Tag: Bago

  • Bago seeks support for govt’s agricultural revolution

    Bago seeks support for govt’s agricultural revolution

    Niger State Governor Umaru Bago has urged critical organisations and individuals to support the state’s agricultural revolution programmes to ensure food sufficiency and security.

    Bago made the call when he inaugurated the new executive council members of Community Association For Grassroots Transformation, in Minna yesterday.

    He decried the rising cost of food items in the country, blaming the situation on those hoarding and mopping up food from markets to create artificial scarcity.

    Read Also: Bagos condemns killing of four persons in Plateau

    Bago, however, said that support of stakeholders like the Community Association For Grassroots Transformation, would go along way in making the state an agricultural hub.

    “Niger State needs to start producing for the emerging markets, which will in the long run enrich the farmers as well as guarantee food security,” Bago said.

    The governor tasked the association to focus on overcoming challenges and attaining more inclusive future at the grassroots.

    He called on the group to organise a round-table with the state government on such developmental issues like the state of Baro Port and Bida Basin.

  • Bago to Niger residents: expose s3xual abuse perpetrators hiding under culture

    Bago to Niger residents: expose s3xual abuse perpetrators hiding under culture

    The wife of Niger state governor, Hajiya Fatima Umar Bago has called on individuals, leaders, and groups to expose people who hide under the guise of culture to perpetrate sexual abuse.

    Speaking at the 2nd International Conference on Rape and Child Sexual Abuse organized by The Peak Story, Bago noted that exposing the abusers and their antics would enable young girls to identify and point them out.

    She pointed out that some of the sexual abuse perpetrators hide under the cultural context of northern Nigeria which adds a layer of complexities that requires nuanced approaches considering the rich traditions and values that have shaped the region.

    She said: “We need to do more by exposing some of these abusers, and their antics so that our girls can identify and know them. This conference should serve as a wake-up call to all stakeholders in Northern Nigeria to protect our norms, values, and cultures from the negative impact of technology and social media. We are emphasizing on northern Nigeria because a lot is going on and they hide under the guise of culture.”

    The governor’s Wife then called for a platform for government officials, experts, gender-based advocates, and community leaders to map out effective strategies against these societal evils.

    She added: “Going forward, we have to initiate collaborations between government agencies, non-profit organizations, and the private sector to develop comprehensive strategies that address the multi-faceted nature of abuse faced by the female gender in our society especially in rural areas and by close relations.

    “The prevalence of rape and child sexual abuse in local communities harms our young girls. It is our collective responsibility to stand together vehemently and advocate for the rights of these vulnerable girls and take decisive action to deal with it to protect their futures.

    “By raising awareness, fostering education, and implementing targeted innovations, we can work towards creating a safer environment for these girls. Let us unite in our commitment to eradicate such heinous acts by ensuring that every girl regardless of her background can grow up free from the fear of abuse and the opportunity to realize her full potential.”

    Speaking on the theme of the conference, ‘Technology and online safety: exploring the influence of technology and social media on sexual abuse issues, strategies, and prevention’, Bago said that in addressing the pervasive impact of technology, there is a need to recognize its potential for good and the challenges it presents.

    “The online world has become a powerful tool for communication, education, and connection but unfortunately, it has also become a breeding ground for various forms of sexual abuse. It is within this dichotomy that we find ourselves and it is our responsibility to harness the positive aspect while actively working to mitigate the negative consequences it comes along with.”

    She reiterated the determination of the state government to place a high premium on gender mainstreaming in its developmental agenda of the state.

    Bago also urges all stakeholders to explore innovative solutions by technology that propel social development and mitigate gender disparity stressing that by leveraging technology, awareness, education, and empowerment can be created to enable individuals to protect themselves and others online.

    Read Also: Bago attends Havard seminar to boost agribusiness in Niger

    The convener, Chenemi Bamaiyi explained that the conference was designed to sensitize students and the youths about the the advancement of technologies and the dangers that come with it while highlighting how they can stay safe online and be protected from online sexual predators and cyberbullying.

    He said that the conference will teach the students how and when to give consent, define boundaries online and offline, deal with cyberbullying, and recognize signs that someone has rape and other perverse motive when relating with them.

    He stated: “We now live in a digital world where having data makes a lot of young people more comfortable than not having money. With the advancement of technology comes its peculiar challenges and exposes young and old people to cyberbullying. We will look at how cyberbullying translates to sexual abuse and how to speak out about it.”

    Bamaiyi explained that the conference is expected to make the students part of the solution to this societal ill and help them know how to navigate technological advancement.

  • Bago attends Havard seminar to boost agribusiness in Niger

    Bago attends Havard seminar to boost agribusiness in Niger

    In the bid to position Niger State as the most agriculturally productive in the country as well as leverage its vast resources and potential for growth, Governor Mohammed Bago, is attending the Agribusiness Seminar at the Harvard Business Campus in America.

    The event, scheduled from January 7th to 10th, 2024 is a long-standing event where global business leaders discuss the evolving and volatile agribusiness sector.

    Since assuming office, Governor Bago had pledged his administration would give priority to agriculture to harness the vast arable land and abundant water resources of the state to make it a major agricultural hub in Nigeria.

    In its bid to harness its agricultural potential and improve the livelihoods of its rural population, Bago has embarked on various initiatives aimed at promoting food security.

    Read Also: Wanted: A smoke-free country

    The seminar focuses on exploring industry challenges and innovation opportunities, seeking to shape the future of agribusiness and discover techniques for long-term success.

    Target attendees are experienced leaders across the food and agriculture industry, including heads of subnationals, senior executives, entrepreneurs, and leaders from agribusiness-related government agencies and NGOs.

    The program intends to improve resilience and flexibility, defend against commodification, improve decision-making and operational efficiency, create transparent supply chains, and manage risks associated with climate change, environmental pressures, and logistical challenges.

    It also covers understanding market shifts, regional and global trends, and responding to government regulations.

    Participants will learn through faculty-led discussions, group work, and insights from industry speakers.

    Topics include strategic objectives, mitigating risks, preparing for trade disruptions and geopolitical upheaval, balancing sustainability with short-term and long-term goals, meeting diverse consumer demands, leveraging new technologies, assessing new business models, attracting industry innovators, and repositioning older brands.

  • Niger Govt dismisses report on ban of alcohol 

    Niger Govt dismisses report on ban of alcohol 

    The Niger State Government has dismissed reports that it has banned alcohol as untrue.

    According to the debunked reports, alcohol would be banned in Suleja and eight other local governments of the sharing boundaries with suburbs of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    The report, which quoted a purported statement by one Ibrahim Mohammed, the secretary of the state’s Liquor and Licencing Board, indicated the ban will take effect from January 1.

    But Governor Mohammed Umaru Bago said there was no such board.

    Bago, popularly known as the Farmer Governor, said he has been busy initiating and overseeing many people-centered projects across the state, and never issued such a directive. 

    He directed security agents to arrest the self-appointed secretary, Mohammed, to understand the motives of the imposter.

    He said in a statement, “The attention of the Niger State Government has been drawn to a report making the rounds of some blogs claiming that the Niger State Government, through the state’s Liquor and Licensing Board, has prohibited the sale of alcohol in nine Local Government Areas of the state, including Suleja. 

    “The Liquor and Licensing Board is yet to be constituted; as such, no directive of this kind can come from a board yet to be formed.

    “In light of the above I have directed security agents to arrest the self-appointed Secretary of this board by name Mohammed Ibrahim, and to understand the motives of the imposter and the reasons behind the pronouncement.

    “We invite the good public and our friends in the media to ignore any such pronouncements and to, henceforth, seek clarification from known government officials who are authorized to speak for the state and government.”

  • Adventures of ‘Farmer Bago’

    Adventures of ‘Farmer Bago’

    Niger State Governor Mohammed Bago comes across as deeply passionate about goals he sets his sight upon, and heavy on optics towards accomplishing them. In other words, he not only rallies followership in pursuit of his goals, he also acts out the leading charge in implementation efforts. Gut drives are typically heated and cannot but affront the coldness of conventions and habits. But to make sense of such drives, you’ll need to assess them in light of the driver’s objectives.

    The Niger governor was last week reported  to have banned workers in the state civil service from wearing native attires like kaftan, babanriga and flowing gowns to work from Mondays to Thursdays. The ban was said to be with immediate effect and applied to both male and female civil servants. Fridays are exempt, naturally, because it is the day for Jummat prayer and less business intense.

    Reports said Bago announced the ban penultimate Saturday during presentation of land development and preparation equipment at a farming establishment in Wushishi council area of the state. In handing down the purported prohibition, he said civil servants must dress like workers who work to create wealth and not noblemen, adding that any worker who fail to comply with the directive would be dismissed from service. For contextualisation, we should note that the governor spoke in a cultural setting where wearing native attires on all days and for all purposes – including work – is the norm. He spoke in Hausa language, as captured in a video clip that went viral, and reports translated him as saying: “From Monday, we will issue an order preventing civil servants from wearing kaftan and babanriga to work between Monday and Thursday. No babanriga, no kaftan, we are here to work. Anybody who wants to wear babanriga should resign. We are also going to engage in serious farming activities going forward.” He explained that his government was committed to changing the orientation and narrative that civil service was all about sitting in offices with flowing gowns and nice clothes, expending public money and doing nothing to create wealth. The youth, civil servants, politicians and traditional officeholders, according to him, must all go back to the farm.

    Apparently leading the charge in his ‘Back to the land’ battle cry, the governor, early last week, took on honorifics. He said he should no longer be addressed as ‘His Excellency’ – that conventional designation of Executive helmsmen – or ‘Honourable,’ or indeed ‘Mr. Governor,’ but rather as ‘Farmer Governor.’ The real effect of this title change on his socio-political status is inconsequential at best, if you asked me, but Bago obviously was laying into optics. After all, Canadian bi-linguist and former editor of Quebec’s largest English-language weekly, The Suburban, Beryl Wajsman, wrote in a 2007 column that “the optique (French term roughly equivalent to optics) is everything.” Speaking during his presentation of the 2024 Niger budget to the state house of assembly, the governor said the new designation he was adopting was aimed at reinforcing the priority his administration placed on agriculture “I want to inform the people of Niger State that from today, my nomenclature has changed and I wish to be addressed as ‘Farmer Governor Bago’ from henceforth.” Whether he seriously intended that anybody outside Niger State should notice or apply the title change is moot. But he put it out there.

    And the governor wasn’t done with the title change: he came for the budget presentation – a thoroughly business affair – in a tee-shirt and trousers. Never mind that the outfitting was extremely odd, almost a faux pas for the business heeled occasion. He apparently intended his casual appearance to underscore the ‘down to earthness’ of the agrarian way of life he was advocating. Take that for optics! The governor also used the event to clarify his earlier directive, saying he had not banned wearing of native attires by civil servants as widely reported. According to him, he only stressed the need for civil servants working in ministries of works, agriculture and others that require physical activity to dress in outfits that would enable them to function properly. It was helpful he made that clarification because it had been difficult reconciling the earlier reported version of his directive with the patriotic advocacy promoting Nigerian culture and products – in this case, attires.

    Bago’s enthusiasm for agrarian renaissance must be appreciated and applauded. But there is more to achieving the objective he touts than mere optics or sloganeering. Our nationhood experience in Nigeria shows that hypes – ‘Operation Feed the Nation,’ ‘Green Revolution,’ ‘Back to the Land’ et al – have not resulted in agricultural boom because they did not address the core issue of systemic fundamentals required as sub-structure for a successful campaign. One of these is the difficulty of access to arable land. When former President Olusegun Obasanjo led the charge on ‘Operation Feed the Nation’ in the late 70s, he ended up appropriating much of the land that could have been available to ordinary citizens seeking to engage in agriculture for himself. Another fundamental is lack of access to long-term, low cost funding for agricultural enterprise. Notice that there is no financial institution as of now dedicated to citizen-level agriculture financing, with cost free allowance for the gestation period that is inevitable between planting and harvest time. The ‘anchor borrowers’ scheme that was a pet programme of former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Godwin Emefiele was a ruse designed to seed-bed his political ambition, and it wasn’t even viably run to ensure successful enterprise and loan repayment by borrowers. Still another fundamental is the difficulty of access to market by farmers with their farm produce. This difficulty is in terms of huge transportation cost, compounded by awful road infrastructure. And that is not to mention lack of access to agriculture value chain that should enhance return on farm produce and incentivize increased output by farmers.

    Read Also: Emulate Chinese approach in tackling Japa syndrome, US group tells FG

    These are some of the issues that the ‘Farmer Governor’ didn’t seem to take account of and envision possible solution pathways in his new push for agrarian renaissance. But there was a more confounding oversight – or was it connivance? – namely the security challenge in Niger State that has hobbled farmers in particular. As recent as last month (November), there were reports that more than 20 maize, soya bean and guinea corn farms on the outskirts of Kontagora, headquarters of Kontagora council area in the state, had been burnt down by suspected bandits demanding a levy of N30million each from farmers to avoid further attacks. Way back in June, bandits’ attacks in several communities in Rafi council area reportedly led to the death of more than 50 farmers. The attacks, which occurred consistently over three days and affected more than five communities, forced several villagers out of their homes and created a humanitarian crisis in the area. And in October, the media reported the chairman of Munya Local Government Area, Najume Abdulamid Kuchi, saying there had been a siege on Zazzaga community resulting in the killing of some farmers and kidnapping of many others. “Honestly speaking, insecurity in Munya has continued unabated. As the LG chairman, on behalf of the people of Munya, I want to confirm to you that attacks happen almost every day now,” Kuchi told a Minna-based radio station on 4th October. He added: “They (bandits) even tax our people to bring their farm produce for settlement, yet they will still come back to attack them. Right now, crops, especially maize, that are due for harvesting are wasting in the farms because farmers cannot access their farms to harvest them. If they go, they get kidnapped.”

    It isn’t directly Bago’s responsibility to tackle these security challenges, but it falls on him to work with the security establishment for effective redress. We must ask how much has been achieved in changing the narrative to support his new drive for agricultural rebirth. It is good, indeed commendable, that the Niger governor is investing in procuring farming equipment and rallying state residents to the land. But his exertions would be sensational grand standing if the systemic fundamentals required for a successful campaign are not sorted out.

    It’s Christmas!

    Today is Christmas, and here is to wish my cherished readers a Merry Christmas and Happy Year 2024 in advance!

    •Please join me on kayodeidowu.blogspot.be for conversation.

  • Agriculture: Niger to hit 1trn revenue in 5-years – Farmer Gov Bago

    Agriculture: Niger to hit 1trn revenue in 5-years – Farmer Gov Bago

    Gov. Umar Bago of Niger, says his administration will likely hit N1 trillion in revenue through the Niger Food Security and Logistics Company,  in the next five years.

    Mr  Abdullberqy Ebbo, Special Adviser on Digital Media and Strategy to the governor, made this known in a statement on Saturday in Abuja.

    According to him, the move will employ over 100,000 farmers who will be farming on over 100,000 hectares across the state.

    He said that an agreement was signed between the Chairman of Niger Foods, Mr Sammy Adigun, and the Executive Director of TGI Group, Sadik Kassim, a Commodity off- takers firm.

    Ebbo said the signing was witnessed by the Chairman, Union Bank, and the EVC, TGI Group, Malam Faruk Gumel.

    Read Also: Bago gives Niger workers seven days public holiday

    According to the agreement, the state and the producer shall be responsible for the cultivation, harvesting, aggregation, and sale of rice paddy, soya beans, maize, and sesame seeds to the off-taker.

    This, he said, includes Tropical General Investments, which would be responsible for the transportation, logistics, and purchase of the farm produce.

    Tropical General Investment was part of the conglomerate which included Union Bank, Wacot Rice, Wasil, and Chi groups.

    He said the transaction involved the production of 600,000 to one million tonne of various farm  produce  per year,  concurrently for five years. (NAN)

  • Bago gives Niger workers seven days public holiday

    Bago gives Niger workers seven days public holiday

    Niger State Governor, Mohammed Bago has given the state workers seven days public holiday to celebrate the Christmas and New Year.

    The governor made the declaration during the end of the Year cutting of the cake held at the Government House, Minna.

    Read Also: Prioritise your health, strengthen bonds with loved ones, God – First Lady tells elderly Nigerians

    According to him, the holiday will commence from Friday the 22nd of December 2023, to Monday the 1st of January, 2024.

    Bago also said that there would be distribution of food stuff to the less privileged across the state to enable them get something to celebrate the yuletide season.

  • Christmas: Bago announces 7-day public holiday for Niger workers

    Christmas: Bago announces 7-day public holiday for Niger workers

    Niger state governor, Farmer Mohammed Umaru Bago has given the state workers seven days public holiday to celebrate the Christmas and New Year.

    The governor made the declaration during the end of the Year cutting of the cake held at the Government House, Minna.

    According to him, the holiday will commence from Friday the 22nd of December 2023, to Monday the 1st of January, 2024.

    Read Also: Call me Farmer Governor Bago, says Niger Gov

    Bago also said that there would be distribution of food stuff to the less privileged across the state to enable them get something to celebrate the yuletide season.

  • Call me Farmer Governor Bago, says Niger Gov

    Call me Farmer Governor Bago, says Niger Gov

    Niger state Governor, Mohammed Umar Bago has said that he should no longer be called ‘Excellency’ or N’Honorable’ or ‘Mr Governor’ but be called “Farmer Governor”.

    “I want to inform the people of Niger state that from today, my nomenclature has changed and I wish to be addressed as Farmer Governor Bago from henceforth”, Bago said.

    Speaking during the presentation of the 2024 budget to the state House of Assembly, the governor said the name is to reinforce the priority of the government on agriculture.

    Read Also: Bago drops ‘His Excellency’ title, adopts ‘Farmer governor’

    Bago, who wore a tee-shirt and a demin trouser during the presentation, said that he has not banned the wearing of agbada by civil servants as carried by some media organizations.

    He explained that he only emphasized the need for civil servants working in the ministries of works, agriculture or other ministries that require physical functioning to dress in outfits that would enable them function properly.

    The governor also converted the state Trade Fair Complex into a multipurpose complex for sports and recreation renaming it as the Bola Tinubu Square (BTS).

  • Bago drops ‘His Excellency’ title, adopts ‘Farmer governor’

    Bago drops ‘His Excellency’ title, adopts ‘Farmer governor’

    Niger state governor, Mohammed Umar Bago, has said that he should no longer be called ‘Excellency’ or ‘Honourable’ or ‘Mr Governor’ but be called “Farmer Governor.”

    The governor stated this during the presentation of the 2024 budget to the state House of Assembly said that the name is to reinforce the priority of the government on agriculture.

    He said: “I want to inform the people of Niger state that from today, my nomenclature has changed and I wish to be addressed as Farmer Governor Bago from henceforth.”

    The governor, who wore a tee-shirt and a trouser during the presentation, however, said that he has not banned the wearing of agbada by civil servants as carried by some media organisations.

    He explained that he only emphasized the need for civil servants working in the ministries of works, agriculture or other ministries that require physical functioning to dress in outfits that would enable them function properly.

    Read Also: Niger’s Gov. Bago presents N613.2bn for 2024 as agriculture gets top priority

    The governor also converted the state  Trade Fair Complex into a multipurpose complex for sports and recreation renaming it as the Bola Tinubu Square (BTS).