Jonathan Launches National School Agribusiness Club (SAC) For Secondary Schools As …Abdulsalam, Danjuma, Dangote, Elumelu, Others Appointed Ambassadors
President Goodluck Jonathan
yesterday, launched the National Schools Agriculture Programme (NSAP)
aimed at developing a new generation of youth agriculture enthusiasts from
secondary schools.
The pilot phase of the programme, a School Agribusiness Club
(SAC), is to be established in selected schools from 12 states across the six
geo-political zones. Each club will comprise 120 students.
The pilot states are Plateau, Akwa
Ibom, Bayelsa, Ogun, Oyo, Kano, Kaduna, Ebonyi, Enugu, Gombe, Bauchi and the
Federal Capital Terrority (FCT).
The programme will also focus on
food/vegetable production, horticulture, aquaculture, poultry, apiary,
livestock production, small scale irrigation, nutrition, processing and
packaging, and entrepreneurial skills for members of agribusiness clubs.
The NSAP is geared toward building
technical and entrepreneurship skills in the students to run agriculture as a
business, equip school leavers with practical life skills to create jobs for
themselves to enable the youths develop a positive attitude towards
agriculture.
President Jonathan, while
celebrating the fact that Nigeria’s food import bill has reduced from $11
billion to $4.3 billion, assured that his administration places high premium on
the young people, hence the programme which will catch them young.
He said one of the challenges facing
the sector was the aging population of the farmers, which in a way had sent a
wrong message to the young people who now see agriculture as an occupation for
the poor and less privileged.
“Farming is a white collar job but
the approach is what is wrong,” he said.
The President said his
administration was intent on making agriculture a very profitable business
venture not only to make the nation food sufficient but to also tackle the
challenges of youth unemployment.
He gave examples with Nigeria’s
business and industrial moguls like Aliko Dangote and Tony Elumelu who are
venturing into agriculture business, pointing out that NSAP is expected to
build a crop of under-20 Nigerians adequately motivated and trained to link up
with and continue on the path of such great agriculture industrialists and
entreprenuers.
“We need the under-20s to link up
with the Dangotes, Elumelus and other big Nigerian entrepreneurs. This is part
of our strategy to tackle youth unemployment,” he stressed.
“We are developing agriculture
Super Eagles,” he said in an analogy with the nation’s football team, the
Super Eagles, that has often made the country proud.
To encourage them the President said
he will be meeting with them once a year at an annual exhibition. He urged
state governments to buy-in to the programme and not play politics with it. He
also said, some former heads of state will be incorporated as ambassadors and
role models of the NSAP to further encourage and inspire the students, who he
predicted would eventually drop their hoes and cutlasses and go for
tractors and harvesters in the expected mechanised farming revolution.
On the choice of secondary schools
in the programme the President noted that statistics have shown that the
secondary school system provides the highest education for
Nigerians. About 4400 students will be involved and about half a million
youths will benefit.
Sani, noted that the effective
implementation of the NSAP will act as a catalyst for agricultural development
and poverty alleviation through closing the age gap of existing farmers,
diversifying the economy and creating jobs in the rural areas.
She also noted that the multiplier
effect of the programme will benefit about 372,960 households.
She described the programme as
Nigeria’s first non-curriculum agricultural programme designed for Nigerian
students to change their negative perception of agriculture, equip
them for life, and eventually help tackle youth unemployment.
Incentives for students include
scholarships, and exposure to global best practices and input to
agricultural enterprenuership.
According to her, the goal of NSAP
is “to build technical and enterpreneural skills in students to run agriculture
as a business , to leave school leavers with practical skills to create
jobs for themselves, and to enable the youth develop a positive attitude
towards agriculture.”
Also speaking at the event the
Minister of Agriculture, Akinwumi Adesina said food is also one of the biggest
money making ventures in life, hence the need to bring in the young people into
the business.
“We need young people in agriculture,
We need to put the hoes and cut lasses in the museum where they belong” he
said.
Recalling that Nigeria was the first
in the world to implement the e-wallet system he said the World Bank has agreed
to scale up the programme.
“This further strengthens our
resolve to modernise agriculture” he said adding that “all the schools will be
duly registered under the e-wallet GES system”.
The Education Minister, Ibrahim
Shekarau also noted that school wasn’t only about reading and writing or just
acquiring knowledge but also being exposed to the activities outside the world.
“This will be added to the chain
lists of core -curricular activities” he said adding that the schools will be
encouraged to ensure that the school agric clubs would be given the support
they require to get to where they want.
“You will now be exposed to the
challenges and things happening outside the classroom” he adds.
One of the
students, Miss Hamzat Bukola, of Government Model Secondary School,
Maitama, Abuja, who addressed the audience, said “before now, I had the
impression that agriculture was for the old and illiterate but now I know
better”.
Ebonyi State Governor, Martins
Elechi on behalf of the governors of the Pilot states assured the President
that the states will do no less to ensure the success of the programme.
“I come from a state backward in
education and forward in agriculture” adding that “education seem to have
driven away farming but this programme will bridge the gap”.
He said the NSAP will be supported
by the governors as part of their efforts in ensuring agriculture
revolution of the administration’s Transformation Agenda.
He also pointed out that “what we
have now is shadow unemployment – jobs available have no requisite manpower and
the manpower available have no requisite skills for available jobs.”
The Plateau state commissioner for
education, Attanasius Doshen, who spoke on behalf of the commissioners, said We
will swing into action to ensure that all programmes set in place to ensure the
success of this programme are implemented.
Goodwill messages were also
presented by the Minister of Education, Ibrahim Shekarau; and Country
Representative of Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), Louise Setshwaelo.
President Jonathan named the
ambassadors of the National Schools Agriculture Programme. They former Head of
State, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar (rtd), Gen. Theophilus Danjuma (rtd), Com.
Ebitu Ukiwe (rtd), Bola Shagayya, Aliko Dangote, Tony Elumelu, Onyeka Onwenu,
Tunji Owoeye, Wilma Aguele and Senator Nimi Amange.
Jonathan Launches National School Agribusiness Club (SAC) For Secondary Schools As …Abdulsalam, Danjuma, Dangote, Elumelu, Others Appointed Ambassadors
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Tuesday, October 21, 2014
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