Shortage of fertilizer in the Sissala area is adversely affecting farmers who are struggling to access it leaving large fields of maize turning yellowish in colour a few weeks after planting.
Some of the farmers told the media in an interview during a visit to their farms in the Sissala East Municipality and the Sissala West District that the non-availability of the input had forced them to reduce their farm size.
Batong Iddrisu, a 65-year-old farmer from Kupulima in the Sissala West District said the situation had compelled him to reduce his maize farm size from 15 acres to five acres, which he said, would affect his income for the coming years.
Madam Issifu Damata, another farmer at Tumu, said she feared abandoning her 42-acre maize field, which she had already ploughed.
“I only applied fertilizer on seven acres with the rest changing colour whilst others are dying off. I have to stay in a queue for several hours just to only get a small quantity”, Madam Damata explained.
She wants the government to urgently intervene to save the situation as the money already spent on the seeds, ploughing and sowing cannot be recovered.
Madam Lariba Fuseini, a mother of four from Gbarima who cultivated maize to take care of her children, said the “current acute shortage made me reduce my five acres to just two acres and I don’t know what this year will be for me”.
Mr Yussif Osman, a member of the Sissala West District Assembly, said the Sissala area would lose a lot if nothing was done to salvage the situation.
He appealed to the government to take steps to bring fertilizer to the area immediately and added that the government should also introduce the warehousing system in the distribution of fertilizer under the Planting for Food and Jobs (PFJ) programme as the current system promoted diversion of fertilizer.
The GNA had observed that some of the 10 PFJ input dealers in the area had their shops closed from Tuesday, July 6, to Saturday, July 10, 2021.
“It is difficult in getting the commodity to have resorted to getting some from the open market, which we don’t even get, you have to pay for your order through a middleman which also gets locked up sometimes, it’s really disturbing”, Mr Issifu Sule of Season Plus has said.
The situation is forcing farmers to queue in the sun to buy the few that come beyond the subsidized price of ¢96 to ¢135 or more.
Meanwhile, the assigned fertilizer dealers in the Sissala West District were last week summoned by the paramount chief of Gwollu Traditional Area, Kuoro Buktie Liman over reports of unavailability of fertilizer to farmers.
The dealers of the government-subsidized fertilizer were difficult to get from their parent suppliers in Accra.
On smuggling, the agents said, “other people from different regions of Ghana were using the Sissala border towns to smuggle the commodity into Burkina Faso.”
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