Tag: African Union (AU)

  • IDPs to feature in reality show

    IDPs to feature in reality show

    A movie production company,Virtues and Noble Touch Nigeria (VNT) has concluded plans to feature Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in its forthcoming Television Reality Show.

    The Executive Producer, Mr Emmanuel Eyaba, who visited some IDPs camps in Abuja on Wednesday for auditions, said that the aim was to give them a new identity.

    The audition was done in collaboration with the African Union (AU).

    The talent programme tagged; “Unleash Your Creativity’’ also known as “UUC Nigeria’’, is aimed at creating a platform for young adults interested in the movie industry to showcase their abilities.

    The zonal auditions which successfully held in Kano, Kaduna, Adamawa, Port Harcourt, Enugu and Lagos.

    Eyaba said that he decided to include the youth among the IDPs in the programme to give them a sense of belonging.

    “I see the term ‘IDPs’ to be stigmatising and I do not like how that comes about.

    “We all are victims of circumstances in various ways, but we are all given different opportunities to succeed so they need this to reprogramme their thinking and approach to life.

    “Instead of distributing items, rice and foodstuff, I think it is better for us to develop their skills and develop their passion in acting,’’ he said.

    According to him, we decided to include them in this talent hunt so that they can develop their skills in script writing, acting, singing, directing, producing or makeup.

    “These developed skills will give them the ability to make a name in Nollywood and give them the ability to care for themselves and family members as well.

    “We are looking for 60 contestants and a minimum of 10 are to be picked from the IDPs camps.

    “The lucky ones will be taken to our camp in Abuja for  two-weeks training where they will be trained by Nigerian celebrities like Desmond Elliot, Segun Arinze, Uche Jombo and more,’’ Eyaba said.

    Also speaking, Mr Anu Fame, the Head of Productions, said those selected would be moved to the company’s camp in December where they would be exposed to special training.

    “They are expected to produce short films while in the camp which will run for 14 days and the films will later be premiered in Genesis Cinema and critique by professionals.

    “The emerging winner will work with AU on a project they are currently preparing aimed at encouraging peace in Africa.

    “So far, the auditions have been good and we are really impressed with those we have seen,’’ Fame said.

  • FG moves against use of chemical weapon

    The Federal Government is taking steps to prevent use of chemical weapons for insurgency and militancy in the country.

    Apart from banning unneeded dangerous chemicals from coming into the country, the government is also monitoring the use of dangerous chemicals needed for other legitimate use in Nigeria.

    The Acting Director General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Mrs. Yetunde Oni and the Permanent Secretary of Political and Economic Affairs in the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and Chairman of the NAC/BWC Office, Ambassador Olukunle Bamgbose, disclosed the new move in Abuja on Monday.

    They spoke during an international workshop on Assistance and Protection Against Chemical Weapons” organised by the National Authority on Chemical and Biological Weapons Conventions Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF), the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), the African Union (AU) and Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

    Oni said: “You are aware NAFDAC is not solely meant for food and drugs alone, we also control chemicals. In a bit to do what is expected of us in ensuring the chemicals are used for the purpose for which they are meant, NAFDAC restructured and we established the chemical evaluation and research directorate. The onus is on this directorate to ensure that whoever is bringing in the chemicals is given a checklist.”

    According to her, there is increasing evidences that chemical can contribute to health, environmental and security problems at various stages during their life-cycle from production, import and disposal.

    Bamgbose said that the event seek to identify and bridge the gaps in the implementation of the Chemical Weapon Control and proffer improvement.

    The workshop, he said, is also to evolve a National Action Plan to guide and regulate the use and threat to the use of chemical weapons in Nigeria among others threats.

    The ECOWAS Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace and Security, Mrs. Halima Ahmed warned the Federal Government against ignoring the possibility of the Boko Haram and Niger-Delta militants using biological and chemical weapons for terrorism.

    She said: “ECOWAS is committed to ensuring that chemical and biological weapons threats are not allowed with the consequences of their usage in Syria and other parts of Middle Eat. On no account should Boko Haram insurgents and Niger Delta militants be allowed to have access to chemical and biological weapons in Nigeria or other terror groups in Africa.”

    The Director General, Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) represented by the Project Officer, Assistance and Protection of the organisation Esmel Oscar Meless urged the domestication of all legal instruments to prohibit usage of chemical and biological weapons  in West Africa and Africa.

  • Senate seeks immediate teaching of history, civic education in schools

    Senate seeks immediate teaching of history, civic education in schools

    The Senate Tuesday resolved to ask the Federal Government to implement the immediate inclusion of history and civic education in the curriculum of secondary schools in the country.

    The upper chamber reasoned that the teaching of history and civic education would inculcate the spirit of Pan Africanism in youths.

    The lawmakers also urged the African Union (AU) to set aside a day for the celebration of former President of Nigeria, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe and other Pan Africanists.

    This followed the consideration and adoption of a motion entitled “Need to include Pan-Africanism in Nigerian secondary school curriculum” sponsored by Senator Shehu Sani, (Kaduna Central)

    The lawmakers noted that the struggle for unity in Africa as championed by the founding fathers of the continent was fast evaporating the psych of Nigerian youths.

    Senator Sani drew the attention of his colleagues to what he called the rapid evaporation of spirit of Pan Africanism in the mind of the youths.

    He noted that the inclusion of Pan Africanism in schools will “ensure that we do not voluntarily surrender the dream of the founding fathers of Africa.”

    Senator Sani told his colleagues that the dreams of these founding fathers may disappear if the children are not inspired about pan Africanism.

    He said “Nigeria as the giant of Africa which has helped many countries to attain self-rule, there is the need to include the spirit of Pan Africanism in Nigerian child to be nurtured in a manner that we can continue to be our brother keepers.”

    The lawmakers adopted the prayer that a day should be set aside in the country and other African countries for the celebration of the founding fathers of the continent.

  • AU to help end post-poll tension in Gabon

    The African Union (AU) has reaffirmed its readiness to contribute towards the search for a solution to post-election tension in Gabon.

    Chadian President Idriss Deby, current Chairman of the Union, said on Tuesday in Addis Ababa that this move has become imperative because he has continued to follow, with renewed attention, the evolution of the situation in Gabon.

    “There must be immediate solution following the announcement on August 31 of the provisional results of the presidential election held on August 27.

    “In this regard, I have maintained a constant liaison with the Gabonese main actors, as well as with other stakeholders concerned,’’ he said.

    The Chairman of the Union reaffirmed the readiness of AU, with the support of the countries of the region and partners concerned, to assist the parties in Gabon in their search for a rapid settlement to the post-election crisis that prevailed in their country.

    He promised that the move would be in strict respect of the constitutional and legal provisions, as well as in the light of the relevant AU instruments on democracy and elections.

    Deby stressed that a high-level delegation comprised of African Heads of State, accompanied by senior officials of the AU Commission and the UN, is ready to be dispatched to Libreville, as soon as the conditions for such a visit are met.

    Local media reported that protesters took to the streets of Libreville late Wednesday after poll results showed that president Ali Bongo Ondimba narrowly won re-election in a vote the opposition said was stolen.

    Reports say demonstrators attacked the parliament building and clashed with police, leaving over 1,000 of them arrested.

     

  • Buhari’s anti-graft battle not one-sided, says Osinbajo

    Buhari’s anti-graft battle not one-sided, says Osinbajo

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Monday declared that the fight against corruption under the current administration is not one-sided.

    A statement issued on Tuesday night by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, said that the Vice President made the remark while speaking with journalists at the end of the 27th Ordinary session of the African Union (AU) in Kigali, Rwanda.

    According to Osinbajo, corruption in the country is being looked at from all possible facets.

    He said: “I think it’s entirely absurd, I think that view is absurd and without foundation or basis whatsoever. We look at corruption from all possible facets.

    “If you look at for example, corruption on the military, from military procurement, obviously the only individuals responsible for that could be persons who had held office within the period in question and that has been done and clearly the opposition was not in the office at that time.

    “Those who were in the office were not necessarily opposition individuals. These were Service Chiefs and other personnel who had served for a while.

    “The other issues for example is the fraud and the corruption that is associated with large sums of money given out by the past National Security Adviser which went to several political figures and again these were large huge sums of money, over 2 billion US Dollars and the sheet size and the enormity of what we are talking about,  must not be diminished in anyway or trivialised in anyway by any suggestion that it is partisan. How? in what way?” he queried.

    He said that those who made the suggestion that the anti-corruption fight is one-sided only want to trivialise a very important programme of the government.

    The allegation, he said, is aimed at working against the strong effort of the government to recover huge sums of money that have been stolen from Nigeria.

  • Culture as stamp of identity

    Culture as stamp of identity

    Recently, African culture eggheads met in Ethiopia at the instance of the African Union (AU) to remind Africans both home and abroad that culture is necessary for human and physical developments. Edozie Udeze writes on the imperativeness of this timely intervention

    Pan-Africanists, African scholars and culture technocrats have always maintained that African peoples wherever they are should not discard their norms and traditional values. All those positive cultural elements that bind the people together and give them leverage over other continents of the world should be kept and projected in order to make the continent of Africa and it crop of leaders excel and perform better.

    These and more were the issues raised in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, recently when a crop of African culture eggheads and technocrats met to discuss ways to use peoples’ cultural values and heritage to turn the continent towards meaningful development and advancement. The conference, termed the 3rd Pan-African Cultural Congress (PACC3), was organised by the African Union (AU) and held in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital.

    The central concern of those at the helm of cultural affairs in Africa is that globalisation should not be allowed to distract the people from those positive issues that have been good for the welfare of the African peoples. “Globalisation ofers great opportunities, but its benefits at present are unevenly shared… And of course, persistent inequalities and struggles over scarce resources are among the key determinants of situation of conflicts, hunger, insecurity and violence which in turn are key factors that hold back human development and efforts to achieve sustainable development,” one of the official sources said.

    Using culture as a predicate, the youths in particular, should be taught the culture of respect, honesty, handwork, diligence, love for their own dressing and traditions, and the need to be proud of what is their own. This was why in his paper titled Cultural Pan-Africanism as pillar for sustainable development in Africa, Professor Tunde Babawale of the Centre For Black and African Arts and Civilisation, (CBAAC) made it abundantly clear that if culture is the totality of the way of life of a people, that same culture must be used by the people to maintain distinct identity and behaviour.

    “This same culture,” as Babawale pointed out, “ought to be dynamic and should give order and meaning to the social, political, economic, aesthetic and religious practices of the people. Culture, therefore, gives people distinct image different from others. In other words, culture manifests in people’s ideals and ideas, beliefs and values, folklore, environment, science and technology and in the forms of their political, social and economic institutions. Equally, it is usually revealed in the aesthetic quality and humanistic dimensions of literature, music, drama, architecture, carvings, paintings and other artistic forms.”

    Babawale’s contention is that since the primary essence of culture shares almost some semblances, there is also a common agreement that culture is a preserve of human beings alone. Therefore, other creatures, though with their peculiar behaviour, are incapable of exuding culture. And if people can learn and share culture from one another, there is the urgent need to discard what is bad and incorporate what is needful to move forward. “Consequently, culture is as important to man as his existence. But for culture and its transfer, the contemporary world would not have been able to connect with its past and would have lost all vital knowledge that remain useful to the basic means of human survival,” he said further.

    The general understanding is that the peoples of Africa should at all times stick to those beliefs and norms that are not opposed to human development in order to make their existence meaningful. The conference re-echoed UNESCO’s submission that no cultural values should be lost, or neglected or discarded. For, according to UNESCO, “culture is a source of identity, innovation and creativity, a set of distinctive spiritual and material, intellectual and emotional features of a society which encompasses complex web of meanings, relationships, values and so on that frame people’s relationship to the world.” Without culture, people have no focus, no bearing and meaning.

    In order to make all these work in a globalised world, Pan-Africanists and those who have chosen to champion the cause of the continent and its diverse peoples have to wake up this spirit of cultural renaissance.

    This is so, because Pan-Africanism is a movement of a group of people that seeks to unify African peoples or peoples living in Africa into a one African community.

    Indeed, the AU charter defines it “as a political and cultural phenomenon which regards Africa, African and African descendants abroad as a unit, and aims at the regeneration and unification of Africa and the promotion of a feeling of solidarity among the people of the African world.” And so for this perspective to take its proper shape, it behoves on these champions of the people to boldly mount the necessary campaigns to free the people from cultural imperialism that has drowned most Africans and made them alien to their beliefs.

    For there to be a sustainable development driven by the people’s cultural values, every African must first of all see his identity as being of the best quality. For culture, development and Pan-Africanism to work harmoniously well to usher in a new Africa, there has to be a synergy of purpose among these elements. Over the years, Pan-African cultural heads of departments and directors in their many international and local conferences have called for leaders to emulate the Asian Tigers in their attitude towards Asian values. UNESCO has always made it clear that no continent or a set of people can develop meaningfully well if they do not resort to and concentrate on what is their own by nature. Asians have come to command the respect and attention of the world simply because they have consistently stuck to the basic elements of their beliefs and norms.

    In a similar conference held in Brazil (20 – 23 August, 2012), and titled Heritage, identity, education and culture: management of historical sites related to the slave trade and slavery in Nigeria, the argument was that no cultural or historical heritage should be allowed to suffer the fate of neglect or abandonment.

    The Brazilian conference held in the historic city of Rio de Janeiro where slave trade had one of its strongest taproots canvassed the view that all the slave route sites in Nigeria have to be preserved for the sake of posterity. Holding brief for the nation and its efforts to keep the sites in place, Babawale had argued that people should be educated more on the whole essences of these sites in the lives of the society. “They are all important in all facets,” he noted.

    Beyond identifying the numerous sites in Nigeria, he directed attention to the efforts of government in preserving those of Badagry and Calabar which, he said, have made the two towns important historical centres. “Yes, Badagry town has a unique history. Apart from being a slave route and port, it was reputed to be the first place where Christianity was preached in Nigeria. The first storey building in Nigeria was also built there in 1845 and still stands on its original site. On the other hand, Calabar is reputed to be Nigeria’s first capital city. It boasts of the first secondary school in Eastern Nigeria; Hope Waddell Training Institution (1895) and had been recognised as an international sea port as far back as the 16th century,” he stated.

    In all, like the myriad of other fora, conferences and workshops held on the place of history, culture and people’s attitude to what is their own, it was generally agreed that renewed efforts have to be put in place to make Africans come to terms with their various historical heritage, traditions and norms. African development must be strong on cultural values.