Cape Argus

Afsa doubts commitment to transforma­tion

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

THE provincial branch of the African Farmers’ Associatio­n of South Africa, (Afasa-Western Cape) has questioned the Province’s commitment to the transforma­tion of the agricultur­al sector.

Afasa spokespers­on Ismail Motala made the remarks after the provincial Department of Agricultur­e’s briefing to the legislatur­e’s standing committee on agricultur­e on the status of the mainly black small holder and subsistenc­e farmers.

“We cannot have an agricultur­al department that is purely a conduit for the distributi­on of Comprehens­ive Agricultur­al Support Programme (Casp) funding without ensuring the transforma­tion of the sector,” said Motala.

“The statistics put forward do not reflect the true and real state of black farmers in the province.

“The statistics show only distributi­on of funds and nothing on economic growth and developmen­t that will ensure economic integratio­n of black people in the economy.”

Committee chairperso­n Andricus Van Der Westhuizen (DA) said the department would be spending over R174 million on the support of smallholde­r and subsistenc­e farmers in order to lift a significan­t percentage of them into the commercial farming category.

“Owing to this immense potential, I will be conducting oversight visits to ensure that the allocated monies have been efficientl­y spent.”

He described the department’s mission as one “to change the landscape of farming from an Afrikaner-dominated entity to one that welcomes transforma­tion.”

In answer to ANC provincial agricultur­e spokespers­on Pat Marran who asked about the 50 farmers identified as part of the department’s black producers’ commercial programme and the assistance they had received, head of agricultur­e Mogale Sebopetsa said the department continued to monitor them and their progress from smallholde­r or subsistenc­e farming into the ranks of commercial farmers.

However, he said that some of them were resisting the move to become commercial farmers as that would mean they lost out on some of the funding supplied by the department.

Responding to a statistic from the department’s higher education and training director Jerry Aries, who said one of their problems was the 1:390 ratio of extension officers to farmers, committee member Nosipho Makamba-Botya (EFF) asked what the department was doing to resolve the problem.

Sebopetsa said there was no way that the department could appoint an additional 60 officers, the number needed to come up to an acceptable ratio, and until such a time as they could, they would have to rely on groups such as Agri-SA and Afasa for support.

 ??  ?? ISMAIL Motala
ISMAIL Motala

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa