Is this the case of one step forward, two steps backward.....? While
there may be genuine desire on the President's part for the Gambia to
realize the goal of self-sufficiency in food, I believe this current
approach can only make it harder for others to join in. The seemingly
endless supply of volunteer labor can only make it harder for aspiring
or already struggling small-time farmers to break-even.
To put things in perspective, the per capita consumption of rice in The
Gambia is around 90kg(taking Senegal's consumption figures). Upland rice
in the Gambia yields are about 1000 kg per ha. This suggests that unless
the President is prepared to claim 120,000 ha (~12% of the Gambia's land
area) as his own with citizen volunteers led by military chiefs,
governors, cabinet secretaries and mayors as cheerleaders the dream of
turning Gambia into a net exporter of rice will continue to be a dream.
500 people from KMC to Kanilai and back (240km) would need at least
D18,750 fuel. 10 buses (15 gallons of diesel @ D125 per gallon). in
addition to D12,500 for food and entertainment (D25 per person). Total
D31,250 for one day on the President's farm. How many such trips are
needed over the year? How are we accounting for such expenses? More
importantly where did the money that made it possible for the 500 people
to participate come from?
Malanding Jaiteh
KMC mayor calls for massive investment in farming
<http://observer.gm/africa/gambia/article/kmc-mayor-calls-for-massive-investment-in-farming#map>africa
<http://observer.gm/africa/news> » gambia
<http://observer.gm/africa/gambia/news>
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
The mayor of the Kanifing Municipal Council, Yankuba Colley, has called
on Gambian entreprenurs to take up farming as a major investment.
Mayor Yankuba Colley was speaking to reporters over the weekend at the
45-hectare Jiramba rice field. This is one of the biggest of President
Yahya Jammeh’s farms in Kanilai. The KMC mayor had led a delegation of
over 500 people from his municipality to the farm to harvest the rice.
Aware of the fact that large scale farming requires huge investments,
Mayor Colley noted that the role of the country’s private sector cannot
be overemphasised. “I am appealing to the rich investors to take the
lead and invest in farming.
This move will ensure the attainment of our food self-sufficiency
goals,” he stated. “In the western countries, many rich people are
farmers. So I believe that we stand every chance to be like them if we
want to,’’ he remarked.
Commenting on President Jammeh’s farming activities, the KMC mayor
expressed his delight with the farming activities going on at the
Gambian leader’s farms in Kanilai. According to him, President Jammeh’s
move to ensure food self-sufficiency in the country is a wonderful one.
He told the Daily Observer that the president’s main objective is to
enable The Gambia to be an exporter of various foods. He further
observed that the Gambian leader’s clarion call for the people to go
back to the land has paid dividend.
Mayor Yankuba Colley urged Gambians to follow the footsteps of the
Gambian leader.
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