AgricultureNews

IITA Emphasizes Mentorship and Training for Women in Nigerian Agriculture

WATEA Project Aims to Empower Women and Transform the Agricultural Sector

Dr Kenton Dashiell, Deputy Director-General, International Institute for Tropical Agriculture (IITA), on Monday, said that women need the right mentorship and training to succeed in agriculture in Nigeria.

Dashiell stated this in Ibadan at a stakeholders’ workshop for Women in Agricultural Technical Education and Apprenticeship (WATEA) in Nigeria.

The workshop was organized by IITA and the French Embassy in Nigeria.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that WATEA is designed to empower 3,000 women in agriculture through education and apprenticeship in six states.

The six states are Kwara, Enugu, Jigawa, Kano, Anambra and Oyo.

According to him, the challenges women face to be successful in agriculture can be overcome through the right training, information, and mentorship.

“Many of them have not been exposed to the real potential in agriculture and are discouraged from venturing into agriculture, believing there is no money in it.

“There is a lot of money in agriculture,” he said.

 

Also, the French Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr Marc Fonbaustier, said agriculture has great potential in Nigeria.

 

According to him, the French authority prioritizes women and young people in agriculture.

Fonbaustier said the agricultural potential in Nigeria, if properly annexed, could be a great benefit to present and future generations, while also reducing unemployment.

 

“This project aims to promote inclusiveness and strengthen government and private partnerships for the development of agriculture in Nigeria,” he said.

The Regional Counsellor for Agriculture, France Embassy, Dr Sonia Darracq, said the demand for qualified agrifood technicians was significant and increasingly presenting an opportunity for young women to access gainful employment or self-employment.

Darracq said WATEA would help to address unemployment and rejuvenate the aging agricultural population by enhancing the employability of young people.

The Jigawa Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development, Mrs. Adisat AbdulWahab, says the state prioritizes agriculture and provides special attention to women’s issues.

Abdul-Wahab called on the sponsors of the WATEA project not to limit their intention to technical schools but to expand it to women at the grassroots.

“Women at the grassroots need intervention of this nature because the way I am seeing, it is like the intervention is limited to technical schools,” she said.

Also, Kwara Commissioner for Agriculture and Rural Development, Mrs Oloruntoyosi Thomas, said the WATEA project was needed to truly transform the country’s agricultural sector.

Thomas said women, not only needed the training to develop their agricultural skills, but to also transform them into agribusiness persons through value addition and sustainability.

NAN reports that the Commissioners for Women Affairs in Enugu, Anambra, Kano, and Oyo States and other participants also spoke at the event. NAN.

Oluwatobiloba Adekunle

Oluwatobiloba is a dynamic mass communication student, poised to become the voice of the masses. As an aspiring journalist, he serves as the eyes and ears of society.

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