Chanda Kabwe (in blue) sprays a maize field in Kapiri Mposhi |
By Paul Shalala
in Kapiri Mposhi
Over 20,000 hectares of maize has so far been
destroyed by the fall army worms in Central Province since the first cases of
the pests were reported in the region late last year.
Newly appointed Central Province Permanent
Secretary Chanda Kabwe says the region has now become one of the hardest hit by
the pests alongside the Copperbelt province.
Mr Kabwe says the deployment of Zambia National
Service (ZNS) officers across the province has helped contain the fall army worms in
most of the districts which are hard hit.
“So far, the situation looks under control. We have
distributed over 10 thousand chemicals across Central Province since the fall
army worms were first reported. We have another consignment coming this coming
week, we are doing everything possible to fight these pests,” said Mr Kabwe
when he toured some affected farms in Kapiri Mposhi’s Kambosha area on Friday.
The Central Province Permanent Secretary assured
farmers in the province that government is doing everything possible to ensure
that they have a good harvest at the end of the current farming season.
And Kapiri Mposhi District Commissioner Peter
Mwiinde has revealed that about one thousand four hundred hectares of maize have
so far been sprayed by the authorities.
Mr Mwiinde says the District is this weekend
expected to receive more bottles of the chemicals to spray the remaining one
thousand hectares.
“We received 700 litres of the chemicals to fight
the army worms. So far we have sprayed 1,458 hectares but we are still remaining
with 1,000 more hectares. Am confident we will spray them too and produce a
bumper harvest this year,” said Mr Mwiinde.
Meanwhile, one of the hard hit farmers is Mary
Zimba, whose three fields in Kambosha area along the Great North Road were
attacked by the fall army worms late last year.
“When my fields were attacked, I had lost hope. I
was worried that this year we will be in poverty. But with the free chemicals I
received from the agricultural extension officers, my crop has been saved,”
said Mrs Zimba.
A check in her three maize fields found her crop
was growing well and had reached knee level.
Tomorrow, authorities in Kabwe, the provincial
capital, will be deploying inmates to beef up the ZNS team which is fighting
the army worms in the fields.
Due to security reasons, the prisoners are only expected to spray fields which
are in the outskirts of Kabwe town.
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