WOMEN have
been deeply involved in various aspects of agriculture, be it land preparation,
planting, weeding, harvesting, processing, animal rearing or marketing.
Some of the proud women farmers |
In spite of this, they have often not
been given due recognition for their contribution to food production,
apparently because the men always take the credit for the productivity of their
wives and sisters.
It was therefore heart-warming to see a
number of women receive awards at this year’s farmers’ day awards ceremony in
Tamale, which was held at Kogni.
Mma Hamza Hadija, a beans farmer from
Jarigu, a community located off the Tamale-Salaga road, was adjudged the best
female farmer in the Tamale metropolis.
Apart from her, four other women were
rewarded for beating their male counterparts in the cultivation of some crops
and the rearing of livestock.
They are Mma Yahaya Raabi, best shea nut
picker, Mma Baba Ayishetu, best farmer of soya beans, Mma Yakubu Fuseina, best
farmer in the rearing of small ruminants and Mma Abdulai Faati, best women
extension volunteer.
They were presented with a number of
items including cutlasses, wellington boots, pieces of cloths, sowing machines
and fertilizer bags.
After receiving their prizes, they told
the Daily Graphic that they were
delighted to have been recognised for their contribution to food production.
Mma Hadija said she had been farming for
more than 15 years and it has not been easy.
Mma Hadija receiving her award |
“Our lives depend on good harvest and this
also depends on good rains,” she noted, adding that anytime the rains were
favourable, she got up to 14 bags of beans on her five acre farm.
Mma Hadija mentioned that one of the
challenges facing her and other farmers was how to get tractor services when
the planting season is due.
She also mentioned the lack of
pesticides and other agro-chemicals as one factor that sometimes affected crop
yields thereby denying them the opportunity to reap what they had sowed.
For Mma Faati, who was rewarded as the
best agric extension volunteer, she became an extension officer because there
had been concerns about the low number of females in agric extension service.
“I was one of those who were selected,
trained and given bicycles to go into the communities and carry out extension
service,” she stated.
She said her role enables her to
interact with farmers in various communities and help them adopt improved
farming technologies.
Mma Fati also happens to be a vegetable
farmer and was actually rewarded in 2005 as the best vegetable farmer in the Tamale
metropolis.
“I grow cabbage, sweet pepper, spring
onions, carrot, ayoyo at my farm at Builpela,” she stated.
Meanwhile, the Chenshei Suhuyini Women’s
Group, which comprises female farmers, processors and marketers, was also
adjudged the best farmer-based organisation (FBO) in Tamale.
2 comments:
Abokobi Society Switzerland ASS would also like to honour Hamza Hadija and the 4 other rewarded women (Yahaya Raabi, Baba Ayishetu, Yakubu Fuseina and Abdulai Faati) at the 2012 farmers day awards ceremony in Tamale. The prize from ASS for these women will be the free supply of sustainable organic soil additives which will boost their harvest income in 2013.
Great News. I look forward to it. Thumbs up, ASS.
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