Tag: Amina Mohammed

  • FG denies export racketeering allegations against Amina Mohammed

    FG denies export racketeering allegations against Amina Mohammed

    The Nigerian Government has denied the allegations of wood export racketeering to China levelled against UN Deputy Secretary-General Ms Amina Mohammed.

    The Minister of State for Environment, Mr Ibrahim Jibril, in a statement denied the allegations being widely circulated in the media against the ex-Minister of Environment.

    The statement read: “The report which contained spurious and unsubstantiated allegations against the former Minister, is a pure misrepresentation of facts, baseless and intended to smear not just Mrs Mohammed, but the Nigerian Government.

    “The Ministry of Environment wishes to state unequivocally that the ex-Minister is not under any probe whatsoever over any purported wrongdoing whether locally or internationally.

    “The ex-minister acted within the ambit of the law of both the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the protocols of International Environmental conventions while in office between November 2015 to February 2017”.

    The Nigerian Government noted for clarity the processes involved in issuing approvals for Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species in wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

    It said “potential exporters are required to apply to the Ministry” and for “inspection of factories and premises for compliance by wood experts”.

    The statement said qualified exporters were issued ‘Letters of Supports’, with ‘Invitation of the Ministry by the exporter for the stuffing of the containers”.

    The Ministry stated that all the CITES permits signed by the ex-minister were done in line with stringent guidance and procedures.

    “Specifically, Rosewood (Kosso) is under CITES Appendix II, which allows Sustainable Trade to improve the livelihood of people in line with International best practices.

    “For the records, the CITES permits signed by the ex-minister were in batches from August 2016 to January 2017.

    “In line with established Public Service norms, the ex-minister continued to perform her duties diligently up to the last minute of her last day in office in Feb. 24, 2017.”

    The ministry further stated that Mohammed, during her tenure as Minister of Environment, carried out far-reaching reforms in the environmental sector.

    It cited that of bringing Rosewood from unguided trade of CITES Appendix III to Appendix II, which sanitised the wood industry in Nigeria.

    It added that Mohammed “led the Review of Endangered Species Act, Convention on International Trade in Wild Fauna and Flora and duly signed by the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, on Dec. 30, 2016.”

    The Environmental Investigation Agency ( EIA ) had earlier claimed that the former Nigerian Minister might have benefited personally from signing thousands of allegedly backdated permits in January 2017 which were allegedly used to clear illegal rosewood exports to China.

    EIA further claimed this happened at the time Mohammed was preparing to leave as Nigeria’s minister of environment following her UN appointment.

    EIA’s report said over 1.4 million illegal rosewood logs from Nigeria worth $300 million were detained at the ports in China in 2016 but were released after the presentation of CITES certificates signed by the ex-minister.

    NAN

  • I’m not under probe, says Amina Mohammed

    I’m not under probe, says Amina Mohammed

    •UN Secretary General backs her

    The United Nations Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed, has said she was involved in the alleged illegal export of African rosewood, also known as kosso, from Nigeria to China.

    The trade is estimated to be worth $1 billion in the last four years. The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), a non-governmental organisation, which specialises in investigating environmental crimes, had claimed that Mohammed might have derived personal benefits from signing thousands of allegedly backdated permits in January 2017 which it said were used to clear illegal rosewood exports to China.

    This was at a time she had been appointed UN deputy secretary general.

    The environmental agency had reported that over 1.4 million illegal rosewood logs from Nigeria, worth $300 million, were detained at the ports in China in 2016 but were released after the presentation of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) certificates signed by her.

    However, Mohammed at the weekend in an interview with TheCable, an online newspaper, she maintained that she spent her time at the ministry working to eliminate the illegal export of the tropical hardwood used for rosewood furniture in China.

    According to her, “No permits were backdated or illegally signed by me. We are therefore appalled if any legally obtained or forged certificates were used by unscrupulous rosewood traders to circumvent exportation procedures.”

    She emphatically told the online medium,  “Not only do I decry fraud and corruption, we also categorically reject any allegations of corruption or coercion in our effort to better address illegal logging and exportation.

    “I categorically deny receiving any bribe. It has never been in my character. I never demanded neither did I collect any bribe, either cash or material.”

    The former presidential adviser, who was appointed by the UN Secretary General António Guterres as deputy secretary general in December 15, 2016, was recently named Diplomat of the Year by the Foreign Policy Group.

    She said when she was appointed minister of environment in November 2015, “one of the first issues I had to deal with was deforestation. It was a huge concern as Nigeria was losing its forest cover at an alarming rate… For me, protecting the environment is sacrosanct. When I was minister, one of my first acts was to tackle illegal logging. What I found on ground was alarming.”

    However, Guterres, the secretary-general, has said Mohammed, has his “full support and confidence.” This is coming amid claims that she retroactively authorised the exportation of the protected wood while she was minister of environment.

    Stéphane Dujarric, the UN secretary-general’s spokesman, expressed the secretary’s confidence in Mohammed.

    He said, “I will say the following.  First of all, just to be clear that the secretary?general was informed by the deputy secretary?general about the reports, and he reiterates his full support and confidence in her.  She, the deputy secretary?general, Amina Mohammed, of course, categorically rejects any allegations of fraud.”

    Dujarric added, “The deputy secretary?general welcomes the effort to shine more light onto the issue of illegal rosewood logging and exportation that she fought hard to address during her tenure in the Nigerian government.  She says that her actions as Nigerian environment minister were intended to deal with the serious issue of illegal wood exportation.

    “As a result, she instituted a ban and set up a high?level panel to find policy solutions to the crisis of deforestation in Nigeria. Ms. Mohammed says the legal signing of export permits for rosewood was delayed due to her insistence that stringent due process was followed.  She said she signed the export certificates requested before the ban only after due process was followed and better security watermarked certificates became available.”

    An environmental advocacy group, the Washington-based Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), had alleged that multiple sources told its undercover investigators that over $1 million was paid to top  government officials in Nigeria to release wood stopped by Chinese authorities because there were no CITES certificates.

    CITES on Thursday released a 40-page report alleging that Mohammed’s approval of the kosso exports violated the CITES agreement.

    According to report, the former environment minister spent her final days as minister doing something that has angered activists. It added that despite a ban then in force on the export of rosewood, an endangered resource, she signed thousands of certificates authorizing the shipment of vast quantities of the wood.

    The certificates “came in bags, and I just signed them because that is what I had to do,” she recalled in an interview last month in her U.N. headquarters office “I don’t remember how many,” she admitted.

    EIA said rosewood is coveted in China for furniture and over the past five years “exploding Chinese demand” has depleted forests across West Africa. As supplies in Gambia and Benin dwindled, it said Chinese traders moved to Nigeria, which had the largest untapped resource.

    Mohammed’s last minute decision to approve the kosso shipments was first documented by the Washington-based environmental group and is now part of an inquiry by the secretariat of CITES, to which Nigeria is a signatory.

    In a letter to Nigerian authorities in August 2017, John Scanlon, CITES’s secretary-general, raised concern about information his agency had received indicating that as many as 10,000 containers of Nigerian rosewood had been stopped by Chinese authorities between May and December 2016, because they were not accompanied by the proper CITES documentation, according to Michael Osakuade, the acting director of Nigeria’s Department of Forestry. On Dec. 31, 2016, Mohammed herself imposed a three-month ban on the trade in rosewood. Yet following her mass signings, more than two weeks after the ban went into force, the trade quickly resumed: Chinese trade data show that between then and April, as many as 12,000 containers of kosso logs were cleared to enter the country.

    EIA estimates that Mohammed’s approval of certificates in January 2017 allowed the delivery of more than 1.4 million kosso logs that had been illegally exported between May and December 2016 and were detained in Chinese ports. EIA furnished FP with six copies of certificates signed by Mohammed and dated Jan. 16, a little more than two weeks after she ordered the temporary three-month ban on the export of kosso wood. A senior Nigerian forestry official confirmed the authenticity of the certificates but denied that they were issued for rosewood that had already left for China.

  • Kwara polytechnic debunks rumours of fee hike

    Kwara polytechnic debunks rumours of fee hike

    Authorities of the Kwara State Polytechnic, Ilorin, yesterday denied allegations of hike in the tuition fee of the school.

    The rumors have generated a serious tension in the state, as some members of the public were reportedly asking the students to resist the hike while many students were reportedly preparing for a showdown with the management of the institution.

    The rumour had it that a new tuition fee of N75, 000 as against N58, 000 charged the students last session has been pasted on the  portal of the school.

    Both the state government and management of the institution condemned the brain behind the rumour and those allegedly inciting students to cause crisis over the matter.

    The state commissioner for Information and Communications, Babatunde Ajeigbe, alongside Registrar of the Polytechnic, M.O Salami briefed briefed on the matter as representatives of students at the briefing corroborated the explanation of the authorities.

    Ajeigbe who said that a government delegation led by the Commissioner for Tertiary Education, Amina Mohammed met with management of the institution over the matter explained that their findings showed that it was just a rumour spread by social media and about  which some people in the state were making mischief.

    He said that there was no increase of fee for the returning students who are now either HND 2 or ND 2 students and this was corroborated by an HND 2 students at the meeting who said he paid the same N58,000 he paid last session when he was an HND 1 student.

    Ajeigbe however explained that the institution has not yet determined what tuition fee of students with fresh admission for ND 1and HND 1 would be saying this would be determined by realities on ground.

    The institution Registrar who expatiated on this said though the school has spent more money on accreditation of its courses this year it would not allow that to be a major influence on  the amount to be paid by fresh students.

  • 37 job openings for young Nigerians in UN – Amina Mohammed

    37 job openings for young Nigerians in UN – Amina Mohammed

    There are 37 career openings for young Nigerians under the United Nations bureaucracy, according to UN deputy secretary-general, Amina Mohammed.

    Mrs. Mohammed speaking  at a cultural night organised by Nigerians working at the United Nations Systems said the openings are available via the Junior Professional Officers’ (JPO) Programme, including internship for young graduates.

    Nigeria, she said, has the opportunity to sponsor its youth for UN careers through the JPO, but regretted that the nation has not seized the opportunity in a long while.

    JPO is a programme for the young people to come and grow their career at the UN and it has 37 positions for Nigeria – one for each of the 36 States and the Federal Capital Territory.

    The JPO programme provides young professionals with hands-on experience in multilateral technical co-operation, and is one of the best ways to gain entry level positions within the UN system.

    JPOs are sponsored by their own government, which fund their placement in one of a range of UN organisations.

    At the cultural night, Amina asked older Nigerians to pave the way for the youth by creating leadership opportunities for them.

    She urged them to stop competing with the younger ones for employment opportunities. “Whenever there are opportunities, try and pave the way for the young ones; you are getting old and we want to see the young ones in the system.

    “We need to give the youth the opportunity because if we don’t give them the opportunities, they can easily fall victims of crimes,” she said.

    According to her, the Nigerian employees at the UN system are getting old and there is the need for the Nigerian youth to be allowed to come into the system.

    “Home really does need us; there are leaders and we are trying with the professionals that we see in the United Nations.

    “The work we need to do is not just to the world but also to remember that at the root of all that, you are only as good as where you come from.

    “And it’s really important that we remember, with what we do here, what we can get back home, that we can encourage those at home, and inspire them.

    “It’s not just what we do for the world. Can’t we take those expertise back home, Amina said, urging them to make the best use of every opportunity they got. She condemned what she termed alarming gender-based violence in Nigeria, saying it has increased in dimensions that one could never imagine.

    “So when I look back home and I see that there are women that are coming back from Boko Haram captivity, they come back with a type of violence that many, for the rest of their lives, can’t recover from.

    “But I also see that what is worse is the kind of violence that is visited upon the young girl. She is indoctrinated and convinced to tie a bomb around her and blow it off; that’s violence against girls; that’s violence against women.

     

     

    “But what I wanted to say was that as we look at the gender-based violence initiative that we put a spotlight on our own nation; we all have a part to play,” she said.

    Mohammed also lamented how girls were left behind in education, stressing that everyone needs to have an education – the boys and the girls.

    “The boys we didn’t educate are the same ones that kidnap the girls that we educated. “So education for everyone is exposure for everyone; it matters so much; it really does give us the basis, the moral compass to help us navigate through life.” Nigeria’s Ambassador/Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, Samson Itegboje, commended the Nigerians in the UN and particularly lauded the appointment of Mohammed as the UN Deputy Chief.

    Itegboje said Nigeria was proud of Mohammed, describing her as an “ultimate authority and a reference point when it comes to Sustainable Development Goals’ issues.”

    The Nigerian envoy said: “Nigeria is a great country; we are a happy people, you can’t take that away from us; we have gone through difficult times but we are happy that we have a government that is responsive to the yearnings and aspirations of dear people of Nigeria.”

    Col. Jolly Abu (rtd), President, United Nations Staff Recreation Club Nigeria Association, said the cultural night was organised to showcase Nigeria’s culture.

    According to him, the Nigerians in the UN are very proud of their culture adding, it is also for them to mingle, rekindle and renew their bonds.

    “The UN encourages that we should meet and foster unity among ourselves and also enjoy ourselves; so that’s what we’re doing,” Abu said.

    Amb. Audu Kadiri, Ambassador/Permanent Representative of Nigeria to the UN Office and Other International Organisations in Geneva and Nicholas Ella, acting Consul-General in New York also attended the event.

     

  • UN pledges support for Nigerian female politicians

    UN pledges support for Nigerian female politicians

    The United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) said it would support Nigerian female politicians vying for elective positions in the 2019 general elections.

    The UN Women Executive Director, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka told the Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that there was the need to increase women participation in politics in Nigeria.

    The UN women chief was at the Nigeria House where he met with the Nigeria’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Prof. Tijjani Bande and the Deputy Permanent Representative, Amb. Samson Itegboje.

    Mlambo-Ngcuka had visited Nigeria in July alongside UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed to push ways to address the many challenges confronting girls and women in the country.

    She said: “We also were in Nigeria to discuss the issue of women’s participation in politics.

    “We were also in Nigeria for how we need to increase the number of women participation in politics in the next elections and the strategies to do that”.

    According to her, the next step for UN Women in the area of women participation is helping to support the women who want to run in different parts of the country to prepare.

    Mlambo-Ngcuka pledged the support of the UN women agency in this regard, saying the men do a lot to position themselves.

    “So we will be working with other civil society,” the UN Women chief said.

    According to her, she was at the Nigerian Mission to give the Ambassador feedback on the visit to Nigeria.

    She added that the briefing also included the progress the UN Women was making in Nigeria and the progress that Nigeria was making at the time of the visit.

    “We were able to renew our commitment to support girls that were affected by the abductions – the Chibok girls in particular.

    “We were also able to look at the women and girls who were in the internally displaced persons’ camps and their conditions.

    “This is to make sure that we address any violations of their rights that may happen. The government has already taken steps to address that, which we appreciate,” she said.

    Mlambo-Ngcuka explained that the UN agency was also doing a lot in the area of women peace and security in general in the country.

    “So it’s also supporting the different initiatives that government has in addressing the safety of women, including safe schools. So we were able to discuss the next steps.

    She said the agency’s tactics was to join the activities of government to increase the awareness of the communities to what creates insecurity for the girls.

    She added UN Women would also support the girls that had come back from Boko Haram abduction to de-stigmatise and to ensure their successful integration.

    She commended Vice President Yemi Osinbajo for the way he handled the affairs of the country during the period he was in the saddle as the Acting President.

    “When we were in Nigeria, we met with then Acting President and we really found each other on the same page and that’s why already we are seeing some follow-up.

    “This includes the fact that he is a ‘HeForShe’ and he’s then committed to relaunch the ‘HeForShe’.

    “We will re-launch the ‘HeForShe’ now with the President – Muhammadu Buhari,” the UN Women chief said.

    ‘HeForShe’ is a solidarity campaign for the advancement of women initiated by UN Women.

    Its goal is to engage men and boys as agents of change by encouraging them to take action against negative inequalities faced by women and girls

     

  • UN calls for more global commitment to SDGs

    UN calls for more global commitment to SDGs

    UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed has called for escalated efforts by Nations for the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to ensure that the 2030 deadline is met.

    Mohammad, who made the remarks at an informal UN General Assembly meeting on taking stock of SDG actions, warned that the current pace of progress was insufficient.

    “The SDGs have jumped from the General Assembly Hall to communities across the world and are taking hold among policy-makers and in global public awareness.

    “However, our assessment clearly shows that the pace of progress is insufficient,” she added, noting also that progress has been uneven between the sexes, and among people of different ages and constituencies.

    She particularly said that the persistence of poverty remained the main challenge and that tackling gender equality and the use of new technologies should be leveraged to tackle this issue.

    She also highlighted the importance of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change to the success of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

    Mohammed also underscored the potential of the 2030 Agenda for a more prosperous and peaceful world and said that its success depends on the active engagement of all actors for people, peace, prosperity and a healthy planet.

    “My simple appeal today to all of you is to stay engaged, help us keep the ambition high, and work with us in this collective endeavour for a better future for all,” she said.

    Peter Thomson, the President of the General Assembly, also spoke of the importance of collaboration and the deployment of resources, expertise and technology on a greater scale to realise SDGs.

    Thomson said: “Potentially, we have reserves of them sufficient to well exceed the goals before us.

    “Thus, it is a matter of deployment, of marshalling our forces, both morally and practically, to undertake the tasks at hand in a spirit of inclusivity and universality.”

    He recalled the work done over the last year to advance each of the 17 Goals, in particular, building momentum across the SDGs.

    Thomson called for strengthening the UN capacity to convene, engage and create coalitions for collective action across the means of implementation.

    He sais that this includes partnerships with the private sector, employing technological advances and leveraging the potential of public and private financing to support achieving the goals.

    He urged greater efforts to deliver on the promise of the 2030 Agenda, adding that “we now need a shift in gears.

    “It is time to crank it up a notch, for time is not on our side. We have the resources, the ideas, the technology and the motivation.

    “Add leadership, courage and an unwavering commitment to progress and we will reach our 2030 destination with goals fulfilled,” he added.

  • Chibok schoolgirls’ strength inspiring – UN

    Chibok schoolgirls’ strength inspiring – UN

    The UN Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed, has described the strength of the rescued Chibok schoolgirls as “inspiring”.

    Mohammed gave the remarks while briefing the UN Security Council on her visit to Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo from July 19 to 27.

    The UN deputy chief said: “In Nigeria, we were moved by our meeting with the Chibok girls facilitated by the Honourable Minister of Women Affairs.

    “Their remarkable strength as survivors rather than victims is inspiring. Many are receiving education and psychosocial support to prepare them for reintegration.

    “But thousands of other young women who have been abducted and returned, subjected to sexual violence and affected by conflict in other ways are still to receive adequate support.

    “We also interacted with displaced women and girls who are facing exploitation and abuse in the camps. We held meetings with women leaders who underscored the need to address mental health and women’s empowerment.”

    She commended the governments of Niger, Chad, Cameroon and Nigeria for their efforts to promote stability through the Multinational Joint Task Force within the Lake Chad Basin Regional cooperation.

    According to her, international support will continue to be crucial in addressing the root causes of the crisis in very complex situations.

    “I am pleased to note that since our visit, the Acting President of Nigeria has established a Judicial Commission to investigate alleged violations of human rights by Nigerian security agencies, and to recommend ways to prevent such violations.

    “I commend this initiative and encourage the relevant authorities to include sexual- and gender-based violence within the Commission’s work.

    “The United Nations stands ready to support this important effort and also to reinforce protection measures for displaced women and girls,” Mohammed, Nigeria’s former Minister of Environment, said.

    She said in Nigeria, the eight-year conflict in the Northeast has generated a risk of famine, displaced 1.9 million people and left 8.5 million people in need of assistance.

    “These dire circumstances are being made worse by the large gap in humanitarian funding including meeting the commitments made at the Oslo Humanitarian Conference. There is an acute need for sustained and scaled up funding to avert famine in Nigeria.”

    Mohammed stressed that “one message resounds most: investing in women and girls must be central to our efforts in Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and beyond if we are to have sustainable peace and development.

    “Giving special consideration to the context will be key to responses that deliver the right results.

    “We look forward to working with national governments, regional organizations, civil society, women and girls themselves, and international partners to deliver results that will advance peace, development and dignity for all.”

    Mohammed said she was pleased to be joined by the Executive Director of UN Women and the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict – both of whom were with her at the briefing, as well as the African Union Commission’s Special Envoy on Women, Peace and Security.

    “We were four African women, from two organizations, visiting two countries, with one goal: advancing peace by advancing the equality, empowerment and well-being of women,” Mohammed said. (NAN)

  • UN commends Cameroon’s generosity to Nigerian refugees

    UN commends Cameroon’s generosity to Nigerian refugees

    The UN Deputy Secretary-General, Ms Amina Mohammed, has commended Cameroon for its generosity towards the Nigerian refugees who fled to the country to escape the destructive activities of Boko Haram terrorists.

    Mohammed gave the commendation during a meeting with Cameroon’s delegation led by Prof. Paul Ghogomu, Director of Cabinet of the Prime Minister of the Republic of Cameroon, a readout from the meeting, stated.

    “The Deputy Secretary-General commended Cameroon for its generosity towards refugees from Central African Republic and Nigeria.

    “She conveyed that the United Nations looks forward to working with Cameroon, Nigeria and Chad to reintegrate those affected, especially women, youth and children.

    Mohammed and Ghogomu also discussed the situation in the Bakassi Peninsula and the fight against Boko Haram as well as the 2030 Agenda and the UN development system reform.

    They similarly discussed the internal situation in the Republic of Cameroon, particularly in the Anglophone regions.

    The UN deputy scribe welcomed the efforts being undertaken by the Cameroonian government to de-escalate tensions and highlighted the importance of further confidence building measures.

    These measures include ensuring that justice is given to all and that human rights are upheld and respected, and noting that those responsible for rule of law are to be held to a higher standard.

    Mohammed also reiterated the willingness of the UN to assist, through the good offices of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Central Africa and Head of the UN Regional Office for Central Africa, Mr François Fall, and the UN country team.

    According to the deputy Secretary-General, the UN will support include efforts to address the outstanding root causes of the tensions in the affected regions.

  • Mohammed leads first joint AU-UN high-level mission to Africa

    Mohammed leads first joint AU-UN high-level mission to Africa

    Ms Amina Mohammed, UN Deputy Secretary-General, is leading a first-ever joint AU-UN high-level mission to Africa, to highlight the role of women in achieving sustainable peace and development.

    On Mohammed’s entourage are UN Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, Pramila Patten, and the Special Envoy of the AU on Women, Peace and Security, Bineta Diop.

    The UN said over the past two days, the delegation met with key members of the Congolese Government, the donor community, as well as women leaders from the civil society.

    At Kinshasa, the deputy secretary-general said their discussions revolved around “a focus on women, and how we can see women’s empowerment, address women’s human rights, and women with their rights to the electoral process”.

    More broadly, while stressing the need to respect everyone’s abilities, she said “there is no one size that fits all”, adding that women’s every day rights must be addressed contextually.

    “There is no aircraft that flies anywhere, or bird that flies anywhere, on half a wing,” she underscored.

    She echoed her refrain from other stops on the trip that a critical step towards sustainable development for all is to ensure that women and girls, half the world’s population, receive the investments, opportunities, access and protection they require.

    Mohammed explained that the UN and the AU had each begun another era with new leadership, reforms and frameworks.

    The UN deputy scribe noted respectively the UN and AU 2030 Agenda and its Sustainable development Goals (SDGs) and the 2063 Agenda, both of which have placed women at the core.

    She stressed the importance of reversing the tragedies of violence, particularly against women and children and ensuring that women’s and girl’s voices are heard in all aspects of society.

    According to her, that should be at the core of the second leg of a high-level UN-AU mission to Africa, which visited the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

    “Peace is the bedrock,  the foundation, to allow us to develop our full potentials, but also to ensure that human rights are respected.

    “Here we see that women’s rights, which are human rights, are not respected and we have a long way to go,” Mohammed said, emphasizing that “so much more can be done”.

    She commended the DRC’s efforts to combat gender-based sexual violence, noting that having a woman, Léonard Okitundu, Vice-Prime Minister of the DRC in charge was probably the reason for the progress.

    According to her, however, “what we really want to see is zero” gender-based violence.

    “We hear what the DRC cannot do. We are here to discuss what the country can do with its women and young people,” she stressed.

    She added that while the rights and aspirations of women “are far from” being attained, it was the job of the UN and AU to support closing the gap.

    Mohammed explained the aim of bringing women leaders into the conversation and engaging with women to find the opportunities to overcome the challenges, “to change the narrative of victims to survivors and aspirations achieved within the 2030 Agenda”.

  • Osinbajo swears in new ministers today

    Osinbajo swears in new ministers today

    Two ministers-designate, Stephen Ocheni (Kogi) and Suleiman Hassan (Gombe) would be inaugurated as Federal Executive Council (FEC) members on Wednesday, the Presidency has said.

    A Presidential spokesman, Mr Laolu Akande, announced this in his tweeter handle late Tuesday night, and said that Acting President Yemi Osinbajo would perform the ceremony.

    Akande said that the inauguration of the ministers would precede the FEC meeting at the council’s chamber of the Presidential Villa.

    “Ag. President Osinbajo would be swearing in the two new ministers already confirmed by the Senate tomorrow morning at the start of the Federal Executive Council meeting,’’ he said.

    Ocheni and Hassan were confirmed by the Senate in May.

    Ocheni replaces the late Minister of State for Labour, Mr James Ocholi, who died in a ghastly auto-crash along Kaduna-Abuja highway in 2016, while Hassan takes the place of Amina Mohammed.

    Mohammed resigned as Minister of Environment to take up the job of Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations.