Audio By Carbonatix
The Minister of Food and Agriculture, Dr. Owusu Afriyie Akoto, on Monday, October 31, resumed his working tour of the regions as he turns his attention to the Western, Western North, Central, Volta, and Oti regions.
The second leg of the working tour comes on the heels of similar successful ones undertaken early this year to other regions in the country.
The visit will largely afford the minister the chance to interact with farmers, input dealers, and directors, amongst others.
His first port of call was the Western North Region where Dr. Afriyie Akoto allayed the fears of poultry farmers, stressing that the government was poised to combat the bird flu outbreaks.

According to him, the disease affected farmers in regions including Western, Western North, Central, Volta and Oti regions.
He disclosed that a total of 280 farms have so far been affected by the Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) with 997,743 birds destroyed.
He also stated that the government had paid over GHȼ15 million as compensation to affected poultry farmers.
To control the disease, Dr. Afriyie Akoto said the government had approved an amount of about GHȼ44 million out of which GHȼ20 million had already been released.
He further noted that an approval has also been given to recruit 1,100 veterinary officers, stating that out of the 1,100 officers, 550 have been recruited and posted.
He said the remaining 550 were yet to be recruited and posted within a period of two years.

In this vein, the Minister advised farmers against accepting birds or eggs from other farms onto their farms.
He also admonished the poultry farmers to ensure thorough washing with soap and water immediately after handling birds, urging them to confine their birds from other birds.
He called on the farmers to regularly wash poultry equipment and bury or burn dead birds and keep waste away from the farm house.
For his part, the Director of Veterinary Services Directorate (VSD) at the Ministry of Food and Agriculture, Dr. Patrick Abakeh, cautioned that compensations for bird flu-infested farms will not be paid to farmers who fail to register with the VSD.
He, therefore, called on the farmers to register their farms with the VSD, explaining that it will give the authorities the knowledge of the number of farmers and quantity of birds affected.
Additionally, he asked the farmers to acquire certification from the VSD to qualify them for compensation following the bird flu outbreaks.
Latest Stories
-
Police arrest 3 suspects over taxi-based phone snatching syndicate
51 minutes -
He should ask himself why he entered politics – Nitiwul responds to Frimpong-Boateng
1 hour -
A construction crane falls on a passenger train in northeastern Thailand, killing at least 22 people
2 hours -
All systems go: A quantum leap for Africa’s farmers and the world
2 hours -
World central bank chiefs ‘stand in solidarity’ with US Fed chair Powell
2 hours -
US approves sale of Nvidia’s advanced AI chips to China
2 hours -
Bawumia focused on delegates, not rivals – Dominic Nitiwul
2 hours -
We should never lose in 2028 – Nitiwul frames 2028 as a must-win election for NPP
3 hours -
We have no time to market anyone else – Nitiwul says NPP’s 2028 ticket is already Bawumia’s
3 hours -
Losing 2028 elections would be catastrophic – Nitiwul warns NPP against first-timer gamble
4 hours -
Actor Kiefer Sutherland arrested over alleged assault of ride-share driver
4 hours -
MTN deploys AI to detect and block fraudulent Mobile Money messages
4 hours -
Claudette Colvin, US civil rights pioneer, dies at 86
7 hours -
Bawumia has no threat – Nitiwul says campaign is not about running others down
8 hours -
Rosenior to talk to Sterling and Disasi about Chelsea exile
8 hours
