity: Agric Meets Culture”, had in attendance traditional rulers, culture enthusiasts, exhibitors and farmers, government functionaries, as well as sons and daughters of Tiv nation, among others.

According to the royal mother, the escalating attacks on farmers and destruction of crops by suspected militia herdsmen in the state’s border communities is a major threat to food production.

She noted that as Nigeria grapples with rising hunger and systemic food insecurity, the Benue situation needed to be addressed as a “national emergency” because of the strategic place it occupies in food production.

Ayatse, therefore, appealed to the President Bola Tinubu-led Federal Government to direct security agencies to intensify efforts towards restoring lasting peace and ensure adequate security of affected communities.

“If there is any time we need to fight this hunger and food scarcity, it is now, and I want to use this opportunity to appeal to every one of us, particularly those who can help us reach the Federal Government.

“Although the Federal Government is making efforts to ensure there is peace and normalcy in Benue State, more needs to be done, because farming has seriously been brought to a halt in the state.

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“The farmers are not going to their farms because of insecurity; they are being hunted and killed on a daily basis.

“If this trend is allowed to continue, hunger will wreck every part of Nigeria because Benue State has been, as the name implies, the food basket of the nation.

“Benue State occupies a very strategic position in the production of food in Nigeria, so we must ensure there is peace in the state.

“Besides ensuring there is peace and there is security of life and property in Benue State, I call on the Federal Government to help farmers in Benue State.

“The insecurity has been very terrible in the state, but it has never reached the dimension we have experienced this year, so the Federal Government should do whatever it can to assist the farmers.

“Otherwise, hunger is starring in our faces, not just in Benue State, but it is definitely going to affect the entire nation,” she said.

Ayatse, however, commended organisers of the Mba’ Apostoli Festival for using it as a platform for showcasing culture and food production, particularly the Tiv cultural heritage.  

“I want to ask the organisers to continue this very important festival, combining agriculture and culture, and we must ensure that technology is seriously encouraged and used at all levels of farming.

“I look forward to having this festival celebrated next year in Benue State,” she said.

Earlier in his welcome address, Operations Manager of the Festival, Dr Cletus Akwaya, said the annual cultural fiesta was aimed at preserving agricultural heritage, culture and building food-secure communities.

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He, therefore, called on relevant government institutions, donor organisations and Nigerians of goodwill to ensure continuity of the festival in the FCT.

“This year’s theme reflects our determination to uplift not just our culture of farming, but also the vital role our crops: yam, cassava, sweet potato and cocoyam play in nutrition, food security and economic development.

“Support for this festival is support for food security, it is support for youth engagement, for rural development, for nutrition advocacy and for cultural preservation,” he said.

In his keynote address, Dr Khalid Ishiak, former Ag. Director General, National Agricultural Seeds Council, said agric and culture were intertwined, with culture influencing agricultural practices, knowledge and the value placed on food and farming.

He, however, noted that Nigeria’s inability to meet up with required optimum food production level has been attributed to factors such as population growth, climate change, conflict and displacement, post-harvest losses, among others.

In her remarks, Aveseh Asough, the Festival Director, said the annual event highlights both food and cultural heritage, fostering development, intercultural integration and promotion of peace in Nigeria.

“Now in its 7th year, the Mba’ Apostoli Festival has grown into a landmark celebration of culture, agriculture and community development.

“From its humble beginning in 2019, the festival has evolved into a globally recognised platform, attracting thousands of participants annually, from farmers and food processors to cultural enthusiasts, youth groups and development actors,” she said. (NAN)(www.nannews.ng)

Edited by Ekemini Ladejobi

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