VIEWPOINT

Abioye Tosin Lawrence: Fertile Land, Empty Stomachs; Is Not The President’s Job To Take Up Hoes And Cutlasses

In recent times, many Nigerians have lamented the growing scarcity and high cost of food. Markets across the country tell the same grim story, families struggling to afford basic staples, children going to school hungry, and farmers battling to survive in a land rich with agricultural potential.

It is a bitter irony that Nigeria, blessed with vast arable land and favorable weather, is grappling with a food crisis. The question on everyone’s lips is: who should be held responsible?

Some argue that it is the government’s failure. Others go further to point fingers at the president, expecting a direct intervention to solve the crisis. But let’s be clear, while leadership is crucial in policy formulation and infrastructure development, it is not the president’s job to take up hoes and cutlasses to farm for the people.

Across the African continent, there are countries with less fertile lands, rocky terrain, limited rainfall, and environmental constraints. Yet, some of these nations are feeding their populations through dedication, innovation, and strategic planning. Meanwhile, Nigeria’s fertile land lies largely fallow, overshadowed by insecurity and a culture of blame.

Even basic food items like pepper, tomatoes, and other cash crops that can easily be grown in backyard gardens are now luxuries in many homes. This is not just a failure of government, it is also a societal failure. Many Nigerians are not helping the situation. We have made it a habit to outsource responsibility, even for what we can personally grow or contribute.

Yes, insecurity remains a major barrier. But let’s speak the truth: those behind banditry and violence are not spirits. Communities know them. Some protect them. Some profit from the chaos. Until there is a collective resolve to expose and confront these elements, peace and progress will remain elusive.

To end this food crisis, Nigeria must return to the soil, not with slogans, but with commitment. Youth should be empowered and equipped to farm with dignity and innovation. States must rise from complacency and take full ownership of agricultural development. Mechanization, storage systems, cooperative financing, and private sector engagement must replace paper policies and abandoned farm settlements.

The soil is not the problem. The people are willing. What is needed is leadership that creates the right environment for agriculture to thrive through bold policies, community accountability, and long-term investment.

Until then, Nigeria will remain a hungry giant rich in potential, poor in action.

Abioye Tosin Lawrence
Publisher, Oriontimes Online Newspaper

Campaigner, HATE-AGAINST-NIGERIA Movement

Author of “Voices from the Fire: My Journey Through a Hollow Empire”

VAM News

Recent Posts

Osun poll: IPC charges Osun media to focus on issue-based reporting, candidates’ manifestos

Ahead of the August 15th, 2026 Osun state governorship election, journalists and media practitioners have…

2 hours ago

Beyond “Fake News”: A Call For Conceptual Precision In Media And Communication Discourse, By Olanihun Sunday Zechariah

By Olanihun Sunday Zechariah Olanihunzechariah@gmail.com +2347038572068 Few expressions have gained as much prominence in contemporary…

2 hours ago

Full list: 124 Nigerians to face US deportation

THE United States has released an updated deportation list containing 124 Nigerians amid President Donald…

3 hours ago

Filling stations shut down over fuel price

News update Some Nigerian filling stations have shut down over premium motor spirit price speculation…

3 hours ago

August 15: Adeleke Will Cruise to Victory, Says Osun SSG

THE Secretary to the State Government of Osun, Alhaji Teslim Igbalaye, speaks with OLUFEMI ADEDIRAN…

5 hours ago

Ondo APC Leaders Rally Behind Aiyedatiwa, Vow to Deliver Tinubu in 2027

Ondo State Governor, His Excellency, Hon. Lucky Orimisan Aiyedatiwa, on Wednesday met with members of…

19 hours ago