NIGERIA’S economy, which is going through a turbulent period from
reduction in oil income, is set to further unravel. Why? The European
Union has just suspended some agricultural food exports from Nigeria.
The food items banned from Europe till June 2016 are beans, sesame
seeds, melon seeds, dried fish and meat, peanut chips and palm oil. This
is a setback for a nation that desperately needs to expand its export
basket to boost domestic agricultural activities and create jobs.
According to the European Food Safety Authority, the rejected beans were
found to contain between 0.03mg per kilogramme to 4.6mg/kg of
dichlorvos pesticide, when the acceptable maximum residue limit is
0.01mg/kg. The embargo is a reflection of our inability to adhere to
global standards, and this has come to haunt us at the international
level again. Overturning the ban requires a firm approach to enforcing
standards at all times.
But the ban is not a bolt from the blue. For some time, the EU has been
warning Nigeria that the items constitute danger to human health because
they “contain a high level of unauthorised pesticide.” The pesticide is
applied when the products are being prepared for export. The EU said it
had issued 50 notifications to Nigerian beans exporters since January
2013. It is baffling that the Nigerian authorities didn’t take any
significant steps to reverse the situation. Likewise, the United Kingdom
also issued 13 border rejection alerts to Nigerian beans exporters
between January and June 2015. Our lax system will continue to hamper
the economy from appropriating the benefits derivable from a revived
export programme.
It confounds many that this problem has been with us for some time and
nothing strategic has been done to deal with the situation. In 2013 for
instance, 24 commodities of Nigerian origin exported to the UK were
rejected, while the figure climbed to 42 food products in 2014. Some of
the items were said to have been contaminated by aflatoxins, making them
unfit for consumption.
The excuse by Paul Orhii, the Director-General, National Agency for Food
and Drug Administration and Control that exporters caused the problem
by not complying with regulatory requirements for semi-processed and
processed commodities is untenable. NAFDAC has not conducted its
regulatory oversight properly and needs to put stringent measures in
place to monitor our products and guarantee them as safe for export
before the next EU review in 2016. The Ministry of Agriculture did not
pay sufficient attention to the problem either.
The ban on Nigerian foods provokes some questions. First, how do we
preserve the foods that we eat locally? Second, how safe are the foods
we import into the country? With our predilection for manipulating the
system, Nigerian consumers might be susceptible to poisonous food
imported from overseas. Take for example, the imported semi-processed
poultry products and meat: several studies conducted by researchers and
public agencies in markets in Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt are
revealing. A study by Okiomah Abu, a nutritional enzymologist, says
“poultry products imported into the country contain toxic and heavy
metals that can worsen the occurrence of food-borne diseases” because of
the combination of feeds the animals eat. Ayoola Oduntan, the President
of the Poultry Association of Nigeria, said, “It has been discovered
that smuggled poultry products contain (a) high level of bacteria. Also,
toxic chemicals and solvents are used in preserving them so that their
owners can get them into the country to be sold at prices cheaper than
we (PAN members) are selling.”
We should be wary. In March 2014, Akinwunmi Adesina, the then Minister
of Agriculture, had to personally order the destruction of a large
consignment of contaminated imported frozen fish stored in a warehouse
operated by Indians in Lagos. In a 2015 report, the World Health
Organisation said, “Food contaminants, such as harmful parasites,
bacteria, viruses, prions, chemical or radioactive substances, cause
more than 200 diseases – ranging from infectious diseases to cancers.”
The global health body added that unsafe food is linked to the death of
about 2 million people annually.
However, a report in this newspaper said the Nigerian Customs Service
had recently started enforcing the ban on imported poultry products,
which are massively smuggled into the country. But government at the
three tiers should also make policies to boost poultry and fish farming
in the country to meet local demand and for export.
As a way forward, we could follow the standard practice in other climes
like India, the UK, China and the United States, which operate effective
food safety and regulatory agencies that monitor products stringently.
US authorities are still battling China, South Korea, Mexico and South
Africa to review a ban placed on American poultry and egg imports over
the avian flu scare that broke out in December 2014. Last month, the
Food Safety and Standards Authority of India ordered Nestlé, the Swiss
multinational, to withdraw its instant noodles from the market over
safety concerns.
The Ministry of Health, NAFDAC, the Standards Organisation of Nigeria
and the newly inaugurated National Food Safety Management Committee
should see the EU ban as a wake-up call to sanitise food imported into
Nigeria, and those being consumed at home.
The EU action suggests that our unfavourable balance of trade position
with our international partners will worsen as we cannot export more
agricultural goods. The first quarter figures (2015) released by the
National Bureau of Statistics showed that crude oil and gas accounted
for 89.2 per cent of our total export of N3.23 trillion with other
exports constituting only 10.8 per cent. The nation imported goods and
services worth N1.64 trillion within the same period. We should reverse
this dependency on imports and harness our natural resources to become
self-reliant in food production.
http://www.nigerianeye.com/2015/07/european-union-suspends-agricultural.html