The Ministry of Food and Agriculture has said it may lift the temporary suspension of leafy vegetable exports within a month.
In a Citi News interview, Deputy Minister for the sector, Kennedy Osei Nyarko indicated that this will only be dependant on the outcome of stakeholder engagements; and an indication that all parties are ready to adhere to the stipulated standards.
“This is a temporary suspension. We are looking at a month but it will all depend on how all the stakeholders will come together to make sure that those protocols we need to follow are adhered to. There were protocols that were set out after the lifting of the ban and some of these exporters keep flouting those protocols.”
The Ministry has defended the decision to place a temporary ban on the export of leafy vegetables.
The Ministry said the decision had become necessary as a result of unhealthy and unwholesome practices by exporters.
A statement from the Plant Protection and Regulatory Services Directorate of the Ministry said Ghana risks a ban by the European Union if the anomalies are not checked.
Speaking to Citi News, Press Secretary at the Ministry, Issah Ridwan, said numerous engagements with exporters to alter their ways of doing things have proved futile.
“We had a number of meeting to re-emphasise the need for them to do the right thing, otherwise we could find ourselves in a similar situation we found ourselves in 2014. It looks like the warning fell on deaf ears.
“So we as a ministry in consultations with the plant protection and regulative service division realized that there was a need for us to put in place some proactive measure because we realized the signals were getting really bad. So there was the need for us to put a suspension on the export of these selected vegetables until we realize the right things are done so that we will not incur the wrath that we did in 2014,” he said.
The Vegetable Producers and Exporters Association of Ghana has criticized the blanket ban.
The Association said identifying defaulting exporters and penalizing them is a better option.
The last time the EU imposed a ban on Ghana on the importation of five vegetables, the country lost more than 30 million dollars.
This time around, the ban is on all leafy vegetables and some selected groups of chilli pepper and cucumbers.