Tag: appointments

  • Crisis rocks Uhunmwode APC over appointments

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Uhunmwode Local Government Area of Edo State is enmeshed in a crisis over the list of political appointees to be submitted to Governor Godwin Obaseki.

    A faction of the party, led by Charles Idahosa and the party’s Chairman in the area, Harrison Oyegue, suspended 30 members of the party.

    The suspension was announced on Friday and ratified by the state’s Secretary of the party, Chief Osaro Idah.

    Those suspended included a former Minority Whip in the House of Representatives, Samson Osagie, popular columnist, Mr. Josef Omorotiomwan, as well as Mr. Roland Alari.

    They were suspended for alleged anti-party activities and working against the party during the governorship election.

    But the Omorotiomwan-led faction at a media briefing yesterday in Benin, the state capital, suspended Idahosa as the party’s leader in Uhunmwode.

    APC’s Acting Chairman in the area, Monday Okpeki, said a disciplinary committee, headed by Samuel Iroh, had been set up to try Idahosa and the other party members.

    He named Omorotiomwan as the new leader of APC in Uhunmwode and accused the state leadership of bias in handling the party crisis.

    He said: “In the process of their illegal suspension, they threw caution to the winds, ignoring due process, particularly the provisions of Article 21 of the APC Constitution, which clearly spells out the modalities for disciplining erring members.

    “In all seriousness, we do not intend to allow ourselves to be used as a football by political nitwits in their struggle for naked power. This underscores the need at this point to show you the type of political liabilities that are purporting to suspend serious-minded people in a serious political party.

    “We challenge Charles Idahosa to show evidence that he has ever won in his polling unit. The antics of this political mercenary are that he keeps extorting the party and its members without any regard for the party’s fortunes. He remains an electoral liability that must be ignored.

    “Incidentally, suspension has become a major scare-crow in Nigerian politics, but we insist that it must be appropriately directed. In the particular case of Uhunmwode Local Government Area, we have identified a number of people who don’t wish the APC well. They are against the wheel of the party’s progress. They are enemies of progress and they have compromised the interest and growth of the party on several occasions.”

  • ‘We are not against Akeredolu’s appointments’

    ‘We are not against Akeredolu’s appointments’

    An Islamic Leader in Ondo State, Alhaji Nerean Akorede has said that his religious group is in support of the recent appointments made by Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu.

    Akorede who is the Coordinator of Progressive Muslim Council in the state said Muslims who belong to the association are not against the appointments.

    He therefore distance himself from agitation by some Muslims that the Secretary to the State Government (SSG) should be a Muslim since Akeredolu and his deputy, Agboola Ajayi are both Christians.

    The religious leader expressed confidence in the ability of Governor Akeredolu to deliver all his electioneering campaign promises, adding that Akeredolu loves Muslims the same way he loves Christians.

    He opined that the Governor will consider Muslims in the state for political appointments, and therefore urged all Muslims in the state to support his administration.

    Akorede who is a stalwart of the ruling APC called for religious tolerance and understanding among the people of the state, stressing that the Muslims cannot be marginalized by Akeredolu or his government.

  • Reps to probe Buhari’s appointments

    Reps to probe Buhari’s appointments

    The House of Representatives is set to investigate all appointments into Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) since the inception of the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The lawmakers said the investigation became necessary due to public outcry over apparent lopsidedness and imbalance in recent appointments and sharing of posts into public offices by the federal government and some of its agencies in favour of certain zones.

    Consequently, House Committee on Federal Character has been mandated to carry out a comprehensive overview of all Federal government appointments/recruitments during this dispensation.

    The Committee that was given four weeks to carry out the assignment would ascertain level of compliance or otherwise of the MDAs with Section 14 (3) of the Constitution.

    The decision of the lawmakers followed the adoption of a motion by Kingsley Chinda (PDP, Rivers), who noted that the failure of the Federal government to comply with the federal character principles in appointments/recruitments into public offices and government agencies has negatively affected the country.

    “The concern and commentaries in the recent time about an apparent lopsidedness and imbalance in appointments and sharing of posts into public offices by the federal government and some of its agencies in favour of certain zones.

    “This negates Section14 (1) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, as amended that ‘The Federal Republic of Nigeria shall be a State based on the principles of democracy and social justice’.

    “Section 14 (3) of the Constitution also made it clear  that ‘The composition of the Government of the Federation or any of its agencies and the conduct of its affairs shall be carried out in such a manner as to reflect the federal character of Nigeria and the need to promote national unity and also to command national loyalty, thereby ensuring that there shall be no predominance of persons from a few States or from a few ethnic or other sectional groups in that government or in any of its agencies’.

    “It was towards the realisation of the above objectives that the Federal Character Commission (FCC) was established under the Federal Character Commission (Establishment, etc) Act, 2004, with responsibility to promote, monitor and enforce compliance with the principles of the proportional sharing of all bureaucratic, economic and political posts at all levels of government.

    “It is however worrisome that the Federal Government and the Federal Character Commission (FCC) have not lived up to the above mandate as there exists numerous cases of lopsidedness and imbalance in appointments and sharing of posts/offices, including the recent recruitments by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) appointments into boards and parastatals and more recently the nomination of Ambassadors, to mention but a few.

    “Unless urgent and positive steps are taken to check the prevailing imbalance in the appointments and sharing of Federal Government posts, people would continue to be discontented and despondent, and this could lead to dis-unity and disloyalty, and heighten ethnic agitations and national insecurity”.

    Also in its resolution, the House urged the Federal Government to comply with the Federal Character Principles in Section 14 (3) of the Constitution in all appointments/recruitments into public offices in the country.

    The motion was unanimously adopted when it was put to voice vote by the Speaker, Yakubu Dogara.

     

  • Appointments and disappointments

    Last week was action-packed at the Villa. On Tuesday President Muha-mmadu Buhari hosted two West African presidents. Consider, too, the gale of appointments and disengagements, all in the week.

    The appointments effectively removed those whose tenures had expired or those who were in acting capacities, although there were also some who were let go before their tenures ran out.

    It was a shocker and disappointment for some of those whose first or second tenures had not expired before the latest appointments were announced.

    The statements announcing the appointments, which emanated from various government offices, had affected some heads of Federal Government agencies.

    Other appointments were made for some committees saddled with the responsibility of carrying out special assignments.

    Not all those affected were happy to relinquish the positions they have been occupying and enjoying the salaries, allowances and the pecks of office.

    The tsunami last week started on Monday with a statement from the Federal Ministry of Education.

    The President in the statement sacked 16 heads of key agencies under the Federal Ministry of Education and also announced their replacement including Nigerian Institute for Education Planning and Administration, Universal Basic Education, National Library of Nigeria, National Examinations Council, National Commission for Mass Literacy, Adult and Non-Formal Education, Nomadic Education Commission.

    Other affected agencies in Education are the National Business and technical Examinations Board, Teachers Registration Council of Nigeria, Computer Registration Council of Nigeria, National Commission for Colleges of Education, Tertiary Education Trust Fund, National Teachers Institute, Libarian Registration Council of Nigeria, National Mathematical Centre, Joint Admission and Matriculation Board and the National Institute of Nigerian Languages.

    The President also appointed a new Executive Secretary for the National Universities Commission ( NUC) to replace Prof. Julius Okojie whose two-term tenure just ended.

    On Tuesday, the President nominated seven nominees for the positions of Chairman, Executive Commissioner, and Non-Executive Commissioners in the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC).

    The list was forwarded to the Senate for confirmation in line with Section 8(1) of the NCC Act 2003.

    On the same day, the President, through the office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), named a new Post-Master General / Chief Executive Officer of the Nigeria Postal Services (NIPOST).

    Buhari, on Thursday inaugurated the Governing Council and Board of Trustees (BoT) of the Trust Fund for the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP).

    The 12-man Council has the Minister of Environment, Amina Mohammed as the Chairman, while the 13-man BoT has Mr Wale Edun, a world renowned financial expert and former Commissioner for Finance in Lagos State, as the Chairman.

    Before last week, Buhari had upper Friday, through a statement from the office of the SGF announced five new heads of health agencies including the Nigerian Institute for Medical Research, the National Centre for Disease Control, National Agency for the Control of AIDS, National Primary Healthcare Development Agency and National Health Insurance Scheme.

    The new appointments have, no doubt, given these Nigerians the opportunities to serve the nation.

    The generality of Nigerians, on the other hand, expect them to hit the ground running and start delivering the goods in their new posts as soon as they assume office. The reason for this is that Nigerians have been waiting anxiously for the fruits of the change agenda of this administration to materialise. The new appointees cannot afford to fail the nation now.

     

    Nigeria’s 37th state

    If the joke by the President of Benin Republic, Patrice Talon, last Tuesday was anything to go by, that country is gradually becoming the 37th state of Nigeria besides the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    Talon, who visited President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja for the first time since assuming office four months ago, has started to toe the line of the immediate past President, Boni Yayi, who frequent Nigeria under his tenure.

    Benin Republic has been befitting many facilities from Nigeria over the years like any state government in Nigeria.

    Topmost of these, is the dependent of Benin Republic on Nigeria for its power supply.

    Just like the real 36 states in Nigeria have been running to the Federal Government to get bailouts in other to survive the hard times, Benin Republic has not pretended not to be adversely affected by what is going on in Nigeria.

    No wonder Talon declared last Tuesday that the present downturn in the Nigeria economy due to dwindling prices of oil in the international market is adversely affecting Benin Republic and other African countries who have relied on Nigeria, as the ‘big brother of Africa’, for one thing or the other.

    Acknowledging that agriculture and other non-oil development are the way out of Nigeria’s current economic woes, Talon has offered to make Benin Republic one of the silos of Nigeria’s agricultural produce under the new moves to boost non-oil sectors in Nigeria.

    Because of the cultural and historical ties between the two countries, Talon has even offered for his country to import Made-in-Nigeria goods rather than importing from the other big economies.

    The time has come for Nigeria to go beyond the ‘big brother’ role and start benefiting from our ‘small brother’ countries.

    Nigeria, should start putting its acts together now to at least become a great exporter of goods and services to the neighbouring countries towards boosting Nigeria’s foreign earnings.

     

    Salvaging Ajaokuta Steel

    Nigerians last week Monday got another cheerful news from the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    This time, it was the Federal Government’s taking over the ownership of the Ajaokuta Steel Complex.

    The complex, which is very significant for Nigeria’s development, has not been properly tapped over the years. Many other countries with less endowment in steel and related resources have been exploiting them to the fullest and have advanced technologically in the manufacturing sector ahead of Nigeria, while the one for Nigeria lie in waste. It is hope that Nigeria will get it right this time around.

  • Buhari’s appointments not lopsided, says Enang

    Buhari’s appointments not lopsided, says Enang

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters (Senate), Senator Eta Enang, has debunked claims by some Nigerians that federal appointments are lopsided.

    Enang spoke yesterday in Abuja at a reception organised by Akwa-Cross Association in the Public Service.

    He said President Muhammadu Buhari followed strictly the principles of Federal Character in all appointments.

    His words: “He (Buhari) has given us the chief of Naval Staff, a high ranking officer in the Federal Security Council.

    “He has given us the minister of Budget and then, my humble self as the senior special assistant on National Assembly Matters. He has also given us the minister of Niger Delta Affairs.

    “In the Southsouth region, he gave us minister of Transportation in charge of about three ministries merged together. He also gave us the minister of Petroleum.

    “When I see people trying to incite others against the President over matters of appointment, I conclude that they are being unfair.

    “That is why we gathered here today to appraise the appointments and to appreciate the President,’’ he said.

    Enang said despite the President’s tight schedule, he had visited some states in the Southsouth to inaugurate projects.

    He said President Buhari visited Cross River State to inaugurate the international superhighway from Cross River to Cameroon and other countries in West and Central Africa.

    “President Buhari also provided N6 billion to dualise the road from Calabar to Itu, en-route Ikot Ekpene, to Aba in Abia State.

    “Also, contracts for Calabar-Lagos rail project, which will take off from Calabar enroute Aba, has been signed,’’ he said.

    On the alleged lopsidedness in the ambassadorial list submitted to the Senate for confirmation, Enang said the issue was being addressed.

    The Head of Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs. Winifred Oyo-Ita, said insinuations that the President unduly favoured a section of the country in appointments were wrong.

    She said the appointments so far made by the President were based on merit and competence.

    “President Buhari allows competence and merit to be brought to the fore in his appointments and we are happy about that.

    “A doorway has been opened for appointments based on merit. If it could happen to me, it could equally happen to anyone else.

    “As civil servants, go ahead, do the best you can. When you continue to put in your best; you excel on your jobs and duties. You may not know who is taking note of you.

    “At a point in time in the future, somebody would single you out and you would wonder who recommended you.

    “So, let us continue to excel and practise the fear of God,’’ she said.

    The Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Mr. Usani Uguru, said appointments were not made on the basis of region as believed by some Nigerians but based on number of states in the country.

    “The North has 19 states and federal character has provisions for states and not regions.

    “Therefore, until we carry out that analysis, there would be no authentication to claims that the North is being favoured in terms of appointments than the South.

    “Nigeria is not configured on the basis of North and South; it is configured on the basis of states as entrenched in the constitution.’’

    Uguru debunked claims that attacks on oil facilities carried out by the Niger Delta Avengers were as a result of lopsided appointments.

    “We are continually engaging youths in various ways and participating in other activities to assuage the situation.

    “We are persistent in persuasion, advising government and following up on the programmes that should be of productive engagement to youths,’’ he said

    The Chairman of Akwa-Cross Association in the Public Service, Mr. Edem Bassey, said the essence of the gathering was to honour Nigerians from the Southsouth, who were recently appointed by President Buhari.

    He said: “The gathering was to push further the need to drive the cardinal focus of the head of Service, which was to produce efficient, effective, productive and incorruptible as well as citizen-centered civil servants.”

  • President Buhari’s appointments and the federal character concept

    President Buhari’s appointments and the federal character concept

    Not since Abacha has the North so completely dominated all the three arms of the Nigerian government.

    The amalgamation, by fiat, of the Southern  and Northern parts of Nigeria was done based largely  on  a 1914 letter from Lord Lugard to the Secretary of State for the Colonies part of which read as follows: “For some time it has been realised that the total isolation of the North from the South cannot continue indefinitely. The North has no access to the sea except through the South. Its revenue is insufficient to maintain its administration and deficits have to be met by annual grants from the South and the imperial treasury. It is expected that the unification of the North and South would relieve the imperial treasury of the necessity of making such yearly contributions”.

    The amalgamation consummated, it became inevitable that genuine efforts be made to ensure that no part of the country is left behind. These efforts finally culminated in what  is known  as the  Federal Character Concept which, by “virtue of the provisions of the Third Schedule, Part I-C paragraph 8(1) of the 1999 Constitution, is to give effect to section 14 (3) and (4) of the Constitution which states that the composition of the government of the federation or any of its agencies and the conduct of its affairs shall be carried out in such a manner as to reflect the Federal Character of Nigeria and the need to promote national unity, and also to command national loyalty thereby ensuring that there shall be no predominance of persons from a few states or from a few ethnic or other sectional groups in that government  or in any of its agencies.”

    Given Nigeria’s multi-ethnicity, therefore, this is a constitutional provision no Head of State, who wants to succeed, will treat with levity.

    Unfortunately, these provisions have been observed mostly in the breach especially in federal ministries and agencies. For instance, I weighed in on this same subject on an occasion when INEC was becoming something of a Northern fiefdom. In: WHAT GAME IS THE NORTH UP TO  AT INEC? , The Nation September 23, 2012, I wrote: “Can Professor Jega, a celebrated academic and former University Vice-Chancellor, double as an ethnic bigot?  Is the ‘famous’ Professor Oba, former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ilorin, working in tandem with Jega in his historic role  of a northern irredentist? Or is it as simple as the Federal Character Commission becoming comatose or completely blind and toothless wherever in the Nigerian polity the North wields an unfair advantage?”  To his eternal credit, Professor Jega subsequently effected some changes though not in the appointments which had become a ‘fait accompli, but in the membership of key INEC committees which were strategically put under the control of directors of Northern extraction.

    That ethnic control of federal agencies was one of the shenanigans Nigerians believed they would see discontinued in Buhari’s CHANGE administration .Unfortunately, we are daily seeing evidences of more of the same. So unfair, and very rampant has it become that I have come to the conclusion  that those around the President are not  being  honest  in letting him have the  feed backs  arising from his appointments  most of which have gone to the North with hardly any consideration for the Southern part of the country. It started with his earliest appointments  of  those generally referred to as  his kitchen cabinet  which many Nigerians believe  can very easily  conduct  its business in the  Hausa language.  However, if those around the President have decided to cocoon him, barring him from hearing  negative  comments, I have no doubt, whatever, of my having personally  earned the right to tell the President the truth. This is because, long before his party’s  Presidential primaries  which he won, I have cast my lot with contestant Buhari and was so gun ho in my support for him that Professor Tam David West,  his  very good friend and supporter , readily quoted me where I had written in an article that “Nigeria needed Buhari more than he needs Nigeria”. I did not limit my support for him to my own views only but went further to quote from my readers’ responses; views that were very supportive of his candidature.  I am sure I won him, not a few Nigerians who ended up voting for him at the election proper. While I am impressed with his anti- corruption war which, amongst other things, has exposed the Nigerian army as an institution far worse now than when it was described, by its one time Chief of Army staff, as an army of anything goes, the President has hugely disappointed with his very insular, North-centric appointments.  Or could it be a benign disrespect for the South  as alleged by those who claimed that the President is on record as  saying  that he should not be expected to treat Southerners who voted him 5% the same way as Northerners who voted him 95 %? I can only hope that this is more than a fabrication. His appointments are so unerringly disdainful of   the South that  one begins to think  that the President has been captured by a cabal – a Katsina Mafia – as Dr Junaid Mohammed  suggests, who is dictating who to appoint to where.

    Much as I hate the comparison, these appointments very uncannily mirror what we had during the reign of the goggled general when  you  couldn’t  name  four  Southerners in  the topmost  20  positions in the country. It is extremely sad that we could have in Buhari’s administration, anything  that bears this striking similarity to what  operated  under  Abacha.  It will cheapen this column to start listing the many appointments that are circulating in the social media, all going to Northerners as if the Federal Character Commission and the law setting it up have been abrogated. And the silence, from the Presidency to the allegations goes a long way to confirm their truism.  I will be very surprised if  the otherwise hardworking pair of  the President’s  spokespersons  can, in all honesty, claim not  to have read the NIGERIAN VILLAGE SQUARE, where it quoted TheNiche’ interview with Dr Junaid Mohammed, a one time supporter of President Buhari, wherein he  said, inter alia: “Muhammadu Buhari’s relatives are the ones dictating policy in Aso Rock for 170 million Nigerians,  thus  adding nepotism to the festering allegation of narrow mindedness levelled against the president who critics say surrounds himself with Northerners in running national affairs”. This is not one allegation in which silence will be golden because Mohammed went on to name at least seven relatives of the president who are the power behind the throne in the Villa – this in addition to the heads of ALL vital security agencies who are from the North.  Dr Mohammed did not shy away from naming them  and  describing their blood relationship  with the President. He even went further to say that two of these seven are already plotting the ouster of the Acting chairman of EFCC for touching somebody  they consider  a sacred cow. I sincerely hope they won’t dare Nigerians who are still largely supporting the President because they know he did not cause their suffering.

    A troubling consequence of these appointments is that whether in the Executive, the legislature or the judiciary, the dominance of  the North is so overwhelming  and  unmistakable.  Their conquest of the leadership of the judiciary is such that a Southerner can hardly be appointed the Chief Justice of the Federation in the next twenty years and that will be in addition to decades of their complete domination. Not since Abacha has the North so completely dominated all the three arms of the Nigerian government.  I have heard not a few Yoruba  say  that  we have been sold  cheap to the North and much as  I reply by saying that  we were  divinely sent  to save Nigeria  from President  Jonathan’s brood of kleptomaniacs ,  I think  I must say that  President Buhari  owes  those of us who literally carried him on our heads, even when all we relied upon was his integrity,  an obligation to  govern fairly  and with due  respect to all parts of the country.  That is the only way he can have a lasting positive legacy.  We, in turn, owe him a duty of  always reminding  him  that   the Federal Character provision has  not  been  edited out of the Nigerian constitution.

  • Council chair revokes chiefs’ appointments

    The Chairman of Gwagwalada Area Council of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Alhaji Mustapha Danze has cancelled the appointment of newly upgraded and appointed district and village heads in council until further notice.

    Danze, who announced this during the first interactive session with districts and village heads of the council in Gwagwalada stated that the appointments were cancel because it was not approved by the FCT administration.

    “Some people have been served with letters of promotion to district or village head without records available in the council or directorate of chieftaincy affairs. We are disassociating ourselves from it. We make them to understand that from the handover note, the upgrading is not accepted,” he said.

    The council boss also said that the interacting session was meant to fine tune areas of mutual understanding between the council and the traditional rulers in the area.

    “There is need for understanding between the council and the traditiona lrulers. We felt it is important to have interaction with them. We want to tell them that we need their cooperation. We cannot do without them and they cannot do without us, so we can all work for the progress of the area council,” he said.

    In his remark at the meeting, the Aguma of Gwagwalada, Alhaji Muhammadu Magaji reminded the chairman of the ten month outstanding allowances of thecouncil traditional rulers.

    When FCT Watch contacted the former administration that the upgrade and appointment for district and village heads were not approved by the FCTadministration, the former council scribe, Alhaji Usman Yahaya said that the allegation was false, while stating that due process followed during the upgrade.

  • Council chair revokes chiefs’ appointments

    The Chairman of Gwagwalada Area Council of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Alhaji Mustapha Danze has cancelled the appointment of newly upgraded and appointed district and village heads in council until further notice.

    Danze, who announced this during the first interactive session with districts and village heads of the council in Gwagwalada stated that the appointments were cancel because it was not approved by the FCT administration.

    “Some people have been served with letters of promotion to district or village head without records available in the council or directorate of chieftaincy affairs. We are disassociating ourselves from it. We make them to understand that from the handover note, the upgrading is not accepted,” he said.

    The council boss also said that the interacting session was meant to fine tune areas of mutual understanding between the council and the traditional rulers in the area.

    “There is need for understanding between the council and the traditiona lrulers. We felt it is important to have interaction with them. We want to tell them that we need their cooperation. We cannot do without them and they cannot do without us, so we can all work for the progress of the area council,” he said.

    In his remark at the meeting, the Aguma of Gwagwalada, Alhaji Muhammadu Magaji reminded the chairman of the ten month outstanding allowances of thecouncil traditional rulers.

    When FCT Watch contacted the former administration that the upgrade and appointment for district and village heads were not approved by the FCTadministration, the former council scribe, Alhaji Usman Yahaya said that the allegation was false, while stating that due process followed during the upgrade.

     

  • Appointments my prerogative, says Bello

    Appointments my prerogative, says Bello

    Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello has said it remains his responsibility to appoint aides without recourse to any group of people, provided the person meets the requirement as stipulated by law.

    He spoke at the weekend through his Special Adviser on Media and Strategy, Mallam Abdulkarim Abdulmalik.

    The governor was reacting to the reported letter of vote-of-no-confidence by the Kogi State All Progressives Congress (APC) executive council to the party’s national leadership.

    He said he was yet to be informed by the party’s national secretariat about the petition, adding that he runs an all-inclusive government and that the APC leadership can recommend anybody for appointment, provided such a person meets the criteria.

    Bello said his administration was working towards unity and as such his doors were open to everybody, irrespective of religious, ethnic or political differences.

    He accused the APC Chairman, Alhaji Haddy Ametuo, of hiding under the party to play the Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) card against his government, “because his brother, Momohjimoh Lawal, was removed as Speaker by the lawmakers.”

  • Afrinvest makes key appointments

    Afrinvest (West Africa) Limited, has announced the appointment of two senior executives to strengthen its management team. Victor Ndukauba takes on the role of Deputy Managing Director while Onoise Onaghinon has been named Executive Director.

    According to Ike Chioke, MD/CEO of Afrinvest, “These appointments are a reflection of the culture we have created in the company. We are dedicated to building a team that provides extraordinary service and counsel to our clients. In some cases, that means making key external hires. But we also remain committed to promoting from within, as this helps ensure that we attract and retain the best talent in the industry.”

    Working alongside the CEO, Ndukauba is tasked with improving efficiency across the Afrinvest Group, providing strategic leadership and driving new business development initiatives. The new role will also see him manage the firm’s control environment to ensure full compliance with regulatory standards and superior client service at all times.

    Ndukauba commenced his career with the Corporate Finance business unit of PricewaterhouseCoopers Nigeria where he advised clients across various sectors. He thereafter joined the Financial Advisory practice in the Investment Banking Division of Afrinvest before heading up the firm’s Investment Research and Asset Management divisions.

    The newly appointed Executive Director, Onaghinon, has 15 years experience in the commercial and investment banking sectors. “With a proven track record of success and a sterling reputation in the industry, Onoise is uniquely qualified to lead our investment banking division, maintaining high performance teams to achieve the investment objectives of our esteemed clients “, said Chioke.