Audio By Carbonatix
The board chair of AGRA and former Ethiopian Prime Minister says African governments must prioritise the creation of an enabling regulatory environment that supports youth participation in agricultural entrepreneurship.
Hailemariam Dessalegn said steps must be taken to safeguard the rights of young farmers and facilitate land registration so they can appropriately venture into agricultural production.
Speaking at a session themed “Connection to Territories: Youth and Land Rights” at the ongoing United Nations Climate Change Conference of Parties (COP28) in Dubai, he called for increased investments in the youth of Africa.
“We need to accelerate access to youth land rights, create decent jobs, foster entrepreneurship, and establish sustainable production systems in Africa.
"This is not just a matter of ownership; it is an investment in the potential of an entire generation, a catalyst for economic growth, and a testament to our commitment to building a prosperous Africa for all,” he said.
He announced that AGRA will work with the African Union Commission and Regional Economic Communities on the harmonisation and adoption of the frameworks, and strengthening of the youth and women protocols to ensure they are progressive and inclusive to youth needs.
“We are committing to supporting continental policies and frameworks as well as mandated institutions continental.
"Policy reforms are paramount and we must advocate for and implement policies that prioritize and protect youth land rights, ensuring equitable access and ownership,” he said.
The session brought together several stakeholders at the COP to deliberate on the connection between youth, land rights, and territories.
Mr Dessalegn said it is no secret that the journey for African youth towards securing land rights and meaningful employment is filled with a complex array of obstacles.
They include inequitable land tenure practices that disproportionally favour elders, men, and elites, systematically excluding and marginalizing the youth, particularly young women.
“The absence of robust land rental and sales markets limits opportunities for youth engagement in both formal and informal land transactions,” he said.
“We are committing to supporting continental policies and frameworks as well as mandated institutions continental.
"Policy reforms are paramount and we must advocate for and implement policies that prioritize and protect youth land rights, ensuring equitable access and ownership,” the former Ethiopian Prime Minister added.
Latest Stories
-
Majority caucus says BoG’s rising losses are cost of stabilisation, not collapse
23 minutes -
Analysis: How GOLDBOD’s “beautiful” 2025 financials created a GH¢9bn hole at the Bank of Ghana
32 minutes -
The numbers speak for themselves – Majority caucus fires back at Minority over BoG loss
36 minutes -
South Africa: The boys who gave the world a party, and went home early
41 minutes -
BoG gold sale row deepens as Majority caucus rejects Minority’s ‘policy insolvency’ charge
58 minutes -
US criticises Zambia for lack of engagement as $1 billion health deal stalls
1 hour -
Meta faces US lawmaker scrutiny over removal of lawyer ads for social media addiction cases
1 hour -
As summer opens, action movies have lost some box-office punch
2 hours -
Pope marks World Press Freedom Day, laments violations and honours slain reporters
2 hours -
Top US diplomat Rubio to meet with Pope Leo on Thursday, source says
2 hours -
Spirit Airlines shutting down after rescue talks collapse
2 hours -
BBC uncovers the Ugandan scammers abusing dogs to elicit donations from animal lovers
2 hours -
GameStop makes $55.5bn takeover offer for eBay
2 hours -
Trump says US to ‘guide’ stranded ships through Strait of Hormuz
2 hours -
Amsterdam bans public adverts for meat and fossil fuels
3 hours