Tag: Africa

  • Future of Africa media landscape in focus at Bloomberg Media forum

    More than 90 international media, technology, business and government and community leaders from 21 countries gathered in Livingstone on November 19 for the fourth Bloomberg Africa Business Media Innovators summit (ABMI).

    The summit  explored the issues and challenges impacting the future of media in Africa under the overarching theme, ‘Africa 2025: The Media Landscape of the Future’.

    Convened by Bloomberg Philanthropies and hosted by Matthew Winkler, Co-Founder and Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, Bloomberg News and Scott Havens, Global Head of Digital and Media Distribution, Bloomberg Media, this year’s summit focused on key themes impacting the evolving global media landscape, including business models of the future, how to finance a rapidly changing industry and media’s opportunities and obstacles in The Fourth Industrial Revolution.

    Participants will also hear from a group of young disruptors on their experiences and predictions about the future of African media.

    minister
    Their Honorable Dora Siliya, Minister for Information and Broadcasting Services, Zambia.

    “As African economies continue to grow and play an increasing role in the global economy, the need for robust, accurate business journalism and financial analysis is more important than ever before,” Matthew Winkler, Co-Founder and Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, Bloomberg News said.

    “Every year, this summit leads to dynamic and engaging discussions about the current state and future of African media; I am looking forward to participating in these conversations over the coming days.”

    Speakers at this year’s convening include media owners, senior editors, investors, business leaders, government officials and community leaders from countries across the continent and beyond, including: Angola, Botswana, Ethiopia, Ghana, Madagascar, Mali, Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda, U.S.A. and Zambia.  Honorable Dora Siliya, Minister for Information and Broadcasting Services, Zambia, opened Monday’s program with a welcome address.

    “We are pleased to host Bloomberg’s Africa Business Media Innovators summit here in Zambia,” said Honorable Dora Siliya, Minister for Information and Broadcasting Services, Zambia.  “As Zambian and African economies continue to evolve and grow more complex, it is key that journalism across the continent develops accordingly. I believe in the transformative power of the media and I am confident that the conversations taking place today and tomorrow will help us continue to drive growth.”

    The latest edition of ABMI follows successful gatherings in Ghana (2017), Kenya (2016) and South Africa (2015), where international media owners and operators, investors and government officials addressed the importance of a robust financial journalism sector and the value of data and data-related technologies to drive international investment and economic growth.

    The annual event series is a component of the Bloomberg Media Initiative Africa (BMIA), a pan-African program launched by Michael R. Bloomberg to strengthen media capacity, promote innovation in the sector and improve access to high-quality data and information on the continent.

  • ACCW: First Bank unleashes killer squad on Africa

    Nigeria and FIBA Zone Three champions, First Bank Basketball Club have named a squad capable of winning the title at the FIBA Africa Champions Cup for Women, which begins today (Friday) in Maputo, Mozambique.

    Six players that did Nigeria proud at the Women World Cup in Spain were named in the squad. They are Sarah Ogoke-Ejiogu, Aisha Mohammed, Nwajei Jasmine and Okoye Cecilia, Nkechi Akashile and Nkem Akaraiwe.

    Others are Deborah Nwakamma, Mary Isuambuk, Okoro Ifunaya, Ewaoche Ojoma, Green Malaika and Mfutila Makiese.

    The experience of the players who played in Spain would come in handy while the others are expected to provide the support that would propel the team to victory. Coach Peter Ahmedu stated that the squad was careful blended to give it a chance of winning the title this year.

    Ahmedu noted that the players know the enormity of the task ahead, adding that the experience players were brought into the team to make it formidable. “Most of the players have played at levels higher than this one so I am sure they can deliver when it matters most.

    “We have players who propelled the D’Tigress to the eighth place finish at the last World Cup in Spain and I am sure they will bring their experience to bear when the going gets tough. It won’t be an easy ride, but I am sure if we get our acts together we will achieve our goal,” Ahmedu added.

    The team into the championship on the heels of two winning performance in the Zenith Women Basketball League and the FIBA Africa Zone Three Championship in Cotonou, Benin Republic. However, the coach stated that those tournaments were used to prepare the team for the African Championship.

    “Its good to win the league back home and the Zone Three Championship, but this is the main thing. And after taking the team to two third place finish. I pray that we strike gold this time,” Ahmedu added.

  • ‘Africa needs about $170b yearly to fund devt’

    Nigeria and other African countries need between $130 billion and $170 billion a year to fund their critical development needs, the African Development Bank (AfDB) said at the weekend.

    The bank said due to tightening budgets, traditional funding sources such as national governments and development institutions such as the bank alone are unable to meet Africa’s capital needs.

    Its President, Akinwumi Adesina, who spoke at the opening ceremony of the “Africa Investment Forum” in Johannesburg, South Africa, at the weekend urged investors to join the partnership platform offered by the Forum and “grab the chance to fast track the continent’s investment and development agenda.”

    The Forum recognised that African businesses are rapidly growing in number and sophistication, presenting excellent investment opportunities with relatively high returns.

    However, the challenge of positioning themselves for consideration in front of institutional investors and global corporates remains.

    The Forum was, therefore, part of a much bigger drive by the AfDB to tap into the vast pool of global capital to fund its ambitious plan to transform Africa.

    The inaugural Africa Investment Forum curetted a total pipeline of 230 projects worth over $208 billion spanning several sectors – energy, infrastructure, transport and utilities, industry, agriculture, ICT and Telecoms, water and sanitation and health and education.

    It also included a co-guarantee platform that will develop and deploy innovative instruments to de-risk private sector investments at scale, thus boosting investor confidence.

    Adesina’s message on the first day of the Forum titled: “Delivering as One for Africa” was a clarion call to regional and global investors, financial sector leaders and prominent government officials. “We must fast-track Agenda 2063,” he urged, adding, “We are impatient to get there.”

    The Bank’s partners acknowledged that with all the multilateral institutions in the Africa Room auditorium of the Sandton Convention Centre, venue of the conference, they had the capital needed to tilt the investment balance and channel much needed investments into Africa.

    The Africa Investment Forum was the first ever transaction-based Forum. “This is not an event. It is a platform where governments, private sector, investors, and project promoters come together. We develop quality bankable projects, de-risk them and actually make sure it happens,” Adesina said.

    He stated that the Bank was committed to fast-track development. “We know countries do not develop from aid, but by the discipline of investment. We require broad-based partnerships and collective effort with the private sector and institutional investors,” Adesina noted.

  • Two children die after migrant boat sinks

    Two children died after a boat carrying migrants sank just 50 meters off Turkey’s western coast near Bodrum on Monday, the coastguard said.

    Seventeen people on the boat were rescued from the sea and seventeen others were found on the shore, the coastguard said.

    Reuters television footage from the scene showed attempts being made to resuscitate a girl on the beach and an unconscious child being carried from the water to a nearby ambulance.

    The coastguard did not specify the migrants’ nationalities.

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    Two children later died at hospital, he said, adding that search and rescue activities were continuing.

    Turkey became one of the main launch points for more than a million migrants taking the sea route to EU territory in 2015, many fleeing conflict and poverty in the Middle East and Africa.

    The influx of migrants was drastically curtailed by a 2016 accord between Ankara and the EU, after hundreds died crossing to Greek islands a few miles off the Turkish shore.

    Mediterranean arrivals to the bloc, including refugees making the longer and more perilous crossing from North Africa to Italy, totaled 172,301 in 2017, down from 362,753 in 2016 and 1,015,078 in 2015, according to UN data.

    NAN

  • Africa is ‘on the rise’, says UN chief

    Africa is “on the move and on the rise” with communities coming together to resolve their problems and offer mutual support, UN Secretary-General António Guterres has said.

    Guterres, while addressing the inaugural Africa Dialogue Series at the UN Headquarters, in New York, urged collaboration among African countries for better future.

    The UN chief urged everyone with a stake in Africa’s success to seize the new opportunities and work together with people on the continent for the common good.

    He, however, said alongside the progress and resilience, on the back of stability and improved governance, parts of Africa remained fragile with challenges to overcome.

    The two-day series focused on the nexus between peace, security, human rights, humanitarian and development in the continent, and replaced Africa Week, which was launched in 2010.

    “The volatility of financial markets, the looming trade conflicts, and high levels of debt in some countries are causing concern over economies that may be vulnerable to shocks.

    “The widening impacts of climate change will create additional strains in the years ahead.

    “Inclusive, sustainable development in Africa is a goal unto itself. It is also a leading tool to prevent conflict and crises,” the UN chief added.

    On sustainable development, the Secretary-General noted the synergies between the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the AU’s Agenda 2063.

    On the UN-AU partnership on peace and security, Guterres cited examples from the Central African Republic and South Sudan where UN is working closely with African-led initiatives.

    “I will continue to advocate strongly for predictable, sustained and flexible financing for AU-led peace support operations authorised by the Security Council.

    “These operations are contributing to global security and deserve multilateral support,” he said.

    Briefing on the theme of the dialogue and expected outcomes, Bience Gawanas, the UN Special Adviser on Africa, said that the Dialogue “bears testimony of the desire to engage with the UN to realise a prosperous and peaceful Africa”.

    “Africa is changing and it is seeking to achieve peace, prosperity and socio-economic transformation,” Gawanas said.

    Ms María Espinosa, the President of the 73rd Session of the General Assembly, highlighted the central role of Africa in the multilateral system.

    Espinosa highlighted the importance of stronger and more collaborative efforts between the AU and the UN, saying such efforts will strengthen multilateralism.

    She also noted the revitalisation processes at the two institutions and expressed hope that the end result will allow them to “work together on behalf of all people”.

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    Similarly, Ms Inga King, the President of the Economic and Social Council, underlined the importance of synergies between UN’s 2030 Agenda and Agenda 2063 of the AU.

    “The Economic and Social Council has an important role to play in sustaining peace and promoting sustainable development in Africa,” she said.

    King noted the body’s collaboration with other entities of the UN system and beyond.

    Also speaking at the Dialogue, Sacha Llorenty, the Permanent Representative of Bolivia and the President of the Security Council for the month of October, spoke of the link between peace, security and development.

    He also said that partnerships were critical to overcome challenges in the continent, as illustrated by the G5 Sahel Joint Task Force and the UN-AU Mission in Darfur.

  • ‘Why Africa lacks capacity to solve its problem’

    The causes of widespread poverty and development challenges facing most of the African countries go beyond systemic corruption and nepotism, Dr. Tosin Ajayi, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Africa Future Limited, has said.

    Ajayi, a medical doctor of over four decade professional experience, linked the root of the Africa’s problems to what he called lack of normal human intelligence, noting that Africans’ inability to engage in deductive reasoning and abstract thinking resulted in low intellectual capacity. This, he said, has led to inability of Africans to generate local solutions to problems bedeviling the continent.

    Ajayi, who is also the chairman First Foundation, spoke at the weekly meeting of Rotary Club of District 9110, comprising the club members from Akowonjo area of Lagos. The meeting was held at Lagos Airport Hotel in Ikeja.

    Speaking on the theme: Human Life in Africa, Ajayi said: “The causes of Africa’s underdevelopment are not only corruption and nepotism as widely believed. There is lack of normal human intelligence among Africans, which resulted from inability to engage in deductive reasoning and abstract thinking like our peers in the developed world. There is a connection between low intellectual capacity observed in African and lack of normal human intelligence. This has made it impossible for Africans to think about solutions to the problem we face as a people.”

    Rather than engaging in critical thinking and long-term planning of resources to drive its development, the physician said Africans developed the habit of committing every problem they face in the hand of God. This, he said, has left the continent at the mercy of poverty and diseases.

    He said: “Instead of planning and thinking solutions, Africans commit their problems to God and expect the Supreme Being to come down and solve the problems which God has given humans the capacity to solve. There is no set of human beings living with such mentality that can lead the world. The West and developed countries in Asia used their intellectual capacities to drive their people out of poverty. In Africa, we rather pray than think.”

    Proffering the way out of African’s development quagmire, Ajayi said African leaders must invest in two key areas – education and quality healthcare – to lead the continent to the future it deserves.

    He said: “Next generation of Africans must be free from diseases that threaten the existence of the people on the continent. If children are infected with virus and micro-organisms, they will not be able to think about the solution to problems Africa is facing. From the period of pregnancy, children must be well-fortified with micronutrients to make their brains well-developed.

    “Education develops the minds. To make Africa survive its challenges, minds must be developed to proffer solutions to real challenges we face. I believe quality education will bridge the developmental gap currently slowing down the progress of Africa and making a backward continent.”

    The club’s district president, Ms Bisi Taiwo, said the aim of the weekly lecture was to expose members to “noble cause” that would improve their culture of selfless service.

  • How to end illicit financial flow from Africa, by Mbeki, Malami, Ahmed, others

    FORMER South African President Thabo Mbeki, Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice Abubakar Malami (SAN), Minister of Finance Zainab Ahmed and others have suggested ways of curbing illicit financial flows (IFF) out of the continent.

    They argued that the fight against the illicit outflow of funds from Africa could only be effectively contained by local initiatives driven by African states.

    They also suggested the strengthening of existing anti-corruption institutions, creation of new ones and the enactment of relevant laws to ensure that those who steal public funds in the continents were denied the opportunity to benefit from their crimes.

    Mbeki, Malami, Ahmed; Executive Chairman, Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) Babatunde Fowler and Executive Secretary, Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC) Prof. Bolaji Owasanoye spoke in Abuja on yesterday at the inter-ministerial meeting with African Union High Level Panel on Illicit Financial flow from Africa.

    Mbeki, who is the Chairman of the African Union High Level Panel on Illicit Financial Flows from Africa, said by his panel’s finding, the continent loses at least $80 billion annually in outflow of illicit funds.

    He added: “That is a lot of money. It is a challenge, therefore, that we need to respond to that to see that we retain as much of these resources as possible on the continent to be able to address more effectively, these challenges of development that we face.”

    The former South African President, who hailed the decision African heads of state, who through the African Union, initiated the move to combat the illegal movement of funds from the continent, said there was the need to collaborate with foreign nations on the issue.

    Malami, who highlighted Nigeria’s efforts at curbing corruption and illicit flow of funds, called for collaborative efforts among all countries to make the crimes unattractive to those engaging in it.

    He said: “There should be collaboration to make it difficult for corrupt elements to succeed. How do we do that? To ensure that at the end of the day, we make it difficult for these corrupt elements to take benefit of the proceeds of corruption; make it difficult for corrupt elements to move freely?

    “That makes a mutual collaboration in term of visa restriction, restriction on investment with illicit funds and proceeds of corruption.”

    He hailed the Mbeki panel for its visit to Nigeria, which he said was timely in view of the urgent need for international collaboration to curb the challenge of unlawful exportation of funds from Africa.

    Mrs. Ahmed, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Finance, Mahmoud Isa-Dutse, said the Federal Government was committed to eradicating illicit financial flows.

    Owasanoye, who equally acknowledged Nigeria’s efforts at curbing the theft of public funds, said emphasis should be on implementation.

     

  • Why Africa has just one profitable airline

    It took several years of negotiations for Fastjet, a low-cost private airline based in Tanzania, to get the traffic rights to fly between Harare and Bulawayo this July. The flying distance between these two major cities in Zimbabwe is about 228 miles—a 45-minute trip. Worse still, it had originally taken three years for fastjet to begin its operations in Zimbabwe, let alone dare to expand its domestic flights in the country.

    This is not unique to Zimbabwe, either. Many African countries restrict their airspaces to prop up state-owned air carriers. That is why it is notoriously difficult for private airlines to succeed in Africa. They are quite literally de-winged before they even has a chance to explore the skies due to protectionism, high taxes, and restrictive regulations. New airlines are prevented from entering the market, existing companies are unable to offer flights of their choice, routes are predetermined, and prices are inflated. These restrictive policies originated in the early 1960s when many newly-independent African states created national airlines to assert their status as nations.

    But these national airlines offer little to be proud of. The majority of state-owned airlines have failed, not being able to make enough revenue to cover their costs. Today, there are only three major sub-Saharan intercontinental airlines: Kenya Airways, Ethiopian Airlines, and South African Airways. The only profitable one is Ethiopian Airlines (it’s not managed by the government), but the others incur hundreds of millions in losses every year, and survive on government bailouts.

    Besides the overwhelming evidence that state-owned airlines waste resources, costing the continent millions of jobs and billions in revenue, the dream just won’t die. There are initiatives to re-boost defunct carriers across the continent, including Nigeria, Uganda and Zambia. The worst part of the disastrous state of African skies is that for the last 50years, there have been multilateral agreements in place that could transform aviation on the continent. They only need implementation.

    Fifty years ago, the newly-independent African nations founded the African Airlines Association (AFRAA). Created to facilitate the integration of African skies and make African airlines more globally competitive, AFRAA is no closer to that goal today than it was in 1968. African governments just can’t seem to be able to stop getting in their own way.

    “How can we liberalise airlines when we are overtaxing them?” asked Elijah Chingosho, then-Secretary General of AFRAA, at the Aviation Africa summit in Kigali, Rwanda in 2017.

    Indeed, African politicians are particularly skilled at attending summits on the urgent need for freedom in aviation, while having no will to implement them.

    In 1988, 20years after the creation of AAFRA, African states signed the Yamoussoukro Decision, a multilateral agreement with 44 signatories, to liberate African skies. In 2018, this agreement has not yet been implemented. In fact, earlier this year, the Yamoussoukro Decision was replaced by yet another agreement that will likely not be implemented, the so-called Single African Air Transport Market (SAATM). Launched in January 2018, SAATM has the same noble goals of opening up Africa’s skies. Except this time, instead of the 44 signatories from 30 years ago, only 23 states bothered to make the commitment.

    While generations upon generations of African leaders continue to shake hands, sign agreements and smile for the cameras, the continent pays dearly for it.

    Air transport plays a critical role in facilitating business, international trade and tourism. When governments regulate airline industries to buttress national carriers, private sector innovation is hampered. In African skies, safety is subpar, sometimes deadly, routes are circuitous—one often has to fly through Europe or the Middle East just to get from one African city to the next, fares are expensive, and airport landing costs are incredibly high. Africa as a whole only has about two percent of global passenger traffic. Regulations might prop up national carriers and buttress some misguided sense of national pride, but they tear down African economies.

    The lack of freedom in African aviation costs the continent millions of jobs and billions of dollars are lost in investment every year. With deregulation, there would be increased competition and improved connectivity leading to lower transport costs and encouraging smoother trade flows. According to the International Air Transport Association (IATA), air cargo represents more than 35 per cent of global trade by value. Africa only captures 1.9 percent of air freight market.

    It doesn’t have to be this way.

    Africa already has the policies written out. If nations would only implement them, it would be a transformative experience for passengers and businesses, as it was for Europe and the United States (US).

    In 1978, President Jimmy Carter signed the Airline Deregulation Act, which somewhat freed the American airline industry, hitherto regulated like a public utility. Through deregulation, Southwest, which had been forbidden from flying outside Texas, was free to offer its then-unique shorthaul, low-priced service on an interstate basis, paving the way for the development of low cost carriers. In Europe, Ryanair was only able to compete freely and inspire new carriers to enter the market, because the EU completed the “open skies” deregulation in 1997.

    Today, a typical European or American traveler, has a range of options for air travel. They could choose the low-cost, no-frills service of carriers like Southwest, JetBlue or Ryanair, or the more luxurious services of a Virgin Atlantic or Delta Airline. Air travel is no longer confined to the wealthy because deregulation helped create affordable and efficient options for everyone.

    If African states want to be competitive in a modern economy, they’d do well to let go of such vanity projects as national airlines, and implement 50years worth of liberalisation accords.

    After that, they’d have nothing to do besides step back and let entrepreneurs finally do the work that states have been blocking.

     

    • Stacy is a senior fellow at AfricanLiberty.org, a platform for advancing individual freedom, peace, and prosperity in Africa
  • Nodash’s ‘The Delivery Boy’ applauded at Lights, Camera, Africa

    Nodash’s latest movie, ‘Delivery Boy’ was well-received my festival goers as it made its Nigerian debut at the Lights, Camera, Africa 2018 film festival which ended on Sunday.

    Movie watchers were left in awes and shrieks as the movie which highlighted social issues like selling of children, homosexuality, radicalisation, terrorism, prostitution screened at the Agip Recital Hall of the MUSON Centre, Onikan, Lagos on Saturday.

    Shot by The Elite Film Team and produced by Something Unusual Studios, ‘The Delivery Boy’ has been screened at the Nollywood Paris Film Festival and at the New York African Film Festival in May.

    In the movie, Amir, a teenage orphan boy, runs into a young girl while trying to escape a mob. She is a prostitute with an agenda and he has a bomb vest under his dress. They are both running out of time and they soon realise they need each other to achieve their goals. Before the night ends, they will have to contend with each other, Amir’s group, the knowledge of the terrible secrets that made them who they are, and the consequences of living in a society that doesn’t care. Their journey takes them through the underbelly of the city exposing the hidden backside of the African society and its dangerous culture of silence in the presence of evil.

    Shot in 2015 and 2016, the movie poignantly situates scenarios the country is currently enmeshed in. According to the director, Adekunle Adejuyigbe, who is popularly known as Nodash in Nollywood, the movie which gulped over N4.5m was a labour of love to tell unpopular stories.

    “I was told not to make this movie,” said Nodash.

    “Three of the actors I casted, and the production designer I hired, turned down the project after reading the script. They all agreed it was a good script but they felt uncomfortable talking about the things that, in the Nigerian society, we typically refuse to talk about.

    “On the financial side of things people felt it was crazy making a self-funded movie that would likely not be allowed to screen in Nigerian cinemas. They felt it was more prudent to make the usual slapstick comedies the Nigerian film industry (Nollywood) was known for.

    “But these are the exact reasons why I felt it was important to make the movie. I believe one of the main purposes of Art is to ‘tour guide’ the audience through ideas and places that they normally wouldn’t dare explore. I also wanted to present Nigerians/ Africans as I saw them.

    “So why would a young suicide bomber runaway a night before a suicide mission taking the bomb vest with him? And why would a young prostitute agree to help him on his unknown, personal, mission.

    “Who is responsible for creating these monsters that haunt us? And how would this story end? These are the questions THE DELIVERY BOY seeks to answer.”

  • Lagos to be among top three tourism destinations in Africa:Steve Ayorinde

    The Lagos State Commissioner for Tourism, Arts and Culture, Mr. Steve Ayorinde, has said the state in the past few years has demonstrated commitment to the business of tourism and promotion of arts, culture and entertainment as part of its growth strategy. Ayorinde was speaking as part of the activities to mark the World Tourism Day. He said the state was happy to further propel its tourism and creative economy agenda with a brand new tourism master-plan, the first of its kind by any state in Nigeria.

    He said: “Lagos State government is in tune with the world to mark this day which is celebrated globally as the World Tourism Day. We have always acknowledged this day and this year has Budapest in Hungary as the ‘host celebrant nation’  with technology and digital transformation as its focus. This theme is pleasing to us as it speaks to our current short to medium term plans for tourism development.

    “We are marking the day with the formal presentation of the Lagos State Tourism Master-plan to Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and we are having a round table in-house to unveil the master-plan to our officers because this is the plank upon which the tourism promotions agenda of the state for the next 20 years will be anchored. The formal presentation of the master-plan to stakeholders and CEOs of 100 top brands and multinationals who are expected to be our key partners in the tourism growth agenda will be done later next month.”

    On whether the state needs the tourism master plan, he said: “We are convinced that we do. In every nation where tourism has thrived, a blueprint is always required. Your vision must be clear and you need a roadmap to drive it. This is what a master-plan does; it identifies what you need to do and how to do it. This is similar to what Lagos State has achieved in the political-economy space. Asiwaju Bola Tinubu conceived the idea of a Lagos State Development Plan. Governor Fashola berths it in 2012 and handed it over to Governor Ambode. This is what the state is running with till 2025. The tourism master-plan will work in a similar fashion with one governor handing it over to his successor while the deliverables are attended to in order to diversify the economy and create a good image for the state.”

    Ayorinde also spoke on the input of the Federal Government. “The master-plan was commissioned directly by the Lagos State government and it is a blueprint that focuses largely on specific areas of need for the state. But in execution, yes it will have a lot to do with Abuja, other states and the private sector.

    “The truth is that you can’t market a state in isolation. You will always be a component of a big, beautiful and diverse country that we really are. Issues of national carriers; ideal airports, visa on arrival and courteous consular officers representing the country all over the world are exclusively within the federal purview. But we are lucky in Lagos that the two people running tourism at the federal level – the Honourable Minister and Director General of Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation are both Lagos products who have the interest of the state at heart.

    “We enjoy a very cordial relationshipwith them and we are always happy to key into their efforts at promoting the tourism and cultural landscape of Nigeria as a whole,” he said.

    Ayorinde also spoke on the tourism vision of Lagos.  “We want to make Lagos State one of the top three tourism destinations in Africa. We are there already as a business and entertainment hub. But as a leisure travel destination, we need to work a lot harder to climb high in ranking for both domestic and international tourists. This  is why our ministry is saddled with the responsibility to formulate, execute and monitor policies relating to the tourism sector and the creative economy in general. The ministry also promotes investments and regulates operations in the tourism, hospitality and entertainment industries in the state.

    “First we have adopted the popular buzzword coined by the governor himself – Tourism, Hospitality Entertainment and Sports for Excellence (T.H.E.S.E) as our focus. In three years, the ministry is fulfilling its mandate creditably well; changing the profile of Lagos into that of a city with a vibrant artistic soul. The state’s landscape is being beautified daily with iconic statues and public art installations that have engaged a wide spectrum of Nigerian artists.

    “Six new 500-seater theatres are being built simultaneously across the state to expand the frontiers of opportunity for talented youths; four out of the six will be opened this December; the Onikan-Marina axis is being turned into an arts and culture district with its first major offering, the J.K Randle Centre for Yoruba Culture and History nearing completion. The Lagos Museum project within the same district will soon commence with a grant from Ford Foundation and strategic partnership from the Musee du quai Branly in Paris and the British Museum.”

    The former Commissioner for Information added: “Our ministry conceptualised and has supervised since December 2015 the popular One Lagos Fiesta which has become arguably the biggest end-of-the-year concert in Africa with its unique template of holding simultaneously across the five divisions of Lagos in the last eight days of the year. If you consider that up till 2014, the LagosCountdown was a one-day, one venue affair, but in three years, One Lagos Fiesta is fulfilling two major obligations – democratising and decentralising the idea of fun and entertainment and giving every part of Lagos a sense of belonging you will appreciate why OLF has become a significant part of our socio-economic service to the people. Similarly, more artists are engaged and given the opportunity to perform at Ikeja, Badagry, Epe and Ikorodu in addition to Bar Beach and in the process we are creating a whole new economy around those towns for eight consecutive days. Also, with a Calendar of Arts Events released in January to aid planning and visits around the state, our ministry believes we will always give visitors a reason to spend an extra day or two in exploring this smart mega city that is full of fun, art and cultural enterprise.

    Explaining how Lagos can tap into the competitive edge the state has in water, Ayorinde said: “I think aqua tourism has always been an important and recognisable component of the tourism eco-system in Lagos State. And it ought to be so because water constitutes about 22.5% of the land mass of the state. So the state is keenly aware of its God-given gift – the lagoon and the Atlantic Ocean. The Prest Boat Cruise for example has promoted water tourism on the lagoon in the last 15 years or so.

    “Several other cruise packages have been added in the last three to five years. And because of the huge awareness and serious commitment of this administration to everything tourism, several business concerns are adding to the water tourism component of the sector. The Lagos Boat Club is growing and as you must have heard, the governor recognises and supports its contribution to the development of the sector.

    “From La Campaigne Tropicana in Ikegun to Ilashe Beachfront and Inagbe waterfront resorts, awareness and investments are growing in the area of water tourism. On the part of government too, this administration has maintained the annual Boat Regatta carnival among several other initiatives.”