Anti-Ruto team to meet Uhuru for farmers’ “salvation” before Ruto comes back

Will maize farmers manage to beat the proposed Ksh 2300 maize price per 90kg bag? The government’s proposed price looks like an insult to farmers, and as a result, a high-powered delegation made up of farmers, professionals, a section of politicians and businessmen from Rift Valley have lined up a meeting with President Uhuru Kenyatta to appeal for a maize price review.

According to one of the local dailies, the delegation is carrying with them a formal proposal that the government should transfer Sh1000 from the fertiliser subsidy programme to be used in topping up the maize price.

If the President will accept the proposal, a 90 kg bag of maize would go for Sh3,200 which the farmers are agitating for.

It is understood that the team has been pushing for the appointment with the president before the DP returns from Italy.

The meeting comes despite Agriculture CAS Andrew Tuimur told maize farmers to forget any possibility of price changes.

Speaking when he appeared before the National Assembly’s Agriculture committee, Tuimur said the Sh2,300 price was arrived at by the Strategic Grain Reserves Board and ratified by the Cabinet.

Agriculture CAS Andrew Tuimur when he appeared before the Agriculture committee yesterday /JACK OWUOR

“My hands are tied. We cannot change the prices now,” Tuimur told the committee chaired by Mandera South MP Adan Haji.

Two weeks ago the Cabinet approved the purchase of maize for Sh2,300 per 90kg bag in a meeting chaired by Uhuru Kenyatta and attended by Deputy President William Ruto.

The DP has been advocating for diversification of crop production while MPs Alfred Keter, Joshua Kuttuny and Silas Tiren have been pushing for a higher pay for farmers.

Yesterday in Parliament, MPs and Tuimur locked horns over how the government arrived at the Sh2,300 price.

Image result for maize scandal memes

Tuimur insisted the price was fair and was arrived at after analysing all the parameters.

The CAS told the committee that the Strategic Grain Reserves Board considered the prevailing market.

“The average cost of production was established as Sh1,539 per 90 kg bag. The cost considered seeds, fertilizer, land lease (where applicable), pesticides, fungicides, herbicides, machinery, labour, transport, working capital among other factors. The price would compensate farmers adequately,” he told the committee.

He added: “The price was adjusted upwards to Sh2,124 by factoring all the factors of production”.

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