The strengthening of the primary sector is of paramount importance, not only because we owe it to our rural world and countryside, but also in order to address the consequences of climate change, President of the Republic, Nikos Christodoulides said on Saturday, noting that the issue of the Common Agricultural Policy and the funds to be allocated by the EU will be among the top priorities of the forthcoming Cyprus Presidency of the EU.
Speaking on Saturday evening at the 9th Rural Culture Festival of the Cyprus Agricultural Payments Organization in the fire-stricken community of Lofou, President Christodoulides, said that so far the government has provided around 80 million euros for the properties destroyed in the July 23rd fire, assuring that ‘the State is here and will respond.’
‘The strength, resilience, and determination of the residents of the community are a tangible and exemplary demonstration that in the countryside one encounters the dynamism that characterizes the Cypriot farmer and rural woman, who fight to keep our land alive,’ he added.
He also pointed out that the practical and substantial support of the agricultural community is not a matter of choice or political priority, but ‘a minimum obligation of the state, which must ensure a secure future without dependencies on external factors.’
‘We see what is happening with the war in Ukraine and the dependencies it creates. We see what is happening internationally with the issue of protectionism and the taxes that some governments choose to adopt, resulting in some countries becoming dependent on or deprived of basic products because they failed to give the necessary importance to the primary sector,’ the President said.
At the same time, he noted that it is regrettable that the primary sector currently represents only 1.7% of the country’s GDP, whereas it once had a double-digit percentage. He stressed that ‘strengthening the primary sector is of primary importance, not only because we owe it to our farmers and countryside, but also to tackle the consequences of climate change.’