- NBA condemns constant disregard to rule of law governing right to food
As clashes between herdsmen and farmers persist, a Non Governmental Organisation, NGO in Abuja has said Nigerians will face untold suffering as prices of food items will likely soar.
Noting that these clashes have largely gone unchecked, Executive Director of the NGO, Abundance of Hope Initiative, Mr Taiye Sasona, disclosed that more farmers were pulling out of farming for fear of being attacked.
Meanwhile, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Abuja has said “hunger and malnutrition persists for lack of a rights-based policy environment that empowers the people to ask questions and hold government accountable.”
The Association in a communique issued after a recent Human Rights Summit held in Abuja further held that: “The constant disregard to the rule of law governing right to food like non-observance of constitutional division of labor and the sidelining of critical
laws to avoid food as a human right pervades the economy.”
Meanwhile, expressing deep concern over the clashes, Mr Taiye Sasona said: “The effect is what we are seeing in the market today as the prices of food items have to go up.
“Many farmers want to quit farming because of activities of herdsmen, so you can imagine, rather than putting more farmers to work on the land, we are losing more farmers.
“The spillover effect of herders and farmers clashes is all over in the north and in the south. Farmers are complaining everywhere but unfortunately it is under reported.
“Farmers can no longer go to farm, forget about the insurgency in the north, in other parts of the country herdsmen are not allowing farmers go to farm.
“Last week I was in
Karishi where I tried to encourage some farmers but they will tell you that they cannot gamble their lives because their farmlands are under attack.
“If this continues in 2021, it will be worse than 2020 because even our national reserve has been depleted and there is nothing to fall back on,’’ Sasona said.
According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS)’ report on inflation, the composite food index rose by 19.56 per cent in Dec. 2020 compared to 18.30 percent in Nov. 2020.
The report noted that the rise in the food index was caused by increases in prices of bread and cereals, potatoes, yam and other tubers, meat, fruits, vegetable, fish and oils and fats.
“On month-on-month basis, the food sub-index increased by 2.05 per cent in Dec. 2020, up by 0.01 per cent points from 2.04 percent recorded in Nov. 2020,’’ it added.
In a survey conducted by NAN in Abuja in December, a 50kg bag of rice was sold between N38,000 and N40,000 against N35,000 in October while 25kg bag was N20,000.
Prices of local varieties of rice, millet and sorghum indicate similar hike, as 100kg bag of rice is sold at N55,000, millet, N18,000 and sorghum, N19, 000 against old prices of N50,000, N15,000 and N14,000 respectively.
Additional reports from NAN