Bayelsa Rice Farmers Lament Flood, Pest Attacks

Rice farmers in Bayelsa State have expressed concern about impending floods and pest attacks on their crops

Bayelsa Rice Farmers

Rice farmers in Bayelsa State have expressed concern about impending floods and pest attacks on their crops.

They expressed concern about rising water levels in the surrounding rivers, pleading with the state government to take action to prevent their farms from being washed away.

Mr Ovieya Sini, Managing Director of Ovieya Rice Farm, told Daily Trust that the rising water level had made it difficult for workers to access his farm by canoe.

Aside from flooding, he said, constant pest attacks and the lack of functional processing facilities in Yenagoa made life difficult for rice farmers in the state.

He urged the government to provide them with pesticides and processing facilities so that they could produce rice that could feed Bayelsa and other Niger Delta states.

Another challenge here is how to convey the farm produce to the upland for procession. You know; our terrain is riverine, but if the government can assist us with boats and other palliative measures, I think we can produce rice that can feed Bayelsa and other states. Our land is good for rice cultivation.

I have invested many resources already in the farm, but if the government can assist with pesticides, and tackle flooding in our society, we will have a bumper harvest, he said.

FG moves to block payment of $148m to Paris Club refund consultants

The Nigerian government says it will not honour the purported pledge made by the previous administration to consultants of Paris Club refund to them $148 million.

This is as the government asked an Abuja court to cancel the promissory notes issued to the consultants for the creditor’s refund.

The federal government prayer was contained in a suit marked FHC/ABJ/CS/896/2023 filed at a federal high court in Abuja

The plaintiffs are the federal government, the attorney-general of the federation, the minister of finance, budget and national planning and the accountant-general of the federation.

The defendants include FSDH Merchant Bank Limited, Ned Munir Nwoko, Gregory Nangor Lar, Riok Nigeria Limited, Prince Orji Nwafor Orizu, Olaitan Bello, Dr. Ted Iseghohi Edwards, and Panic Alert Security System Limited.

The controversial payment of $418 million to consultants (defendants in the suit) who were engaged by the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) and the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON) has engendered a dispute between the three tiers of government.

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