Museveni urges European Union to open it’s markets to Uganda’s agricultural products.

 

President Yoweri Museveni has called on the European Union to open up is market to Africa’s food products and improve farmers’ incomes with out the barrier of artificial farmers and subsidy provision. Museveni mentioned that African farmers do not need any form of subsidies and can produce food cheaply for Nationals.

If you can help us with the European market; remove the distortion that was introduced by the European Union when they introduced European Agriculture Policy where you maintain artificial farmers in Europe with subsidies. Here, we don’t need subsidies. I am a farmer; I have never got any subsidies from anybody and I produce food cheaply for Ugandans. You wonder why the Europeans could not get cheap food from here instead of having that distortion,” Museveni said.

The President made the remarks while meeting Bjorg Sandkjaer, the State Secretary and Deputy Minister of International Development from the Kingdom of Norway at State House Entebbe. The two leaders discussed various issues pertaining to food security and income generation and social-economic transformation among other things.

The President said Europe and Africa would greatly benefit if the market is opened up without any form of restrictions.

If you are to link Europe and Africa on the issue of food, you will be well off. Africa would be well off and Europe would get cheap food. In Uganda, we do things easily. Right now, we are in a little war with Kenya; the war of eggs and chicken. Our chicken when it goes to Kenya it is cheaper and better so our people undersell the Kenyans. In order to have eggs, you need maize for chicken feed. Uganda produces maize cheaply. Kenya farmers are now crying and using non-tariff barriers,” Museveni said.

The President said with two rainy seasons a year, even without irrigation, Uganda grows food twice a year which is quite unique. “Even a culture like my group, there is a small harvest in June. You plant in March and harvest in June with the rain alone and without irrigation. Then the big harvest is the one of August. We plant in September and harvest is in January,” he said, adding that with a bit of mobilization people have been waking up to commercial agriculture.

President Museveni said in terms of food production, especially if irrigation is added, Uganda has a surplus of maize, milk, Sugar among others.