These engagements are expected to contribute
towards setting the agenda for sustaining the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture
Development Programme (CAADP) momentum, which forms the basis for African
leaders to recommit themselves to realizing the original vision set out in
2003.
CAADP
is the African Union-NEPAD long-term framework to improve food security,
nutrition and increase incomes in Africa’s largely farming based economies.
Since
its adoption by African countries in 2003, over 40 countries are now actively
engaged in CAADP at different levels. A decade of
CAADP experience has demonstrated that Africa has a well-crafted, home-grown
framework guiding policies, strategies and actions for agricultural development
and transformation.
But sustaining the CAADP momentum requires the media in Africa to give more attention to the agricultural
sector to advance economic growth.
In
Nairobi, Kenya, radio journalists from 14 countries met in August 2014 to
explore avenues and practical action to improve the use radio as the channel to
reach local communities with information on agriculture and development, in the
context CAADP.
Participating
journalists maintained that the media, especially radio, remains an important
instrument to communicate and facilitate dialogue on agriculture.
Radio,
they noted, also remains indispensable as a medium for sharing best practices,
as well as raising awareness on key issues in advancing agriculture and development.
A
facilitator at the workshop, Ochieng Ogodo of SciDev.Net, reiterated the role
of smallholder farmers in sustainable development, inspite of the emerging
extractives economies in Africa.
He
therefore stated that the media has a role to play in shaping public discuss and
improving livelihoods by reporting professionally and serving as instruments of
change and contributing to literacy on agriculture.
The
New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) Agency established the CAADP Journalists
Network to promote agricultural development reporting in Africa.
The
Network, which was launched on the eve of the 9th Comprehensive Africa
CAADP Partnership Platform in Addis Ababa in 2013, aims to equip African journalists
with a better understanding of CAADP, and the broader issues and debates
related to agricultural development on the Continent.
According
to CADDP Information and Advocacy Officer, Mwanja Nga'anjo, “Africa is still
not food secure” hence the need for African countries to commit at least 5-10%
of budget expenditure to agriculture.
At
the Nairobi meeting, the participants agreed to bring increased attention to,
and encourage debate and dialogue on the 2015-2025 CAADP Results Framework,
which was recently adopted by African Heads of State and Government in the
Malabo Declaration on Accelerated Agricultural Growth 1.
Florent
Tiassou of Green Radio World observed that agriculture, climate change and
environment reporting can be made interesting to the audience if journalists
can change their approach and explore diverse areas of coverage including land
use management, sustainable development and wealth creation.
The
CAADP Journalists Network to seeking to enhance support for local community
level radio programmes aimed at raising awareness on the value addition of
CAADP in Africa’s agricultural growth, as well as its value addition to socio-economic
development needs.
TerrAfrica
is also lending support to improve reporting on sustainable land and water management (SLWM).
The
meeting in Nairobi was attended by journalists from several African countries,
including Togo, Niger, Namibia, Tanzania, Mozambique, Ghana, Malawi, Burkina
Faso, Zambia, Kenya, Nigeria, Uganda, South Africa and Benin.
A
drafted action plan will see radio programming in the Network enhanced through
the NEPAD Agency’s technical support for improved agricultural coverage in
African countries.
Story
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
2 comments:
Hello, nice piece. Did Brenda Zulu attend the meeting? Did I tell you I won a CAADP award for one of my agric stories?
You did not dear. But I read it on myjoyonline. congratz
Post a Comment