Tag: artisans

  • Biometrics for  traders, artisans

    Biometrics for traders, artisans

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi will on Thursday launch biometrics data capture and identification card project for tradesmen and artisans.
    Commissioner for Trade, Industry, Investment and Cooperatives Princess Taibat Adeyemi-Agba, in a statement yesterday, said the programme will hold at Trans Amusement Park, Ibadan by 11am.
    Adeyemi-Agba said the programme will provide the government information that will serve as database for providing commercial incentives and welfare packages.
    She added that the government will also use the data for local content in awarding jobs and contracts.

  • Ajimobi flags off bio-metrics for tradesmen, artisans

    Ajimobi flags off bio-metrics for tradesmen, artisans

    Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State will on Thursday, February 9 flag off Bio-metrics data capture and identification card project for tradesmen and artisans in the state.

    The state Commissioner for Trade, Industry, Investment and Cooperatives, Princess Taibat Adeyemi-Agba stated in a statement on Monday that the bio-metrics programme will hold at Trans Amusement park, Ibadan by 11.00am.

    Princess Adeyemi said that the biometrics and data capturing will avail the Oyo State Government information that will serve as the database for providing commercial incentives and welfare packages for the various groups in the state.

    She stressed that the state Government will also use the data captured data during the exercise for local content in awarding jobs and contracts in the state.

    Also, the State Government has said that it will not relent in its Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) drive, assuring that all loopholes will be blocked to ensure the reality of the 2017 appropriation proposal tagged “Budget of Self Reliance”.

    The Head of Informal Sector, Board of Internal Revenue, Mrs. Tewogbade Oluyemi stated this while leading the Tax enforcement team in Informal Sector to the commercial centres within the State Secretariat,

    She stressed that BIR will increase the state’s IGR in order to provide more infrastructural facilities for the masses and enhance development in the State.

    Mrs. Tewogbade commended the traders and artisans for their full compliance in remitting their personal taxes and called on the traders and artisans in the state to emulate their counterparts within the state secretariat.

  • Navy to reintroduce training for artisans

    Navy to reintroduce training for artisans

    Plans are underway by the Nigerian Navy (NN) to reintroduce apprentice training for welders, fitters and other local artisans whose services are necessary for ship maintenance.
    The Chief of the Naval Staff (CNS), Vice Admiral Ibok-Ette Ibas, spoke yesterday at the opening of NN Engineering Seminar at the Naval Dockyard, Victoria Island, Lagos.
    Ibas noted that lack of trained and skilled manpower was part of the challenges of the Navy, adding that efforts were on to address the shortcomings.
    He said the Navy would partner with relevant training institutions to get the right manpower so that its fleet could be adequately maintained.
    He said: “There was a time Naval Dockyard had a training facility for apprentice training school to develop adequate manpower for personnel and civilian populace.
    “Fitters, welders and skilled personnel were trained in the school. He has posited the need to go back to that era, put back the apprentice school and then, partner with other training institutions and facilities to get the right manpower to be able to maintain our fleet.”
    On how the Navy plans to meet its needs in light of dwindling resources and poor budgetary allocation, Ibas said the service was looking inwards to see how best to develop capacities that could generate funds.
    The CNS noted that prevailing operational realities necessitated the seminar, adding that the NN was presently more challenged than ever “by multi-faceted monstrous threats from all flanks in her operational space, which also coincides with the country’s indispensable resource base…”
    “The efforts of the NN to square up with these challenges have seen her embarking on ambitious capacity upgrade to include an aggressive fleet reactivation and recapitalisation.
    “The NN fleet expansion programme has led to the resuscitation of many hitherto non-operational platforms and injection of several new ones, including capital ships and over hundred boats through a two-prong programme of local production and foreign acquisition. It is, however, expedient that the platforms are not only provided, but remain available. This requires the NN to support the fleet with first-rate maintenance.
    “Against the fact that any accomplishment can only come on the back of a sound technical manpower, the service has religiously sustained both general and specialist training, breaking new training frontiers in the process,” Ibas said.

  • We’ll commence disbursement of N25bn ETF in December – Ambode

    We’ll commence disbursement of N25bn ETF in December – Ambode

    …Artisans, traders, others to get access to fund

    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode on Tuesday said the State Government will commence the disbursement of the N25billion Employment Trust Fund (ETF) initiative of his administration by December, 2016.

    Governor Ambode, who spoke in Lagos at the graduation ceremony for 500 artisans trained by the State Government on modular employability programme in nineteen different trades, said the informal sector remains a critical vehicle for economic recovery, adding that Government was passionately committed to repositioning the sector for economic gains.

    He said the N25billion ETF, which would be disbursed for the next four years on N6.25billion annual basis, was one of the initiatives designed to empower the informal sector, adding that government was open to ideas and strategies that would aid sustainable growth of the sector.

    “Let me tell you clearly that the N25bn ETF is for artisans and entrepreneurs in Lagos State. We will commence disbursement from the month of December, 2016 and let me assure you that a larger percentage will go to our carpenters, our tailors, our hairdressers, our vulcanizers, and so on. Everybody that is a tradesman and is an artisan in Lagos will have automatic access to the Employment Trust Fund (ETF),” Governor Ambode said.

    Speaking at the event which also coincided with the 7th Tradesmen and Artisans’ Week, the Governor said the ETF was an initiative with the cardinal mandate to support the establishment and growth of small businesses to create job opportunities for the people, adding that soft loans would be provided to genuine and credible artisans and traders in the State.

    Besides, the Governor said it was now time for conscious and concerted efforts to re-engineer the mindsets of young ones and advance entrepreneurs with the view to repositioning them to face modern challenges, saying that except focus is shifted to equip and rebuild the informal sector, members would not be vibrant enough for the prevailing realities of the moment.

    He assured that his administration would not sit and wait for oil prices to rebound in the international market before arriving at a solution to the challenges confronting the state, hence the need for the ETF and other initiatives.

    On the training for artisans, Governor Ambode said such was one of the platforms for recognizing and projecting the significant contributions of the informal sector as a vehicle for economic development, adding that government was equally mindful of the fact that artisans were the major players and the conveyor belt for industrial enterprise in the country.

    While urging the newly trained artisans to leverage on the strategic position of Lagos as the contributor of 25 percent of the total GDP of Nigeria and 5th largest economy in Africa, Governor Ambode said the training which they passed through was designed to address this skills mismatch and provide the right mix of skills needed to service the industrial needs of the State.

    Responding to requests by artisans through their representatives, Governor Ambode approved that the beneficiaries of the training should be increased to 1,500 artisans next year and a yearly subvention of N12million and brand new operation bus for the Lagos State Council of Tradesmen and Artisans (LASCOTA), among others.

    Earlier, Commissioner for Wealth Creation and Employment, Mr. Babatunde Durosinmi-Etti said the 500 artisans were re-trained and up-skilled on eight weeks intensive programme solely sponsored by the State Government for better service delivery.

    On his part, LASCOTA Chairman, Alhaji Nurudeen Buhari thanked Governor Ambode for the various efforts aimed at improving the productivity of artisans in the State, especially the Tradesmen and Artisans’ Empowerment Programme (LASTEAP), saying that the continuous training had impacted positively on their productivity and enhanced them economically.

  • Our wives now pay the bills

    Our wives now pay the bills

    As the current recession bites harder in the country, Gboyega Alaka, returns with some of the most gripping stories of frustration and despair from amongst artisans and labourers, who by virtue and nature of their works, seem to be the most affected.

    The day was far spent. Precisely past 12 noon. But a good number of the men were still seated in their usual shed, waiting and hoping, albeit without much assurance. For years, the men, under the umbrella of Bricklayers and Carpenters Association of Nigeria, have gathered at this point by Iyana-Ejigbo Bus stop; their banner, now faded and tattered, hanging somewhere above them, and weakly announcing their essence. It read: Call here for labour office, Bricklayers and Carpenters Association, Service To Humanity.’ The motive is for those in immediate need of their various services, to be able to locate them and hire them; so they could in turn earn their daily wages and have something to survive on.

    And it has worked for years. Like one of them recalled, they’ve had their shed around the Iyana-Ejigbo area of Lagos for nearly a decade, if not more. They used to be at a more visible point right by the roadside, until demand for visible spaces forced them to this corner. But by and large, life has gone on fairly well. Customers located them and contracted them for jobs and they made a living. Sometimes, they got contracted for big construction jobs, and they worked on the site for weeks, sometimes months, raking in huge money and living well. During those good times, most of them have also been able to empower their spouses, by way of saving for rainy days; which they admit do come, from time to time.

    But that has changed, which accounts for why so many of them were still seated by the shed this afternoon. The annual global artisan economy, according to world’s leading supplier of technology and services, Bosch, is said to be valued at $32 Billion. This, by implication means it is one of the largest employers of labour in today’s world. It also means that people in this category, such as bricklayers, carpenters, plumbers, welders and electricians, play vital roles in the development and growth of our world. In Nigeria, the situation is no different, as they engage in building houses, offices, roads and public utility edifices. The problem however is that the current economic situation has left most of them stranded, being that their services do not enjoy priority of space in most people or organisations’ spending.

    Said D Ogunmola, a carpenter, the truth is that “Time has changed. There are no jobs anymore (and) everyday, we just come out and sit here all day long, without anybody looking our way. Ordinarily, we get jobs at least three times a week in the past, but now, we may sit here for upward of two weeks, moping and hoping. How does a man get bye like that?”

    Even though only about ten of them were seen sitting or loitering by the shed this afternoon, Ogunmola said they’re actually huge in number but most of them have gradually left in frustration, seeing that it was past the normal time when people come to contract them for jobs.

    In the middle of the discussion, Mutiu, a younger member of the group, who introduced himself as a bricklayer said “Look brother, the situation is so bad that passers-by now see us as miscreants and agberos, who just wake up and come here looking for free money, simply because they’re always seeing us here, come rain, come shine.”

    He said he’d been hanging around the shed since 6am, just so he didn’t miss out on any opportunity; yet all that seemed to have amounted to a waste. “There are days that not a single person from among us will leave this shed for a job, except maybe to take a stroll out of boredom, or to go home.”

    He said the situation is so bad that the lazy boys in the neighbourhood and around the bus stops, whom they used to tell off to go find something to do, now talk back at them and even deride them for their ill fortune. “One of them even told me to go and jump into the lagoon, telling me, ‘when was the last time you left this shed to go and work?’ He even told me to come and join them in chasing vehicles for free money.

    “Let me tell you,” Mutiu continued, now agitated, “if I see somebody who is ready to take me abroad right now, as we’re talking now, I swear, I will not hesitate for one second. What’s there to hesitate about? What would I be missing if I left right now? Nothing. I tell you, nothing. This Nigeria does not pay anybody and I for one, I’m frustrated.”

    Ogunmola, who said he is married with kids, said sometimes, most of them leave home to come sit at the shed, not because they’re sure they’d get jobs, but because as men, they could not just sit at home, idling away. The irony in that, according to him, is that what they refuse to do in the comfort of their homes; they end up doing in full public glare.

    He lamented: “Things are really tough in the country now; pennilessness and hunger is killing us. We are praying to God to change the situation, so that people can begin to build houses again. It is when people have eaten and paid their children’s school fees that they think of any form of construction. Some of us, who had children in private schools, have had to withdraw them because they can no longer cope. And it is not as if they put their children in expensive schools anyway.”He lamented.

    Asked how much they get paid per day for their kind of work, Ogunmola said he gets paid N4,000 as a bricklayer; same for carpenters; but that labourers get paid N3,000. Even then, he declared that he would gladly grab the job for less, if anyone were to approach him in this hard time.

    Mutiu is however of the opinion that the wage ought to have gone up but reasoned that it is when you have patronage that you think of increasing your wage.

    His opinion was corroborated by another member of the group, a carpenter, who said all they make do with now are minor mending jobs, such as fixing tables, chairs and little wooden bridges over the gutters, for which they get paid as little as N100, N200 or at most N1,000. He said, “It is so bad that now we combine breakfast with lunch, and what do we buy? Food of as little as N50 and N70, just to keep hunger at bay. In the past, we richly patronised the food-sellers; but these days, we have so incurred accumulated debts, that they no longer sell to us. But would you blame them?”

    At this point, Fatai, a much younger man, joined the discussion. He seemed quite glad to have this opportunity to voice his frustration and wasted no time in announcing to this reporter that: “Look, I had to buy this coke on credit from the woman there. The last time I got a major (construction) site job, is over a year ago. Let me tell you, this Buhari regime has not favoured artisans like us at all. I think because the government is fighting corruption and retrieving stolen money, those who have money, whether legitimate or illegitimate, are not ready to bring it out for any construction work, for fear of attracting unnecessary attention.”

    As a result, he declared that he and his co-artisans are ‘psychologically sick.’ “If you don’t have money, you’re sick, and it could lead to hypertension. People have also been known to commit suicide because of situations like this. As we speak, some of us have not even eaten anything today.”

    They say it’s the recession

    Asked what he thinks is the cause of the current drought, Ogunmola said “It is because the price of everything has gone up and there is no money in town. They call it recession, whatever that means. So people, who used to spend money on construction, are no longer able to, and people like us are the direct recipients of that drought. Besides, building materials have also gone up. A single iron sheet is now N1,000, while a bundle is around N20,000. Even a bag of cement has moved up to around N2,500. So that makes it tough even for intending builders and they just keep procrastinating. It’s like a chain, and the effect is ripple.”

    Continuing, he said, “You salary earners are better off. You get paid, even on days when you don’t have much to do, but not in our case. You have to work, to get paid. What we go through these days is a case of one (day) job in two weeks. At N4,000, how far can that take anyone?”

    ‘Who the hell are you?’

    As this reporter took shots to wrap up this encounter with the group, a voice suddenly bellowed, “Who the hell are you?” It was the voice of one not given to any kind of excesses and he simply wanted to know what gave the reporter the audacity to be taking pictures. But Ogunmola quickly came to the rescue. He introduced the owner of the voice as chairman of the group and also conveyed the reporter’s mission to the chairman. But the smallish elderly man was not fazed.

    “So what!” He sneered. “Oh you want to know how we are surviving? Fine, you have seen it. Tell the government we’re here and that I, for one, have resigned myself to fate.”

    Asked how often he gets jobs now, he looked up sharply and said, “Why are you going back there? When a man tells you he has resigned himself to fate, you should understand that that means end of discussion. There is nothing more to say.”

    His was a typical case of frustration, as currently pervades the land.

    Our wives, our sustainers

    When asked how he copes with the challenges of the home, Ogunmola said “Our wives already know our kind of job, so they’re accommodating. They do their best to support us. Mine for instance, sells fufu and it is with the proceeds that she manages the home.

    Olufemi, who had been quiet all through the discussions chipped in: “In fact, most of us have our wives to thank for our survival. Don’t forget God already ordained them our helpers. My wife is a trader and it is with her support that we saw our four children through school and still manage through this hard time.”

    Fatai, on his part, revealed that his wife sells food, which makes feeding of both of them and their only child a bit easy. Even then, he said he sometimes holds back from eating directly from the business without paying, so as not to run it aground.

    Worst end of the year

    Ogunmola is therefore of the opinion that this end of the year (November, December) is the worst they have experienced in a long time. He said the tradition usually, is that people would be busy trying to complete their houses that had been under construction, so they could move in before the New Year. The implication of that is that artisans like us and labourers, including welders and iron-benders and painters are always busy. But that seems like a long time ago now.

    Ogunmola also said the situation is robbing them of their manliness in the home, to the extent that they now rely on their wives more of the time for feeding and other responsibilities.

    Almost echoing Fatai’s exact words, he said, “The situation is killing us gradually.”

    At the other end of town, not far from the popular Synagogue church in Ikotun, this reporter caught up with a group of artisans working on site. They were busy building a row of shops. The head bricklayer, Alfa Adamo Olalere admitted that they were indeed lucky to have landed this one, but confessed that it was their first job in about a month. The reason they even landed the job, he said, was because they started the project and have a good relationship with the landlady.

    Alfa Olalere is also of the opinion that this is the worst end of the year season in a long time. “At times like this in the past, the usual thing was for people who had building sites to suddenly speed up works on them, so they could move in or have tenants move in there. But that is not happening now. Everything is just dry.”

    When asked how long they have been on this project and how much they get paid per day, Olalere said, “We started this phase of fixing doors and plastering three days ago, and we should be through in another two days.”

    He also said they (he and the other bricklayer) get paid N3,000 per day, while the assistant (the labourer) gets paid N2000. A quick calculation meant that he would have made N15,000 in five days. Sensing that this reporter was doing a silent calculation, he asked almost in self pity: “How much of today’s immediate need can that (amount) attend to?”

    Like the guys in Iyana Ejigbo, he admitted that more of the support in the home now comes from his wife. He said: “That is why our wives have to be engaged in business. That way, there is food on the table at all times, because children don’t understand recession and they don’t accept excuses.”

    Besides, as a Muslim, Olalere said he believes in fate and that the God that created the mouth has created what every individual will put in it, and that we only have to strive to get it. He said the ongoing economic hardship was brought about by God and that it is a passing phase that will soon blow away. He therefore enjoined patience, perseverance and hardwork on all Nigerians.

    Lateef, a furniture maker, who had been watching this interview with keen interest chipped in that it is the same with his profession. Lateef, who is married with children in school, said he has no regrets about his kind of work because it’s his passion, but said patronage is really low these days.

    “Usually in November/December like this, we had so much work, that we often called on our colleagues, who were less busy, to join us. In other cases, you’d have had people, who’d have informed you of jobs to be done for them. Jobs could include making new furniture, refurbishing old ones, reworking clients’ offices or home interiors; but none of that is on ground as we speak.”

    Lateef also said those moving into new homes are always in the habit of making new furniture, and that it doesn’t seems like anybody is moving into new houses this year.

    Lamentations all over

    At a point near Egbeda bus stop In Lagos, where labour workers of Hausa origin usually gather in the morning to get contracted for jobs, the story is the same. A couple of them approached for interview declined comments and shied away from the camera. One of them however volunteered in his smattering English that “Country is hard; no work, no money. We are hungry.”

    Another said most of them have travelled up north to engage in farming or be with their family, since there is nothing to do in Lagos at the moment. A Yoruba man lounging nearby said: “Tell Buhari that the world has collapsed on us labourers. We are the ones suffering most because it is when people have left-over that they remember us. We are hungry. In fact, some of us are dying.”

    Wilson, a printer, who lives in Badagry, said “If you go to Shomolu and Mushin, where real printing work goes on in Lagos, you’ll know that this country is really sick. The places are like ghost towns and everybody is lamenting, whereas they are usually a beehive of activities during normal times. Usually, I would have got several calendars and souvenir jobs by this time, but that is not happening. I’ve even gone to my regular clients, sent quotations and pressed the usual buttons, yet nothing is happening.”

    Dare, a journalist, spoke of how the artisans in his neighbourhood in Ikorodu are lamenting and have literally become beggars, stalking those they consider a bit well-off for loose change. In other instances, he said most of them are migrating to other jobs with jet speed. He spoke of a funny scenario, where a guy he had always known to be a bricklayer crossed him as he drove out of his neighbourhood and told him, “Oga, you no get dirty cloth? I don dey do dry-cleaning now o, I will wash and iron your clothes very well, and my price is cheap.”

    That in a nutshell summarises the bad the situation as it affects artisans in present day Nigeria.

  • Bosch Power Box launched in Nigeria

    Bosch Power Box launched in Nigeria

    Bosch (www.Bosch.com), one of the world’s leading suppliers of technology and services has launched Bosch Power Box (BPB) in Nigeria.

    Bosch Power Box (BPB) according to a statement by the company will assist the thousands of tradesmen and artisans in Nigeria – including plumbers, carpenters, welders and electricians – in growing their business through providing access to the very latest in technology as well as training and technical and financial support.

    Nigerians artisans are expected to be able to buy, lease or rent the very latest power tools developed by the world’s market leader and to be used at these central hubs.

    The Bosch Power Box not only offers power tools to local craftsmen, but also servicing and maintenance expertise. Free training is also offered artisans and carpenters to upskill by giving them hands-on coaching.

    The Bosch Power Box (BPB) in Nigeria is expected to increase the success it has already established in Sokoban Wood Village, Kumasi Ghana, launched in 2016.

    Artisans play a big role in Nigeria’s economy. The Global artisan economy is annually valued at $32 billion and it is one of the largest employers in the developing world.

  • Business kits for traders, artisans

    As part of his efforts to reduce effects of current economic hardship experienced by members of his constituency, the member representing Lagos Mainland Federal Constituency at the House of Representatives, Hon. Olajide Jimoh, has empowered some members of his constituency with business and entrepreneurial kits.

    The items provided included tricycles, block-moulding machines; motorised sewing machines, grinding machines, power generating sets and hair dryers, among others.

    While distributing the items at the fourth stakeholders’ meeting in Lagos, Jimoh said the gesture was informed by the need to empower people with sustainable means of earning income. He noted that the effort will further tame the harrowing rate of unemployment and youth inclination to criminal activities.

    He said: “Need we stress the fact that the country is currently facing myriad of problems and Nigeria’s economy is in comatose. It is gratifying that the present government is working steadily to give the economy the needed impetus in order to restore Nigeria’s glory.

    “It is obvious that empowering Nigerians is the way to go if we must develop. If we are serious about reducing the incidence of burglary, armed robbery and associated crimes, the youth must be constructively engaged.”

    The lawmaker noted that the modalities used for selection of beneficiaries was carefully organised to align with thriving business angles.

    “For instance, we have invested in these tricycles because of our belief that transport business is thriving in Nigeria; likewise fashion designing, so that beneficiaries will have good businesses to engage in. The food industry is, perhaps, the biggest. Thus, grinding machines will come in handy,” he said.

    He, however, advised the beneficiaries to make use of the items provided in order to grow their businesses into huge establishments.

    Hon. Jimoh, who also gave an account of his stewardship, reeled off robbery on federal roads, problems confronting the entertainment industry, unemployment crisis, international certification of vaccination as some of the motions he had raised before the House of Representatives.

    Others, he said, included pushing for a bill for an act to provide for the establishment of the traditional medicine council of Nigeria, technological solutions to manual handling and checking of passengers’ luggage at airports by Immigration and the Nigerian Customs Service.

  • Dearth of skilled artisans: Master craftsmen to the rescue?

    Dearth of skilled artisans: Master craftsmen to the rescue?

    The continued dearth of skilled and indigenous artisans has remained a source of concern to stakeholders in the built environment. Many are worried that artisans, such as masons, tilers, carpenters, steel fabricators, plumbers, electricians, painters and others are sourced from neighbouring countries like Benin Republic, Togo, Ghana, Cote D’ Ivoire, among others.

    According to experts,  in 2015, the development cost Nigeria over N9 billion in payment to ‘’expatriate’’ artisans.

    Determined to reverse the trend, and ensure that local artisans take their rightful place in the construction industry, the Lagos State Government has inaugurated ‘Lagos State Master Craftsman Project’- a training initiative aimed at honing the skills of indigenous artisans.

    The initiative, which is  in conjunction with the Nigerian Institute of Building (NIOB), other professional bodies and training institutions, such as the Lagos State Technical and Vocational Education Board, will take on the craftsmen for on-the-job training. On completion of the training, they will be attached to reputable construction companies on the housing projects of the state to gain the requisite hands-on-experience.

    Under the programme, a craftsman after training would be assigned to a project for a specified period to undertake skill capacity building, acquire work ethics and discipline. Each batch of craftsmen would be trained for six weeks, subjected to appropriate examinations and eventually registered as a “Master Craftsman’’ if successful.  The training will be flexible to accommodate the artisans and workmen already at work or in some form of employment.

    Furthermore, a data base of certified craftsmen will be maintained by the state . The data base will identify and categorise the craftsmen from the programme with a unique identification number that will be verifiable online.

    The project,  according to  the Commissioner for Housing, Prince Gbolahan Lawal, reinforces the public-private partnership policy of the administration.

    He said over the course of the scheme, which is for four years, 4,000 artisans would have been trained and equipped with the necessary skills and tools needed across the scope of construction works. Besides, the multiplier effect of this initiative excitedLawal, who said each artisan was expected to train others.

    Lamenting the sorry state of the construction industry, Lawal regretted the dependence of the sector on foreigners, who, he said, are taking advantage of the shortage as skilled artisans are aging while the younger ones have not been sufficiently groomed to take over from them.

    “Lack of adequately trained artisans has been discovered to be a major contributor to the problems of housing delivery and this industry plays an important role in the economy. This programme would enhance employability, improve productivity and stem the influx of foreign artisans as well as craftsmen into the country,” Lawal said.

    Justifying the training, the Permanent Secretary, Lagos State Ministry of Housing, Mr. Bayo Dipe, said the influx of foreign craftsmen was a sign that nature abhors vacuum and since there is a shortfall of such technical hands, indigenous developers resorted to importing them from neighbouring countries.

    According to Dipe, it is a general belief in the industry today that if one wants quality work, particularly, finishing, foreigners are the ones to patronise.

    He, however, cautioned that it is a dangerous trend that must not be allowed to continue. “Firstly, it is not good for our economic development both as a nation and as individuals, who engage in these trades.  The sector is too important be left in the hands of foreigners while many of our youths are jobless.

    “Secondly, it is also not good for our security as the influx of foreign artisans exposes us as a country. Thirdly, the proliferation of poor quality work, which abound in  our cities arising from poor workmanship as a result of the dearth of well trained craftsmen, is not the pride of any nation.  It is also a contributor to the spate of collapsed buildings in our society,” Dipe explained.

    The Master Craftsman Project, stakeholders say, is an expression of government’s firm beliefs that the programme will take the country back to the era when its artisans and workmen were amongst the best in the world. It is also believed that this will bring a new culture of training and skill acquisition in the local building construction industry.

  • Institution trains artisans on foundation work

    The Nigerian Institution of Structural Engineers (NIStructE) has resolved to train young engineers and other artisans in foundation construction to curb building collapse.

    Its President, OreOluwa Fadayomi, said this while declaring open a three-day course on “Application of sub-soil investigation results to design of different foundation types and piled foundation integrity tests.”

    The course was organised by the institution in Lagos, last week.

    Fadayomi noted that the collapse of buildings in recent times has become very embarrassing to professionals, regretted that since some artisan and construction practitioners are not well grounded in what they do, it therefore becomes imperative that as qualified professionals, they should train the younger ones and share experiences they have garnered over the years.

    While urging participants at the training to share their knowledge with their colleagues, he said it is possible for other professionals to hide their mistakes, but for engineers, it is difficult as it will result into loss of lives and investments.

    Course Coordinator and Vice-President of the institution, Dr Kehinde Osifala, in his welcome address, said the need for continous development of technical manpower coupled with the need to reduce the spate of building collapses necessitated the course.

    The training, Osifala assured, would be a continuous exercise, and tailored to other aspects of engineering, with another one focused on addressing supervision in construction work.

    The course focused on sub soil investigation and laboratory tests; interpretation of subsoil investigation; foundation types and areas/situations of applicability and pile loading and integrity tests among others, also involved site visit.

  • N500b cash for traders, farmers, artisans coming

    Over two million traders, farmers and artisans will receive N500 billion micro-credit to be managed by the Bank of Industry (BoI). It is tagged: N500 billion Social Protection Programme for 2016.

    Speaking yesterday, Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr Okechukwu Enelamah said the ministry  will be rolling out programmes and initiatives focused on supporting micro, medium and small enterprises (MSMEs) with finance, infrastructure, technical support and training.

    He said the manufacturing sector currently contributes only about 10 per cent to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), lamenting that it is lower than it is the lowest other emerging markets.

    He said the government is set to implement the Nigerian Industrial Revolution Plan (NIRP), launched by the previous government.

    “Our industrialisation ambition is hinged on the  NIRP launched by the previous government in 2014. It is now time to move that comprehensive document from plan to action. It is now our duty to implement that plan in light of current realities, taking into consideration the lessons learnt in the two years since it was unveiled.

    “We are focusing on identifying and supporting a select number of industrial sectors in which Nigeria has comparative advantage. We have seen success in our backward integration policies in the cement industry; and sugar is currently trying to replicate that success. In the Automotive and Cotton, Textile and Garment (CTG) industries, we are continuing discussions with players and stakeholders to see how we can better implement an industrial policy that creates jobs, profits and prosperity,” he said.