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Insecurity  in  Rural Communities  Greatest  Threat to  Food Production – Alaafin

The spate of insecurity in rural communities remains the single greatest threat to food production, the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Abimbola Owoade, has said.

The monarch noted that until the government deploys a coordinated, decisive response to the security crises, a reduction in food imports or food prices will remain a forlorn hope.

Oba Owoade stated that no matter the agricultural policies announced by the authorities, the reality in rural communities is that insecurity has become the single greatest threat to food production.

According to a statement by his Director of Media and Publicity, Bode Durojaiye, Oba Owoade remarked on Thursday while addressing participants at an interfaith prayer service.

The event had in attendance eminent personalities, a member of the Oyo traditional Council (Oyo Mesi), High Chief Asimiyu Atanda, village heads, religious leaders, community leaders, and a cross-section of residents.

Alaafin maintained that a nation where food producers in the rural communities must negotiate access to their fields with armed bandits cannot claim to be mindful of food security.

He observed that adequate security of lives and property is the foundation of any thriving society because it directly eliminates fear, protects human rights, and unlocks economic potential, adding that without the guarantee of safety, the basic pillars of a nation collapse.

He said: ‘Security is a sine qua non for societal progress. A secure environment encourages inter-communal collaboration and shared national identity.

‘Kidnapping and rural insecurity severely cripple agricultural productivity by displacing rural farmers from their lands, disrupting local supply chains, and draining household incomes to pay ransoms.

‘These threats escalate food inflation, collapse rural credit systems, and lead to widespread food scarcity in affected communities. Farmers are often forced to liquidate their assets, livestock, and capital to pay ransoms, leaving them with no funds to purchase seeds, fertilisers, or equipment’.