By SOLDIER BURUKA of DAL
Fr Garia unveils the official plaque watched by Dr Lahis and other officials |
The
people of Chimbu have been urged to utilise their land and resources for
agriculture farming which will help improve their livelihood.
Chimbu
Governor Fr John Garia called on the people to be more innovative and use
whatever little resources they had to seek income-earning opportunities and
reduce poverty and food insecurity.
He
told the people not to use the rugged and mountainous terrain, inadequate
infrastructure, ineffective services and other issues as an excuse.
Fr
Garia was speaking at the official launching of the smallholder support
services expansion project (SSSEP) in the province last week.
Provincial administration staff, farmers,
women’s leaders and provincial leaders attended the launching in Kundiawa.
He
also presented K40, 000 as counterpart funding to help establish the new
project office.
The
programme will be introduced into the Kerowagi and Sinasina-Yonggomugl
districts.
Central
together with Chimbu are the two new provinces to be included in the expansion
phase after the project was trialed in Morobe and Eastern
Highlands for several years.
It was trialed as a way to address the
inadequate and ineffective delivery of agricultural support services in PNG,
and the approach included contracting individuals and institutions to deliver
support services to smallholder farmers.
The
overall goal is to improve the quality of life of smallholder farmers by
increasing their access to agriculture support services.
The
Governor, whilst expressing his appreciation to the Department of Agriculture
and Livestock for accepting his province, said SSSEP would boost agriculture
development and provide opportunities for the farmers to improve their
livelihood.
He
expected the majority of the rural population to gain maximum benefit through
their involvement in the project and urged all stakeholders to support the new
system.
Fr
Garia acknowledged the efforts of many farmers in food crops, rice, fish farming,
livestock and coffee who had worked tirelessly without government assistance to
become successful.
He
said people should not always rely on the politicians for cash handouts but try
to become self-reliant.
Fr
Garia said he never encouraged handouts and always gave out seedlings and
farming tools to farmers who requested for assistance.
The
Governor also called on public servants to stop being bottlenecks and assist in
getting the flow of services to the rural communities.
He
said new concepts such as the SSSEP could work effectively if public servants were
committed and honest in the delivery of services.
Chairman
of Kerowagi farmers’ co-operative society, Jacob Kerenga, on behalf of the
farmers of Chimbu, thanked DAL and the provincial administration for selecting
his province to be included.
He
said people had the land and resources but they were lazy.
They also lacked regular extension and technical
advisory services and hopefully this would change through the SSSEP.
“This
is the opportunity we have all been waiting for to improve agriculture farming
activities,” Kerenga said.
“How
can we improve our livelihood if we don’t go back to agriculture- the backbone
of our economy?”
Kerenga said while the people were being
encouraged to produce more food crops, there were inadequate markets available.
He
said this was one of the constraints faced by the farmers and urged DAL to do
something. SSSEP project coordinator Dr
Sam Lahis thanked the Governor for the counterpart funding, which is a
commitment towards supporting the SSSEP in the province.
He
also acknowledged the New Zealand Government through the NZ Agency for
International Development (NZAid) for providing grant funding worth over K3.7
million in support of the SSSEP in PNG.
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