Mr Wonder Chabikwa, The Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers Union President in pictures.
The Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers' Union is a registered farmers' union. it was started on the initiative of large scale indigenous commercial farmers who entered the business of commercial farming after independence.
Monday, 3 June 2013
tobacco cheating unearthed
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| Mr. Wonder Chabikwa. ZCFU president |
ZBC News visited Boka Tobacco Auction Floors where hundreds of bales have been rejected after bricks, stones, and metal bars were discovered in them.
The foreign matter would be covered by quality tobacco.
The president of the Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers Union, Mr Wonder Chabikwa warned farmers against such acts saying it is criminal and amounts to fraud.
Chabikwa said such dishonesty compromises the confidence that the international market has on the local tobacco crop.
According to ZBC news, one farmer whose crop had been withdrawn from the sales refuted the allegations, but instead accused the TIMB officials of swindling the farmers through the rejection process.
According to the TIMB regulations, any farmer who is caught cheating is fined $20 before he is allowed to regrade his crop for resale. source: ZBC
Draft agric policy announced
The Ministry of Agriculture, Mechanisation and Irrigation Development
has come up with a draft agriculture policy to improve the overall
competitiveness of the sector, Minister Joseph Made has said.
In a speech read on his behalf by the Principal Director, Livestock and Veterinary Services, Dr Unesu Obatolu Ushewokunze, at the Combined Livestock Symposium held recently, Minister Made said the policy document was focussed on raw material availability, productivity, animal health, marketing efficiency and trade facilitation among other things.
He said the draft policy promotes mutually beneficial contract farming arrangements to help farmers grow key food and feed crops such as maize and soyabeans.
“My ministry strives to continue improving the management of raw material imports by industry players to ensure efficient and cost-effective raw material acquisition,” he said. He added that the policy also supports improvement in training, research and extension through the Department of Research and Specialist Services, Pig Industry Board, agricultural colleges and universities among others.
Officers from the ministry are expected to collaborate with various private sector institutions to equip livestock farmers with knowledge and skills.
Minister Made said the draft policy proposes an active role by the ministry in ensuring surveillance, prevention and response to disease outbreaks.
This is aimed at strengthening the Veterinary Services Department in supporting production, productivity competitiveness and sustainable livestock production. Through its departments and parastatal, the ministry is aiming at improving efficiency of the agricultural market system.
“We would like to ensure an efficient and fairness under a liberalised marketing system and as part of the marketing policy, the ministry is committed to value addition of all primary produce to boost the impact of agriculture on the economy,” he said.
The draft policy also emphasises on improving trade in agricultural products through maintenance of liberal
export and foreign exchange polices, simplified agricultural trade regulations and negotiation of favourable bilateral agricultural trade agreements.
Source: Herald
Thursday, 16 May 2013
Lack of funding hinders wheat planting
The winter wheat planting deadline of May 15 has passed with few
farmers having planted the crop. Most farmers failed to meet the
planting deadline due to unavailability of funding. Others have,
however, shifted from wheat due to the high risk associated with the
crop to other winter crops like
barley and potatoes. The barley is being grown under contract.
Agritex director Mr Joseph Gondo confirmed that farmers have started planting wheat in different parts of the country.“Farmers have started planting wheat, especially those who have finished harvesting soyabeans. There is no Government funding and farmers are using their own resources,” he said.
Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers’ Union vice-president Mr Johnson Mapira said few farmers were planting wheat due to the absence of a funding facility.
“Most farmers who have planted have used their own resources while a few have managed to access loans from banks,” he said.Mr Mapira said farmers in Glendale, Mazowe and Bindura have started planting the crop.
Zimbabwe Farmers’ Union second vice-president Mr Berean Mukwende said lack of funding has affected many farmers who had planned to grow the crop.-Herald
Wednesday, 15 May 2013
ZESA prepaid system create confusion
The Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers Union (ZCFU) says the prepaid system
introduced by ZESA has created confusion that has caused farmers to be
sceptical about planting wheat in Umguza district this season.The new billing system, which the farmers have not yet understood, has been launched in the district at a time most of them are trying to recover from the losses they incurred as a result of the drought experienced last year.
ZCFU spokesperson for Matabeleland North province, Mrs Shandu Gumede said it will be difficult for a high water demanding crop like wheat to be produced under circumstances where there are constant power cuts due to non-payment of bills, adding that less than 10 farmers in the province have expressed interest in producing wheat this season.
“The prepaid system that has just been introduced has made farmers very sceptical because what’s happening is that, most of them half way through irrigation, their allocation or units diminish so they are still trying to understand their budget, they are still trying to understand how it works,” Gumede said.
Matabeleland North Provincial Agritex Officer Dumisani Nyoni said farmers are yet to gain confidence in the new system following an incident that occurred at Redwood Communal Irrigation Scheme where 10 hectares of wheat nearing maturity had to be written off due to power cuts.
“Farmers are now sceptical as they fear that if they fail to make payments they will be switched off power, and those that have been connected they are yet to develop confidence and full knowledge on how much power they will need to support the wheat crop,” said Mr Nyoni.
During peak seasons, Matabeleland North province utilises 1 000 hectares for wheat production, but production levels have decreased with less than 200 hectares being put under the crop in the past two years.

Wheat also requires 500 kilogrammes of ammonium nitrate fertiliser and another 500 kilogramme of Compound D per hectare.
The farmers in Umguza have also had water challenges following disconnections by ZINWA for non-payment of bills.
ZBC
Tobacco class B buyers back
Tobacco farmers say Class B buyers have allegedly resurfaced at the
tobacco auction floors, a move farmers say negatively affects the
pricing of the crop.
They were banned last season for allegedly pushing down tobacco prices.
According to The Herald, farmers, however, alleged that the Class B merchants were colluding with Class A merchants to reject the bulk of their tobacco so that they could buy it at low prices and re-sell it to Class A buyers at a higher price.
Tobacco growers say that the Class B buyers were this season not formally operating at the auction floors but were buying the crop from outside the floors.
The growers allege that auction floors were working together with the
buyers and this had resulted in an increase in the number of bales
being rejected at the floors.Macheke farmer Mr Ben Hatitye said bales were being rejected for no apparent reason to force farmers to sell to the Class B buyers outside the floors to “at least get something out of the rejected crop”.
“We are being forced to sell to these buyers by the situation. In some cases the transporters who would have ferried us to the floors will be ready to go and one cannot be left behind to sell a few bales considering the process I have to go through with the re-handling, baling and selling,” he said.
source: Herald
Monday, 13 May 2013
New developments in agriculture- Good or bad
New developments in agriculture
include factory farming and the creation of new fruits and vegetables. Many
people believe, however, that huge industrial farms and genetically modified
plants are dangerous and that we need to go back to smaller, more natural
farming.
In the last 50 years, agriculture
has become more and more mechanized and there have been many discoveries in
genetic engineering. However, some people are worried about the effect of this
on our health and our environment.
There is no doubt that we need more
food. There are over 7 billion people now and there will be 10 billion in just
a few decades. To feed these extra people we need more food. Another point is
that this food has to come from less and less land. This means each hectare has
to produce more food.
A third point is that we need to reduce waste
and inefficiency. Up to 30% of food is wasted on the farm, between the farm and
the shop, or in the home. New methods to stop food from spoiling or to improve
vitamin or other qualities will be good.
Advocates say genetically modified (GM) foods
allow farmers to produce more with fewer chemicals—which means a cleaner
environment and cheaper groceries for us all. But the question remains: What impact
do GM foods have on our health?
GM
foods have been on the market only since 1994, and research on their long-term
effects on humans is scarce. To date most of the studies have been done on
animals; worryingly, though, some of those studies link GM foods to altered
metabolism, inflammation, kidney and liver malfunction, and reduced fertility.
In one experiment, multiple generations of hamsters were fed a diet of GM soy;
by the third generation, they were losing the ability to produce offspring,
producing about half as many pups as the non-GM soy group.
However, many of these developments
in farming are dangerous. First of all, nobody knows what the effect of
genetically modified organisms will be on our bodies. There has not been enough
long-term testing to see the effects. A second point is that factory farming
often causes disease or helps it to spread. We are feeding our animals
unsuitable food and keeping them in bad conditions. This will affect the
quality of our food. Finally, if agriculture is a business instead of a way of
life, the farm owners will think only of quick profit, not long-term
sustainability.
In conclusion, we need more food and
more efficient farming, but we need to learn from mad cow disease and bird flu
that nature does not like being forced to do things our way. -writefix
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