Making agriculture a
central part of international development
By Odimegwu Onwumere
Being good is a huge investment in any individual’s life; it does not fail.
It is very important especially in the present times that majority of the
people can no longer differentiate between what they want and what they need.
Dr. Kanayo Francis Nwanze has earlier defined his. His feat at the UN's
Rome-based International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) continues to
tell the light-featherweight individuals that there is no obstacle anywhere,
except that which a person has refused to surmount.
On Wednesday 13 February 2013, he was re-appointed to a four-year term as
president of the IFAD, having begun his term as IFAD’s fifth President on 1
April 2009. His appointment and re-appointment show that patience is a very
vital tool for living in the world.
Working in this organisation that was created 30 years ago to undertake
rural poverty which is regarded as the arrowhead of the droughts and famines of
the early 1970s, Nwanze has brought transformation in the IFAD by holding
stoical to the agenda of reformation. So they say, for-the-duration-of his ten
years as Director-General of the Africa Rice Centre (WARDA), he transformed the
centre from a provincially attentive institution into a worldwide acknowledged
research institution. How else a person does prove accomplished in his or her
career?
Nwanze is part of the success story of the IFAD today, which has invested
more than US$10.6 billion in low-interest finances and funding that have
fostered roughly-speaking, over 350 million very poor rural women and men
augment their incomes and afford for their families since 1978.
The history of IFAD will never be complete if Nwanze is not mentioned due
to the pride he has brought into the union that supports close to 250
programmes and projects in 87 developing countries, and is a global partnership
of OECD, OPEC and other developing countries. The Delta State born-Nigerian
Nwanze has given his word in making sure that IFAD sustained to serve that
which it was formed.
Nwanze made this hope available in a speech where he said that he would
endeavour to spawn vivacious pastoral areas that could ensure what he regarded
as, a dynamic flow of economic benefits between rural and urban areas.
Nwanze-led IFAD is vibrant today amongst the three United Nations food
agencies in Rome along with the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the
World Food Programme (WFP).
Many regard Nwanze as a driving force in the accomplishment of key reforms
begun by the out gone IFAD head, Lennart Båge. The former did not achieve this
on a platter of gold, but through his philosophy of consolidation and deepening
change and reform process in IFAD.
At the 36th Governing Council, Nwanze told a gathering of
representatives from IFAD Member States that: Vibrant rural areas can ensure a
dynamic flow of economic benefits between rural and urban areas so that nations
have balanced and sustained development.
Joining the rest of the world’s organisations to set out the world's
post-2015 development agenda, Nwanze apparently said: "Structured reforms
have transformed IFAD into a more agile, efficient agency, better able to
respond to a rapidly changing environment.... This has been crucial to
improving IFAD's effectiveness at a time when new challenges are constantly
reshaping the physical and geo-political landscape where we work."
Dr. Kanayo Francis Nwanze is doing everything humanly possible to help in
creating food security and sends poverty on errand in the world, no matter the
fears in many quarters that the world is drastically changing, which is causing
tremendous financial imbalance in the world, therefore creating the opportunity
for the rich and the poor to trample on the weak.
Nwanze would say: "To put it simply, more partnership means more
impact... IFAD is determined to work with its partners to make the most of
agriculture's poverty-fighting powers.... Experience shows that development is
most effective when it is self-driven.... How we respond to today's challenges
will determine not only the shape of food systems in the near future, but also
the health of ecosystems and the distribution of the world's population.”
What about the IFAD’s innovative Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture
Programme? Nwanze has been of the view that both the urban and rural areas are
fast adapting to the changes of the changing world in which his organisation is
playing a very optimistic role in making sure that it is well for all and
sundry, but underlined the importance to fashion opportunities for young people
whom he sees as, without prospects, have nothing to lose and are more easily
swayed by extreme rhetoric.
Nwanze has shared love for women also. He sees them as a folk that have
eaten ashes for bread and tears for tea in the rural areas, where they work
tirelessly to improve the living standard of the society. Pointblank, he
hammered sent his point home that the world and the rural dwellers might not
enjoy the improved-world being clamoured for, except women are recognised and
empowered in no-less way, because by not doing that, Nwanze believes that half
of humanity is denied.
The highest decision making body of IFAD – Governing Council – would have
made a mistake if they had had oversight in not seeing the qualities that
Nwanze is made of and appoint him to continue a second term in office of four
years, to lead the rural poverty agency. This is an organisation that in 2009
had 25 country offices but by the end of 2012, has had 38. Bravo!
The world should therefore support this man whose brain has sparked many
positive debates around the world. Dr. Nwanze needs the support of the world in
making sure that he realised his plans in resilience-building for improved food
security in the world. The world should help in straightening and strengthening
him in this onerous task for the good of the societies, especially those in the
developing world. In the tribe where Nwanze comes from in Nigeria, proverbially
speaking, a man is not expected to kill lion the second time before he is
called a lion killer.
Commentators have spoken of Nwanze thus: 1 "A Nigerian national,
Nwanze has a strong record as an advocate and leader with a keen understanding
of complex development issues. He brings to the job over 35 years of experience
across three continents, focusing on poverty reduction through agriculture,
rural development and research."
2 "Under Nwanze’s guidance, IFAD has stepped up its advocacy efforts
to ensure that agriculture is a central part of the international development
agenda, and that governments recognize the concerns of smallholder farmers and
other poor rural people. As an intellectual leader on issues of food security,
Nwanze has been a member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on
Food Security since 2010, and formerly chaired the group."
Nwanze needs the support of all, as he burgeons on with the duty of his
office, by bringing a more holistic approach that goes-above his intellect. As
they say, Nwanze earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Agricultural Science
from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria, in 1971, and a Doctorate in
Agricultural Entomology from Kansas State University, United States, in 1975,
amongst others.
Odimegwu Onwumere, Poet/Author,
contributed this piece from Rivers State.
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