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We
have stated that we will be honest in our reporting, thus
this next paragraph.
Logobero, about 15 km outside Yei, was the first farm to be
established. It has been troubled by corruption. The Board
of Directors of the Savannah Farmers Cooperative Company (SFC)
found it necessary to dismiss all the management and staff,
invoking their zero-tolerance policy for corruption.
It is now managed by Rev. George A. K. Taban who holds a certificate
in Agriculture. Two
Canadian farmers have spent several months each on this farm
in 2006 to train the Sudanese staff in proper maintenance
and use of the tractors as well as modern methods of plowing,
harrowing, machine planting and cultivating.
A vastly increased crop has been reported for this recently
past growing season. This farm has a potential of thousands
of acres for expansion and mass food production. The soil
is rich, producing well in every kind of crop which has been
planted. It should be self-sustaining by the end of 2007.
The Executive Committee of the Savannah Farmers Cooperative
has recently
accepted an offer of another 2,000 acres made by the local
Chiefs and clans, with government approval.
The land on which all the farms are located has been acquired
through an ‘endless lease’ at no cost to the SFC
for as long as food is being produced. The land always does,
and always will belong to the people and can only be used
by written agreement with the tribal landlords. Since beginning
the first farms, their success has led to many invitations
to start farms in other areas, even outside Sudan where their
success has been noted.
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