Audio By Carbonatix
The Ministry of Food and Agriculture has dismissed claims that Ghana imported raw cassava from China in 2019.
This follows claims by the Member of Parliament (MP) for Asunafo South, Eric Opoku, that Ghana imported cassava from China in 2019.
According to a statement issued by the Ministry, the claim by the MP is not true, and as such, he failed to quote the source which forms the basis of his arguments.
“The Ministry wishes to state emphatically that the claim by our MP is not true. First, Eric Opoku failed to quote the source which forms the basis of his claims. Secondly, to openly deceive the people of Ghana, he gave the clear impression that the ‘cassava imports’ he referred to was freshly harvested raw cassava crop”.
The press release also provided data stating “empirical data from various sources, including the Ghana Statistical Service, the Ghana Revenue Authority, among other organisations, specifically refer it to be processed industrial cassava, such as starch, gari, cassava flour, tapioca, and others.”
“In fact, Ghana is a net exporter of cassava products. The value of exports of processed cassava in 2019 was of ₵13.7 million compared to ₵ 2.5 million of imports. In the same vein, in 2020, processed cassava export was GH ₵ 10.8 million compared to ₵1.5 million of import. Total production of cassava in Ghana in 2019 was 19.4 million metric tonnes”, it said.
It further pointed out that the Plant Protection and Regulatory Services Directorates of the Ministry of Food and Agriculture, which is the agency responsible for issuing permit for importation of agriculture produce, did not issue any permit for the importation of cassava into Ghana.
The statement indicated that Eric Opoku’s comment is an effort to disrepute government’s flagship programme, Planting for Food and Jobs.
“The Member of Parliament, in his attempts to discredit this government’s desirable record in agriculture, failed to avert his mind to the fact that some of the derivatives from cassava used for other purposes, including manufacturing of drugs, textiles, amongst others, are not manufactured locally and therefore must be imported. Is this what Eric Opoku termed as importation? Then we can as well say that Ghana imports cocoa because there are several cocoa products that are imported into the country,” it added.
It concluded that the country has since the rollout of the flagship, Planting for Food and Jobs programme in 2017, been touted as the breadbasket of West Africa.
Latest Stories
-
Mahama launches $300m World Bank-funded secondary school improvement programme
18 seconds -
Nato chief welcomes US sending 5,000 troops to Poland
3 minutes -
NIA pushes mandatory biometric verification as digital identity reforms expand
8 minutes -
Dress properly for visa interviews; it can influence approval – Ghana’s Ambassador to US urges
16 minutes -
Mahama unveils plans for second phase of ‘Big Push’ road programme for 2027
18 minutes -
President Mahama assures Savannah Region of imminent electrification works
20 minutes -
National Service Authority open to strategic partnerships – Ruth Dela Seddoh
22 minutes -
Mahama pledges to end double-track system by 2027 through expansion of technical and vocational education
23 minutes -
Delta Air Lines marks 20 years in Ghana, poised to offer travel options amid World Cup travel boom
27 minutes -
Turkish opposition fights court ousting of leaders in ruling boosting Erdoğan
32 minutes -
Australian man dies after falling down ravine on hike to Machu Picchu
33 minutes -
Ghanaian pilgrim dies during Tawaf ritual in Mecca
34 minutes -
Stakeholder dialogue in Tamale push for expanded agroforestry to tackle climate change and land degradation
36 minutes -
She refused to increase her sachet water price – and it changed her life forever
43 minutes -
Damang Mine concession should not be politicised — Mahama Ayariga
44 minutes