LAND VS AGRICULTURE

State urged to resolve land problems at the Coast to help farmers

He called on Coastal farmers to embrace smart farming methods because of the land problems.

In Summary
  • Bishop Baya asked the government to hasten the process of titling.
  • Bandari Sacco CEO Joseph Bii said Coast people should attend the show in great numbers to learn more about financial solutions to agriculture provided by the Sacco.
Bandari Sacco CEO Joseph Bii and chair Kenneth Sungu after the Harvest Festival at the Mombasa ACK Cathedral on Sunday.
BUMPER HAVERST Bandari Sacco CEO Joseph Bii and chair Kenneth Sungu after the Harvest Festival at the Mombasa ACK Cathedral on Sunday.
Image: BRIAN OTIENO

Land ownership problems remain the biggest challenge for Coast people and this is affecting farmers and food security in the region.

Mombasa ACK Bishop Alphonce Baya on Sunday said the government still has a long way to go to ensure Coast people have land title deeds despite efforts to address the same by the Kenya Kwanza regime.

“Land is a factor of production and without land ownership then we cannot say we have attained independence,” the Bishop said.

Speaking after the Harvest Festival service at the Mombasa ACK Cathedral where officials of the Mombasa International ASK Show had gone to have their produce blessed, Bishop Baya asked the government to hasten the process of titling.

“There are still many areas that experience these land problems,” he said.

He said many farmers at the Coast also suffer from exploitation by middlemen who take advantage of the dire drought, poverty and land disputes to oppress the desperate farmers.

“If the government resolves the land problems, these brokers and middlemen will have no one to take advantage of because the local farmer will be empowered,” Bishop Baya said.

He called on Coastal farmers to embrace smart farming methods because of the land problems.

Mombasa ASK Show chair Anisa Abdalla said preparations for this year’s Mombasa International ASK Show are in top gear with President William Ruto expected to officially open it on Thursday.

The show opens on Wednesday and will end on Sunday.

This will be the first edition after the country fully opens post-Covid.

Abdalla said this year’s edition has received a record 1,200 schools confirming participation.

“This is mainly because of the CBC that focuses on hands-on experience, for which there will be plenty to learn for the learners,” Abdalla said.

Mombasa County Commissioner Abdirazak Jaldesa has assured visitors of security which has been beefed up in the county.

Abdalla said they expect a record number of guests owing to the confirmations and the aggressive marketing they have done.

“This time, we are the ones who went out to entice the exhibitors to come unlike in previous years, where exhibitors were coming to us to ask for space to display their goods and services,” Abdalla said.

She called on schools to take advantage of the show to expose the learners to the practicals of what they teach the learners in school.

She said lessons on smart farming, agribusiness and climate-smart technologies that can be applied in agriculture will be on show.

“We are at the Coast which has perennial problems of hunger and drought in Kilifi, Kwale, Taita Taveta and Tana River counties. This is the opportunity for farmers to come and enhance their knowledge on the required drought-resistant seeds,” Abdalla said.

Bandari Sacco CEO Joseph Bii said Coast people should attend the show in great numbers to learn more about financial solutions to agriculture provided by the Sacco.

“We have agricultural, investment and financial products for farmers. We will give real solutions to farmers at the Coast,” said Bii.

He said the one of the biggest products for farmers at the Coast is the cashew nut and they are mostly small-scale farmers.

“We have business loans which are cheap and flexible because we know that farming is dependent on rains and sometimes the rains fail. This means we can adjust our terms and conditions according to the rain patterns to suit that farmer Coastal farmer,” he said.

In the blue economy and specifically the fishermen, there are products and savings procedures tailor-made for the fishermen.

Kenya Medical Research Institute acting deputy director in charge of corporate communications James Wodera said they will be putting up a show for the public who will learn crucial things about some of the health challenges they face.

“We would like them to come to see how our motto “In search for better health” is being translated to have an interface between agriculture, hood health and technology,” said Wodera.

Wodera said this way, especially in the Coast region, the public will be able to better manage their environments and ensure they save a lot of money that would otherwise be used in treating easily preventable diseases.

Mombasa ASK Show chair Anisa Abdalla and Mombasa ACK Bishop Alphonse Baya after the Harvest Festival at the Mombasa ACK Cathedral on Sunday.
BUMPER HARVEST Mombasa ASK Show chair Anisa Abdalla and Mombasa ACK Bishop Alphonse Baya after the Harvest Festival at the Mombasa ACK Cathedral on Sunday.
Image: BRIAN OTIENO
WATCH: The latest videos from the Star