Coronavirus: Why Nigeria's rice handouts aren't going down well
Thousands of
bags of rice given by Nigeria's federal government as handouts during the
coronavirus lockdown has got many people all steamed up.
Some states
have alleged that the bags of rice sent to them were expired and not fit for
consumption.
President
Muhammadu Buhari last month ordered the customs service to distribute
confiscated bags of rice to the needy to help cushion the effects of a lockdown
to halt the spread of coronavirus.
But the gift
has not gone down well with some states in the south-west of the country, who
received the first batch of the rice.
Oyo state,
which is governed by the opposition People's Democratic Party (PDP), has been
the most vocal about the quality of the rice and wrote a letter to the customs
service of its intention to return the "weevil-infested" rice.
On Wednesday
it made good that threat by abandoning two trucks of 1,800 bags of the rice at
the gates of the customs service after officials refused to accept them.
In Ondo state,
where the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) party is in charge, officials
said some of the bags contained expired rice which were not fit for human
consumption but ruled out returning them.
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we’ll die inside our homes’
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Nigeria's unexplained deaths?
But the Nigeria
Customs Service has denied giving out expired rice and said it was embarrassed
by the allegations of the Oyo state government.
"The
warehouse had no signs of weevils, neither were there signs of weevils on the
loaders or on the trucks under the scorching sun," it said in a statement.
Most Nigerians
stocked up on food when the government announced a lockdown in three states of
the country
The
controversy was further stoked by the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Sadiya
Farouq, whose ministry in in charge of distributing the rice.
She said the
bags of rice had been tested by the country's agency for food and drugs control
-.
But the head
of Nafdac, Mojisola Adeyeye, said her agency was not invited "to test the
rice" distributed to Oyo state as claimed by the minister.
Where did the
rice come from?
Thousands of
bags of rice have been at the warehouses of the customs service for months
after they were seized from smugglers trying to get the rice into Nigeria.
And it is from
this stockpile the service released 46,000 metric tons of rice for distribution
to the states following the president's order.
Nigeria's land
borders were closed in August last year to enforce a ban on importation of
certain products - including rice, into the country.
The border
crisis fuelled by rice
And it seems
it is not only people in the south-west who have issues with the rice.
This twitter
user posted a video of a bag of "Covid-19 Palliative" rice given to
residents by authorities in the capital Abuja, describing them as
"poisonous and expired".
Is it the
first time such a thing has happened?
There is a
history of government officials confirming that bags of rice seized by the
customs service are expired and not fit for consumption.
In October
last year, the Comptroller General of Nigeria Customs Service, Hameed Ali, said
that Nigerians were eating expired foreign rice re-bagged and smuggled into the
country.
"They do
that in Benin Republic, they do that on the high sea. They change that bag and
then give it a new date and that's what we consume here," he said.
Presidential
aide Lauretta Onochie also posted this video of thousands of bags of seized rice
which she said had expired.
"We don't
know when it was harvested. We don't know the chemicals used to preserve
them," she tweeted.
Cooked rice,
especially Nigeria's famous spicy jollof, is a staple in the country and the
raw grains have been a key part of relief aid distributed by individuals and
organisations during the lockdown.
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