By Vision reporter
President Yoweri Museveni has called on the
youth from Acholi sub-region to fight land fragmentation and instead use it
more productively through modern agriculture to create jobs and improve
incomes.
“I have been decampaigning breaking up of
land. Land is not just for sleeping, land should be for work. We divide what
comes from the land but not divide the land itself,” he said.
Museveni was addressing over 250 youth
leaders from Acholi sub-region’s districts of Kitgum, Lamwo, Amuru, Pader,
Agago, Gulu and Nwoya who had just concluded a study tour of models farms in
Masaka and Mbarara districts.
The youth visited St. Jude family projects
and rural training for intensive integrated organic farming for sustainable
agriculture facility in Masaka owned by model farmer Kiiza.
They also were at another modern integrated
farm owned by Rev. James Katamunanwire of Mbarara that specializes in
brick-making, dairy cow production and banana production on small pieces of
land.
“Modern agriculture is the key to everything
else. That is want I want to see. The more sustainable way to solve some of the
youth demands is to teach them modern agriculture so that they can earn incomes
and solve some of the problems themselves,” he said.
The youth who had come with a list of demands
for motorcycles, scholarships, money for SACCOs, jobs, oxen and ox-ploughs,
among others however changed their minds after the tours and urged the
president to empower them with start-up capital.
Led by their coordinator Alema Joyce,
the youth spoke one after the other, and collectively saying they want to use
the knowledge they have acquired to exploit their land back home.
Some of the issues that they identified as
important included enterprise section and mix on small land pieces, water
collection methods to mitigate drought seasons, value addition using solar
methods and milk production using heifers.
Museveni said that government will restock
the Aswa ranch and Waligo centre to use them as multiplication centres for
cattle that can also be given in turns to other youth for agriculture.
“If we solve the question of household
incomes, the rest will be easy.”
“The model farmers who have engaged in modern
agriculture and built permanent houses have solved the problem of water
themselves without waiting for government,” he said.
“Even when government builds a borehole, it
will be in the centre of the whole community and people still have to walk from
their homes to get it.”
The President said initially his office
had facilitated a few youth leaders with iron sheets and cement because of the
problems of the war that had affected the region.
Government will find a more sustainable way
of supporting the youth including training them in various modern production
projects, he promised.
The meeting which was held at the President’s
country home in Rwakitura was attended by the Prime Minister, Rt. Hon. Amama
Mbabazi.
Original article here
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