Dr. Isaac Macharia, the General Manager of Phytosanitary Services at the Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (KEPHIS), has called on African tomato farmers to be on alert for the ToBRFV virus, which has been causing significant damage to tomato crops globally. The virus can lead to a yield loss of 30-70% and has a unique way of contaminating seed coats instead of embedding in the embryo. Macharia emphasized the importance of reporting any occurrence of the disease to prevent its spread and recommended preventing its introduction through the importation of contaminated seeds by implementing pre-shipment testing. He also suggested breeding resistant varieties and investing in laboratory diagnosis. Since Kenya imports most of its tomato, capsicum, and eggplant seeds, it has mandated real-time PCR testing for all imported tomato seeds to ensure no positive samples are imported. So far, no positive samples have been found since the initiative began in February 2021.