Tag: Adesina

  • AfDB President Adesina loses dad

    Chief Roland Folorunso Adesina, father of President of the Africa Development Bank (AfDB), Akinwunmi Adesina, has died in Ibadan, Oyo State capital.

    He was 96.

    A family source said Pa Adesina died about 7am last Wednesday at a private hospital. He spent 12 days on admission.

    The late Chief Adesina was an accountant with the Western Regional Government;  he retired in 1979. He was also a staunch member of the Anglican Communion.

    The AfDB president took to twitter last Thursday to pay  tribute to his father.

    The younger Adesina described his father as his best friend, stressing that he wouldn’t have been who he is today without his father’s love and sacrifice.

    He tweeted: “My darling father and best friend, Roland F. Adesina, passed away yesterday morning. I wouldn’t have been who I am today without your love and sacrifice. Thanks for sending me to school and being a role model. Rest in peace my very dear senior Ombros!”

  • AfDB appoints five senior management staff

    AfDB appoints five senior management staff

    The President of African Development Bank AfDB, Dr Akinwumi Adesina has announced the appointment of five senior management staff as part of efforts to enhance the bank’s service delivery.

    Adesina announced this in a statement signed by the bank’s Principal Communications Officer, Mrs Olivia Obiang on Monday in Abuja.

    Adesina said that Dr. Hanan Morsy as was appointed as the Director, Macroeconomic Forecasting and Research, with effect from March 12.

    According to him, Morsy is a citizen of Egypt, and a renowned Macro-economic and Public Policy expert with vast experience in international financial institutions and the private sector.

    The AfDB president said that Stella Kilonzo, was appointed as the Senior Director, Africa Investment Forum, with effect from March 1.

    He said that Kilonzo, is Kenyan national and had been the Division Manager, Capital Markets Division since Dec.  2013, when she joined the bank.

    Adesina said that Olivier Eweck was also appointed as Director, Syndication and Technical Services Department, effective from February 1.

    Read Also: AfDB strengthens regional collaboration on research

    According to him, Eweck is a citizen of Cameroon and until his appointment the Manager, Financial Technical Services Division, for the bank since 2009.

    Adesina said that Moono Mupotola, was appointed as Director, Regional Integration, effective from March 1, while Wambui Gilchrist, was appointed Director, Water Development and Sanitation, with effect from March 15.

    He said that Mupotola is a Zambian national and until his appointment, was the Director in charge of the Regional Integration and Trade Department of the bank.

    He said that Gichuri is a Kenyan national, and has served the bank as Water Practice Manager, Africa Region since July 2016.

  • Adesina urges U.S. to support Africa’s agricbusiness

    Adesina urges U.S. to support Africa’s agricbusiness

    African Development Bank (AfDB)   President, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina has called for increased American and global investments to help unlock Africa’s agriculture potential.

    Adesina, who was the distinguished guest speaker at the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s ) 94th Agriculture Outlook Forum in Virginia, spoke on the theme The roots of prosperity.

    He said: ‘’For too long, agriculture has been associated with what I call the three Ps – pain, penury, and poverty. The fact though is that agriculture is a huge wealth-creating sector that is primed to unleash new economic opportunities that will lift hundreds of millions of people out of poverty.”

    Participants at the forum included the Secretary of Agriculture, Sonny Perdue; Deputy Secretary of Agriculture, Stephen Censky; World Food Prize Foundation President, Kenneth Quinn; Chief Economist of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Robert Johansson; and Deputy Chief Economist, Warren Preston.

    Adesina appealed to the US private sector to change the way it views African agriculture.

    “Think about it, the size of the food and agriculture market in Africa will rise to US $ 1 trillion by 2030. This is the time for US agri-businesses to invest in Africa,” he said.

    ‘’And for good reason: Think of a continent where McKinsey projects household consumption is expected to reach nearly $2.1 trillion and business-to-business expenditure will reach $3.5 trillion by 2025. Think of a continent brimming with 840 million youth, the youngest population in the world, by 2050.”

    Adesina urged the U.S. government  to be at the forefront of efforts to encourage fertiliser and seed companies, manufacturers of tractors and equipment, irrigation and Information Communication Technology (ICT) farm analytics to ramp up their investments on the continent.

    “As the nation that first inspired me and then welcomed me with open arms, permit me to say that I am here to seek a partnership with America: a genuine partnership to help transform agriculture in Africa, and by so doing unlock the full potential of agriculture in Africa, unleash the creation of wealth that will lift millions out of poverty in Africa, while creating wealth and jobs back home right here in America,” the 2017 World Food Prize Laureate told the forum.

    Adesina told the more than 2,000 delegates that the AfDB is spearheading  some transformative business and agricultural initiatives.

    “We are launching the Africa Investment Forum, as a 100 per cent transactional platform, to leverage global pension funds and other institutional investors to invest in Africa in Johannesburg, South Africa from November 7-9,” he said.

     

     

  • Adesina, Onobrakpeya get 2017 National Merit Award

    Adesina, Onobrakpeya get 2017 National Merit Award

    VICE President Yemi Osinbajo has conferred the 2017 Nigerian National Merit Award (NNMA) on Prof. Adesoji Adesina and Mr. Bruce Onobrakpeya at the Council Chamber of the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    At the yearly award ceremony that comes up every first Thursday of December, Osinbajo hailed the research and intellectual qualities of the recipients.

    He stressed that the Federal Government would continue to support research  and innovation.

    According to the vice president, posterity would not forgive government’s functionaries if they fail to provide support for research activities, noting that every winner of NNMA was unique.

    He described the recipients as “milestones of Nigeria’s checkered history”.

    Noting that the duo bear awesome responsibilities, Osinbajo hailed the recipients for the intellectual feat they attained as he challenged them to further deploy their huge experiences to advance the course of the society, recalling the words of Bernard Baruch, which says that “man can’t retire his experience but must use it”.

    Lauding the Governing Board of NNMA, he said that so far, the board had identified 75 recipients of the award, observing that the award “epitomises the finest of Nigerian innovation”.

    Osinbajo welcomed Adesina and Onobrokpeya into what he described as the “prestigious league” of Nigerian National Order of Merit Investiture.

    Extolling the sterling qualities of the recipients, Osinbajo observed that the works of Adesina in engineering and technology span over three decades in various fields, including mining, defence, manufacturing, among others, with over 400 publications and competitive research grants.

  • Atiku’s claim on Buhari fictitious – Presidency

    Atiku’s claim on Buhari fictitious – Presidency

    The Presidency on Saturday described as “fictitious concoction” a claim credited to former Vice President Atiku Abubakar that President Muhammadu Buhari was banned from entering United States over religious considerations.

    The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said in a statement on Saturday it was mind-boggling that a person of Atiku’s calibre who should know the truth was spreading lies about the President.

    He said the claim made by the former vice president only existed in the realm of his imagination, as President Buhari was never stopped from entering America.

    The statement reads: “Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, claims in an interview published Saturday that ‘for about 15 years, Buhari could not enter America on account of religious considerations.’

    “This fictive concoction being passed off as truth is mind-boggling, coming from a former Number Two Man of Nigeria, who should know the truth.

    “At no time was President Buhari, as a private person, ever forbidden from entering any country in the world.

    “Rather, the rest of the world has always held Muhammadu Buhari as a man of sterling qualities, strong on integrity, transparency and accountability.

    “The same testimony is still borne of the Nigerian President by many world leaders today.

    “It is curious that former VP Abubakar had been asked why he had not visited America for over a decade, something that had been a stubborn fact dogging his footsteps. Instead of answering directly, he begged the question, saying Buhari also had been disallowed from entering the same country for 15 years before becoming President.

    “We hereby make it resoundingly clear that what the former vice president said only exists in the realm of his imagination.

    “If he has issues to settle with American authorities, he should do so, rather than clutch at a straw.”

     

     

  • We’re proud of you, Buhari tells AfDB President

    We’re proud of you, Buhari tells AfDB President

    President Muhammadu Buhari says Nigeria remains proud of its former Minister of Agriculture, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, for the winning the 2017 World Food Prize.

    Adesina, who is the President of the African Development Bank (AfDB), will today be presented with the $250,000 prize and Laureate sculpture at a ceremony in the United States.

    The President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr Femi Adesina, said Buhari stated this in a video message to the AfDB President.

    The presidential aide, in a statement issued in Abuja on Thursday, quoted President Buhari as saying: “I received with delight the cheery news of your award as 2017 World Food Prize Laureate.

    “Certainly this did not come to me and many Nigerians as a surprise, given your antecedents and contributions to the development of agriculture across the African continent.

    “We are very proud of you.

    Read : AfDB to invest $24bn in agriculture in 10 years – Adesina

    “According to the World Food Prize Foundation, you won the prize for driving change in African agriculture for over 25 years and improving food security for millions across the continent.

    “Your choice as the winner of the World Food Prize is a clear recognition and appreciation of your long standing contributions, reflected in your several roles and activities which promote social economic development.

    “By dint of hard work, persistence, diligent efforts and God’s sufficient grace, you have risen above many limitations to emerge as a notable figure and a true champion.

    “Your life story mirrors the resilience of the African spirit and doggedness for which Nigerians are well known.

    “On behalf of the government and people of Nigeria, I congratulate you and rejoice with you, your family and the AfDB family on this well-deserved honour.

    “Congratulations!’’

    Prior to serving as Nigerian Minister of Agriculture from 2010 to 2015, Adesina was a senior economist at West African Rice Development Association (WARDA) in Bouaké, Ivoary Coast, from 1990 to 1995.

    Adesina was named Forbes African Man of the Year for his reform of Nigerian agriculture.

    He introduced more transparency into the fertiliser supply chain through the popular E-Wallet system of fertilizer distribution in Nigeria.

    The AfDB President had also worked at the Rockefeller Foundation as a senior scientist in 1988, and from 1999 to 2003, represented the Foundation in southern Africa.

    The former Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, appointed Adesina as one of 17 global leaders to spearhead the defunct Millennium Development Goals.

    Read Also: Buhari signs University of Petroleum Resources Bill

  • Fayose replaces Adeyeye with Adesina

    Fayose replaces Adeyeye with Adesina

    Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose has approved the appointment of Lagos lawyer, Pastor Dele Adesina (SAN), as the new chairman of the Governing Council of Ekiti State University in Ado-Ekiti (EKSU).

    This followed the resignation of Prince Dayo Adeyeye from the position.

    Adesina, who hails from Ilawe-Ekiti, is a member of the state’s Judicial Service Commission and former General Secretary of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA).

    The appointment takes immediate effect.

    Also, The state government yesterday accepted the resignation of Prince Dayo Adeyeye as Chairman of the Governing Council of EKSU.

    A statement by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Dr Modupe Alade, said the government thanked Adeyeye for his contributions to the university and wished him well in his future endeavours.

  • Obasanjo, Adesina to present books on African development

    Two  books – Transformative “Paradigms in African Development and A Journey in African Development written by a former Vice President of the African Development Bank (AfDB),Chief Bisi Ogunjobi, is to be launched in Lagos on Thursday.

    Former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, and the President of the African Development Bank, Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, are expected to be  Special Guest of Honour and Guest of Honour respectively at the public presentation of  the books.

  • Adesina’s World Food Prize: Honour well deserved

    Adesina’s World Food Prize: Honour well deserved

    The piece of heart-warming news that our own Dr. Akinwumi Adesina,  President, African Development Bank (AfDB) and former Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development under President Goodluck Jonathan has been named the 2017 World Food Prize Laureate could not have come at a better time. With Nigeria experiencing a turbulent econo-political period the award comes as a breath of fresh air. What makes it more cheering is the fact that it is a well deserved laurel for a distinguished Nigerian. Adesina  epitomises a bright beacon of hope in our long, dark tunnel of ignorance, poverty, apathy and self-inflicted woes.

    As one of his consistent admirers over the years, the focus is on the lasting lessons we all could glean from him on professionalism, pragmatic leadership, selfless service, patriotism and can-do it spirit. It would be recalled that back in 2008 when yours truly was the Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief of Strata Media  Organisation,  Adesina granted our rich and colourfulFoodbusiness International Magazine, a two-page, pull-out interview. It was through the Assistant Editor, Lanre Agboola. The then editor, ZebAgomuo was thrilled. In fact, that incisive interview not only sold out the Vol.1,No7 Edition but got the members of staff academically enriched and thoroughly inspired. Adesina was then the Vice President (Policy and Partnerships), Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA).

    He used that opportunity to canvass subsidy for African farmers. Said he: “ When I say smart subsidies, I mean the private sector has to distribute the inputs, the government supports the farmers together. We also have to make sure it is a targeted subsidy” that would benefit the poor farmers. “The government has to make sure that the farmers are provided with proper extension services, to be very efficient.” What made him sad was when “ I see so many graduates of agriculture all across Africa roaming the streets, looking for jobs. It is a bizarre thing”.

    Good enough, he walked the talk when he eventually became the Minister of agriculture. As aptly captured by Kenneth Quinn, the President, the World Food Prize, the Hall of Laureates, described Adesina as “someone who grew out of poverty, but whose life mission is to lift up millions of people out of poverty’’. Inspiring, is it not? Of course, it is.

    These are reflected in his breakthrough achievements all through his career. The list is long but let us have a taste of the pudding. For instance, as the Vice President of AGRA he introduced initiatives to exponentially increase the availability of credit for smallholder farmers across the African continent. Not done, he galvanised the political will to transform African agriculture. Back  in 2006, as the Associate Director for Food Security at the Rockefeller Foundation, Adesina played a critical leadership role in organising the Africa Fertiliser Summit in Abuja. That summit was described as absolutely essential in igniting the campaign to spread a new Green Revolution across Africa, which led to the creation of AGRA.

    Furthermore, as Minister of Agriculture in Nigeria, from 2011 to 2015 he successfully transformed the country’s agriculture sector through bold reforms. He it was who introduced the E-Wallet system which broke the back of the corrupt elements that had controlled the fertiliser distribution system for 40 years. In addition, was the creation of  programmes to make Nigeria self-sufficient in rice production, as well as to make cassava become a major cash crop. The related value chain he clamoured for saw the input of 20 per cent cassava flour to 80 per cent wheat flour in the making of composite bread. Also, the ‘Nagroprenuers’ scheme he introduced made way for the training of  750,000 young graduates in commercial farming.

    As Quinn rightly noted the reforms he implemented increased food production by 21 million metric tonnes and attracted 5.6 billion dollars in private sector investments. This earned him the reputation as the ‘Farmer’s Minister’.” Incidentally, Adesina has become the first person from the agriculture sector to ever lead a regional development bank. His receiving the World Food Nobel Laureate Prize “would give impetus in the coming decade to his profound vision”. Adesina is also the 46th person and the sixth African to win the World Food Prize. Are we not immensely proud of him? Yes, we are!

    That explains the presence of  the former Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and Nigeria’s Acting Ambassador to the U.S. and Chargé d ‘ Affaires, Ambassador Hakeem Balogun to savour the momentous occasion. Note that they were not there as Igbo, Yoruba or whatever but as proud Nigerians to identify with a son of the soil, holding the green-white-flag of unity and progress, peace and prosperity for the whole world to see. That is another lesson for us all.

    In retrospect, Adesina’s sterling achievements as the Minister of Agriculture was one issue that stood former President Jonathan in good stead. Adesina won the prestigious Forbes Magazine Africa Man–of- the-Year Award. And in 2015 the country won an award from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) for achieving one of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) on halving the number of hungry people in the country by 2015. That was during the two-day summit by Rockefeller Foundation with the theme: ‘Realising the potential of African agriculture’.

    Unfortunately, the bitter truth is that Nigerians are hungrier now than they were in 2015. The lesson here is for us to stop politicising sensitive and critical issues on good governance. What would have happened if Adesina’s vibrant and virile vision for the agriculture sector had been sustained till now? Your answer is as good as mine.

  • Adesina disowns CSO over Punch reporter’s expulsion

    Adesina disowns CSO over Punch reporter’s expulsion

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s media office yesterday distanced itself from the expulsion of the Punch correspondent covering the Presidential Villa, Mr. Olalekan Adetayo.
    Journalists in the Villa are directly attached to the office of the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity Femi Adesina.
    Adetayo was yesterday afternoon expelled by Buhari’s Chief Security Officer, Bashir Abubakar, over story considered offensive to the Presidency.
    Adesina, on his Twitter handle, said he was not consulted before Adetayo was expelled.
    He said: “We weren’t consulted in the media office by the CSO before he expelled the Punch reporter. President Buhari is committed to press freedom.
    “An amicable solution would be found to the reporter matter. President Buhari does not intend to muzzle the media in any way,” Adesina added