Agency solicits lawmakers support for natural medicine roadmap
They need to put life in this resolution and make special budgetary allocation for implementation.;
The Nigeria Natural Medicines Development Agency (NNMDA) has urged the House of Representatives to make budgetary allocation for the implementation of its 36-month roadmap on prioritising natural medicines in the country.
Prof. Martins Emeje, Director-General of the NNMDA, made the call on Monday in Abuja during an interview with news men.
His call followed a recent resolution by the House of Representatives urging Nigerians to prioritise natural medicines.
Emeje, while commending the adoption of the resolution, described it as the best thing that had happened to the natural medicines ecosystem in the country in the past two decades.
“What we want from them now is the support for us to implement our road map as an agency.
“They need to put life in this resolution and make special budgetary allocation for implementation.
“We want to ensure that we have research farms where we can cultivate particular plants, rear particular animals, rear particular insects, create gardens of particular minerals, peculiar to only that environment.
“For each ward, Local Government or state, there are peculiar plants, animals and minerals that cannot be found somewhere else,’’ he said.
According to him, diseases in every location have something to do with the natural constitution of that environment.
“It is the plants, animals and minerals in that community that can be explored for medicine for diseases found in that community.
“That is the reason why bitter leaf in my village may not have the vital constituent for treating diabetes, but the same bitter leaf in Ogun State, will have it.
“This is because of botanical and biological differences,” Emeje said.
Emeje said the intention was to create one-stop health shop where natural medicines were produced in a particular community for the people.
“The House of Representatives took a resolution that says there is need for Nigerians to promote and prioritise natural medicine.
“For the House of Representatives to make this resolution that it must become a priority, I am satisfied.
“It will be important that appropriate committee responsible for ensuring that this kind of resolution is fully implemented will do so,” Emeje said.
According to him, the lawmakers have given the agency the weapon and the encouragement to work harder towards ensuring that Nigeria produces the natural medicine for its peculiar diseases.