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Gov’t, UNDP sign agreement to boost food production in rural areas

Mohammed Abchir, UNDP Resident Representative (L), Josephine Lagu, Minister of Agriculture and Food Security (C) and Mathew Udo, Undersecretary in the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security (R) display the agreement on Thursday in Juba.

By Simon Deng

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) together with the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security signed on Thursday an agreement to help boost food production in rural areas across the country.

Mohammed Abchir, the UNDP Resident Representative in South Sudan, said that the six-year Rural Enterprises for Agricultural Development initiative to be funded to the tune of 17 million U.S. dollars is an initiative that signals collective achievement and better outcomes in food production.

“This is an excellent partnership, if we achieve our results, we will forget about the pain. What we will remember is the smile on the face of those people who are going to benefit from this initiative,” Abchir said during the signing ceremony in Juba.

Abchir said the project targets approximately 27,511 individuals in 162,315 rural households across the country.  

 “We are all committed to join hands and make sure the implementation starts quickly, UNDP is committed and of course, we will continue as much as possible to advocate and see maybe how additional resources will come in,” he disclosed.

Josephine Lagu, the Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, said the implementation of the Rural Enterprises for Agricultural Development initiative will benefit other ongoing agriculture development projects in the country.

“This project is going to enable our rural producers, those engaged in crop production, livestock, poultry, fisheries, and those engaged in various other trades across the country to have the opportunity for their capacity to be built so that they can do whatever they are engaging in better,” Lagu said.

She added that the project will also ease access to finances for rural agriculture producers to increase production.

“Our people are consuming foodstuff coming from neighboring countries, but we have resources to start producing so that we can feed ourselves so that our people can earn decent wages and have decent livelihoods for themselves and their families,” Lagu said.

Mathew Udo, the Undersecretary in the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, said the project will play a critical in the development of agriculture across the country.

The Rural Enterprises for Agricultural Development initiative to be implemented in six states including Northern Bahr El Ghazel, Western Equatoria, Central Equatoria, Eastern Equatoria, Upper Nile, and Jonglei state, is aimed at improving food security, income, and resilience among the targeted rural households, and also seeks to empower rural producer organizations to become sustainable and resilient value chain players.

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