Tamale, Dec 19, - A total of 15,000 women in 17 districts in
the Northern Region have harvested 500 metric tons of orange-fleshed sweet
potatoes (OFSP) for household consumption to improve nutritional status of
women of reproductive age and children under-five years.
The women were supported with
five million OFSP vines, which were cultivated on 354 acres of land in 261
communities across the districts including Chereponi, Saboba and Gushegu during
the 2017 cropping season.
The United States Government’s
global hunger and food security initiative - Feed the Future, through the
United States Agency for International Development’s Resiliency in Northern
Ghana Project ( USAID RING), supported the women with the OFSP vines to
cultivate and consume as it is a tasty, easy-to-grow, and highly-nutritious
crop.
OFSP helps to reduce vitamin A
deficiency, a pervasive health problem in the country, particularly in the
Northern Region where about 75 percent of children under five suffers from it.
Vitamin A deficiency can be a major
cause for anemia amongst women and children and the OFSP is expected to improve
the health of thousands of women and children by encouraging diverse crop
production and the consumption of nutrient-rich foods.
Mr Yunus Abdulai, acting Chief of
Party of USAID RING, who spoke at an event in Tamale hosted by USAID RING and
partners to celebrate the harvest for the year, said the efforts were aimed to
improve access to diverse, vitamin-rich, and nutritious crops for northern
households.
USAID RING and its partners since
2016, supported the cultivation of OFSP in the Region, which significantly
increased from 1.5 million OFSP vines in 2016 to 5 million vines in 2017, as a
result of high yields achieved during the first major harvest and the growing demand
for the crop by women farmers.
Mr Joseph Ashong, Project
Management Specialist-Nutrition at USAID Ghana, said “As with all crop
cultivation activities, the 15,000 households received basic training from the
Government of Ghana staff on land preparation, planting, field care, land maintenance,
harvesting, storage, and utilization.”
Mr Ashong added that “In fiscal
year 2018, USAID will scale-up the number of OFSP vines from five million to 23
million, reaching nearly 75,000 women from the most vulnerable and food
insecure households.”
Dr Francis Amagloh, Head of Food
Security and Technology Department, Faculty of Agriculture, University for
Development Studies, expressed need for all to commercialize the OFSP by using
it to develop varieties of meals for sale to the public.
GNA

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