We don’t hoard foodstuffs at Dawanau International Grains Market – Management

The grains market is the largest in West Africa, supplying foodstuffs to customers in Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon and the Central African Republic, among other countries.

Update: 2024-02-17 07:23 GMT

The management of Dawanau International Grains Market in Kano State has dismissed speculations that dealers transacting business in the market are hoarding foodstuffs to create artificial scarcity.

The management also dismissed notions that the traders were inflating the prices of food items arbitrarily to cause excruciating hardships to the public.

Supreme News reports that the grain market is the largest in West Africa, supplying foodstuffs to customers in Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon, and the Central African Republic, among other countries.

Such food items include rice, millet, sorghum, beans, and groundnuts, which are largely grown in the northern parts of Nigeria.

The market also stocks crops such as sesame seeds, hibiscus, tamarind, and soybeans, which are exported to Asia, Europe, and other global markets.

Addressing newsmen in Kano on Friday, the President of the Dawanau Market Development Association (DMDA), Alhaji Muttaka Isa, said the grain dealers only purchased foodstuffs from growers in various parts of the country.

He said such grains were stored in the market’s warehouses before being sold to their customers.

“Following the recent rise in the prices of food products across the country, misinformation and disinformation have taken over the public domain concerning our operations, and we are wrongly accused of hoarding food items.

“The Association hereby calls the attention of the general public to understand that we are dealers of items, having an average daily turnover of N30 billion.

“Farmers from far and near bring their products here, which we buy and sell as a whole to industries and for exports.

“We buy and sell the items and cannot possibly hoard them.

“The various grains and other food items you see in these warehouses are only in transit; they must be stored first before they are sold to our customers.

“Storing the goods in the warehouses is essential to prevent them from spoiling and also for convenience purposes,” Isa explained.

“Governments and organisations purchase grains from us. For example, the Federal Government buys grains from us, and organisations like the World Food Programme (WFP) also buy grains from us and distribute them to IDP camps in Nigeria and elsewhere.

“I wonder how these esteemed customers can buy from us if we are hoarding these grains. So, I am appealing to the general public, particularly our business partners, to disregard the wicked rumour as it is baseless and unfounded.

“The truth is that we are genuine businessmen, passionate about the progress and well being of our customers as well the economic development of our dear nation, Nigeria,” the president said.

He also called on the Federal Government to intervene by renovating the rail transport system, to ease transportation of goods and enhance the activities of the inland dry ports.

“Another issue is the shortage of these food items in some areas that are affected by insecurity.

“Production in those places has drastically reduced from what it used to be in the past.

“We wish to use this opportunity to call on the Federal Government to come into this to modify and regulate the activities for better output.

“A standard rail transport system should be put in place to break the jinx of high transportation costs experienced by transporting the items by road.

This will enhance the activities of the inland dry ports and ease market operations.

“We will continue to try our best as dealers in these essential commodities to ensure that a stop is not only put to the soaring prices of goods but is also reduced to the nearest minimum,” he added.

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