MAPUTO, July 23 (Xinhua) -- Mozambican President Armando Guebuza has
declared that the success of the green revolution in Mozambique lies in the
hands of the family sector, not of big projects such as Mozagrius.
Guebuza was speaking on his arrival in the town of Mecanhelas, on the first
day of a working visit to the northern province of Niassa, AIM reported on
Tuesday.
Mozagrius was a grandiose scheme in the mid-1990s, whereby South African
farmers were to be attracted to Niassa, where their mechanized agriculture would
boost production. But although some of the South African media compared the
scheme to a second "great trek", in fact only a dozen or so South Africans came
to Niassa, and most left within a few years. The money was never forthcoming and
the scheme collapsed.
Guebuza said that the government intends to increase the number of rural
extensionists and provide them with conditions to assist the family producers
with no major problems.
Agriculture Minister Soares Nhaca, who is accompanying Guebuza, said that
the government is planning to recruit 185 extensionists this year to add to the
577 who are already working across the country.
According to Guebuza, large scale projects may not respond to the goals of
the green revolution because their primary objective is to make a profit.
However, Guebuza acknowledged the role played by commercial farmers in
increasing production and productivity, reiterating that the family sector is
the key to success in food self-sufficiency.
He said that in parallel with strengthening the family sector, it is
necessary to improve access roads to ensure easy circulation of people and
goods, given the great farming potential of Niassa, the largest but most
sparsely populated province in the country.
Addressing a rally in Mecanhelas, Guebuza urged the residents to take
advantage of the district's potential, notably in rice, to increase production
and help the country stop importing what it has the capacity to produce and even
export.
On Monday, Guebuza also took part in an extraordinary session of the Niassa
provincial government, where he praised the fact that the province has recorded
a 12 percent economic growth during the last two years.