NORTON MP Temba
Mliswa lampooned former Agriculture minister Joseph Made saying during his
tenure he spent time managing former President Robert Mugabe and his wife
Grace’s farms instead of inspecting government agricultural projects at
different institutions in the country.
Mliswa was contributing to debate on a motion on a report
by the Christopher Chitindi-led Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Lands and
Agriculture on command agriculture and agricultural colleges on Thursday when
he alleged that agricultural colleges failed to perform because they were not
properly supported or funded.
“Government had become dysfunctional, and how do you run
agricultural training institutions without a board? Made spent time at his farm
instead of him spending time doing his ministerial mandate,” Mliswa said.
“All he did was to go to Gushungo Dairies with foreigners,
showing them Mazowe with the former First Lady Grace (Mugabe), but we never saw
him going to tertiary institutions. I think his job was to work for the First
Family,” he said.
Mliswa said if command agriculture is to succeed, then
every Zimbabwean regardless of colour or political affiliation should benefit
and get inputs from the programme.
While presenting the committee report, Chitindi said
farmers had experienced problems such as late distribution of inputs, while
others had to travel long distances to collect their inputs.
“For example, Norton farmers collected their inputs from
Chegutu, while Umzingwane farmers collected inputs from Filabusi and Gwanda.
“There was also a negative perception on command
agriculture with one ward in Kwekwe, where only three people took up the
programme, while others said they feared joining it because of the consequences
that will be meted by the military if they failed to deliver,” he said.
Chitindi said the name “command” had negative connotations
to farmers, who thought that it was a military programme.
Southerton MP, Gift Chimanikire (MDC-T) said there is need
for farmer training before people are given huge tracts of land to do farming.
He said the ruling party should desist from selective
distribution of farm inputs, where opposition supporters were excluded from the
presidential input scheme or command agriculture.
Uzumba MP, Simbaneuta Mudarikwa (Zanu PF) said there is
need to ensure fertilisers and herbicides are affordable. He said it is
imperative for the government to come up with a policy to ensure supermarkets
get their vegetable supplies from local farmers.
Kuwadzana East MP, Nelson Chamisa (MDC-T) said if Zimbabwe
is to improve in farming and restore its lost glory as the bread basket of
Africa, there is need to mechanise even peasant farming so that rural farmers
use modern equipment to also increase their yields. Newsday
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