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Private cotton merchants fail to provide inputs

18 Jan, 2019 - 00:01 0 Views
Private cotton  merchants fail  to provide inputs

eBusiness Weekly

Tawanda Mangoma
Cotton merchants are reportedly failing to provide farmers with replanting seed, fertilisers, pesticides and herbicides after a dry spell that swept across the country in late December and early January destroyed the crop, Business Weekly can reveal.

Cotton Company of Zimbabwe (Cottco) southern region manager Munyaradzi Chikasha revealed this while handing over a tractor, trailer and plough to the country’s best cotton farmer for 2018 in Chiredzi recently.

He said due to the unreliability of rains, most planted cotton failed to germinate, forcing farmers to replant in most parts of the country.

“Farmers recorded poor germination percentages this season due to rainfall unreliability. We are allocating our farmers seed to replant, but the challenge is some cotton merchants who had contracted farmers in the Lowveld have abandoned them,” he said.

Responsibility to replant now saddled on Cotttco

Chikasha said the problem now is that the burden has since fallen on them and they were having to accommodate the abandoned farmers.

“We have farmers who are coming to us saying company A and B only gave us seed,” he said.

“They promised to bring fertiliser and insecticides, but they never came back. A farmer must be allocated adequate inputs to curb the spread of diseases and pests. If this company fails to support its farmer, and fall army-worm attacks the field, it will spread across the whole area just because a farmer was neglected by his preferred company.”

Chiredzi West legislator Farai Musikavanhu, said cotton merchants should honour their promises to minimise side marketing during the buying period.

“Problems of side marketing can only be addressed if all companies that are interested in supporting cotton farmers fulfil all their promises,” he said.

“Farmers must be issued with all inputs which would guarantee a bumper harvest for the nation.

“Cheating the farmer will not give us the best results, the problems of side marketing will be solved by looking after our farmers. We want more cotton and that cannot be produced by under supporting farmers. We must give them adequate assistance to improve our national yield.”

Southern Cotton and Zimbabwe Cotton Consortium this year registered to support farmers in the Lowveld.

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