Tag: European Union

  • Ramaphosa thanks PM May for returning sunken WWI ship’s bell

    President Cyril Ramaphosa of South africa oon Tuesday thanked thanked British Prime Minister Theresa May for handing over the bell of a World War I ship on which over 600 black South African troops perished when it sunk in 1917.

    “We were extremely honoured to have been presented with the ship’s bell of the SS Mendi,” Ramaphosa said at the close of May’s visit to the former British colony.

    The gesture “honours the memory and the sacrifices of all those who perished so far away from their homes and loved ones,” he added.

    May’s trade trip to South Africa – which will be followed by stops in Kenya and Nigeria – comes as Britain seeks to shore up trade partners ahead of their exit next year from the European Union.

    “Both our countries have identified key sectors for investment to boost economic growth and development,” Ramaphosa said after meeting with May.

    “We also confirmed our wish that the negotiations on the UK’s exit from the European Union are concluded in a manner that restores stability to economic and financial markets,” he said.

    Earlier, May kicked off her first Africa trip in Cape Town, saying she saw huge potential for investment in the continent.

    May’s trip comes as she seeks to shore up trade partners ahead of Britain’s exit next year from the European Union, with British businesses sounding the alarm about the potential negative impact.

    She announced plans for about 5 billion dollars in investment for Africa and said job creation should be at the “very heart” of the British-African partnership.

    Britain was South Africa’s sixth largest trading partner in 2017.

    She spoke about the need to continue British aid to Africa, saying “I want to be clear, foreign aid works,” and offered assurances on Britain’s engagement with the wide world even as it prepares to break away from Europe.

    “We will remain a global champion for aid spending, humanitarian relief and international development,” she said in an address.

    On the plane to South Africa, May tried to calm fears of what would happen if Britain leaves the European Union without a negotiated Brexit deal, saying it “wouldn’t be the end of the world.”

    Britain published 24 documents last week on preparations for a no-deal Brexit, which analysts warn could have dire consequences for the economy.

    Read Also: Buhari, Ramaphosa to discuss security of Nigerians in South Africa

    At the press conference, May also voiced support for South Africa’s controversial land reform plans.

    Her U.S. counterpart Donald Trump last week angered the South African government after tweeting concerns about their intention to expropriate land without compensation in order to address historical inequality.

    “The UK has for some time now supported land reform … land reform that is legal, transparent,” she said, adding that she welcomed assurances already given by South African leader Cyril Ramaphosa that there would be “no smash and grab.”

    May’s comments will come as a relief to many in the country who were worried the land policy could scare off investment.

    The prime minister, however, stressed the need for strong legal frameworks and anti-corruption mechanisms in African countries in order for investors to be secure.

    “Corruption and dirty money,” she said, “both have the potential to push development off course.”

    More widely, the prime minister promised that Britain would support a permanent position for Africa on the United Nations Security Council.

    Britain will also be opening more embassies on the continent, including in Chad and Niger, May said, countries that have a closer connection to France because of their colonial history, but which are threatened by terror groups.

    “We will invest more in countries like Mali, Chad and Niger that are waging a battle against terrorism in the Sahel,” she said referring to the fight against islamist groups like Boko Haram.

    May will now meet with President Cyril Ramaphosa and, weather permitting, go to Robben Island – where South Africa’s first democratic leader Nelson Mandela was imprisoned for years by the apartheid regime.

    She then heads to Nigeria, where she’ll meet President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday as well as speak to victims of modern slavery.

    On the third leg of the trip, in Kenya, she will meet President Uhuru Kenyatta and see British soldiers training troops who will ultimately be sent to fight Al-Shabaab in Somalia.

  • Okowa urge action to check youth’s restiveness, criminality

    Delta State Governor, Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa has urged concerted efforts to get the youths engaged to check restiveness and criminality in the country.

    Governor Okowa made the call on Wednesday in Asaba when he received a team of World Bank, European Union and Federal Government officials who were in the state to assess the level of implementation of State Employment and Expenditure For Results (SEEFOR) projects.

    According to the governor, “We thank the World Bank for the efforts, but, there are still very big gaps in our country and we know that partnering with the private sector as a state, we would be able to find other means to attend to the gaps that are still existing in the area of youths unemployment because, once we are able to do that, we would be able to achieve and sustain the security and peace that we have in the state.”

    Okowa disclosed that getting the youths engaged was in line with his administration’s commitment to making the youth’s job creators through the different youth’s employment and wealth creation programmes of his administration.

    Read Also: Okowa decries high number of IDPs

    His words, “We are happy with the partnership between World Bank and the European Union, we are happy that the youth empowerment components is working in Delta State as over 700 youths have been trained and empowered through this partnership and they are on their own,” he said, adding, “we hope that this collaboration will continue to improve by the day.”

    While noting that his administration has spent a lot of money to ensure the empowerment of youths, Governor Okowa, stated that the youths are also working hard to achieve results as “the price of hard work is to continue to work harder.”

    The team leader, Mr. Brar Parminder lauded Governor Okowa’s administration for ensuring that the SEEFOR projects are succeeding in the state, disclosing that they were impressed with the success stories of the SEEFOR programmes in the state.

  • NASS Invasion: EU worried, wants security agencies to be neutral

    The European Union (EU) have expressed concern over the recent invasion of the National Assembly by heavily armed men in hoods.

    EU stressed the importance of the law enforcement agencies staying neutral, while advocating for independence of institutions in line with the constitutional provisions.

    In a statement from the EU embassy in Abuja, the EU Heads of Mission also posited that the coming 2019 general elections are vital for the country’s peace and stability.

    The statement reads: “Heads of Missions have noted with concern recent examples of interference in the democratic process by law enforcement services – the most recent case being the barring of access to the National Assembly on August 7.

    Read Also: NASS committed to credible elections in 2019 – Dogara

    “The EU is fully committed to supporting democracy in Nigeria, and it commends the Federal Government’s swift action to protect the independence of the National Assembly as a critical pillar of democracy.

    “The EU reiterates the importance of all law enforcement services staying neutral and ensuring that independent institutions can operate in line with their constitutional mandates, free from interference and intimidation.

    “The upcoming general elections in 2019 are vital in ensuring national stability, peace and prosperity for all Nigerians. It is for the Nigerian people to decide the outcome of the elections, and the EU calls upon all stakeholders in Nigeria to play their part so that voters can make their decision through a free, fair, credible and peaceful election process.

     

     

     

  • ‘Checking irregular migration’

    Nigeria has become synonymous with irregular migration. What can be done to stem the tide? ROBERT EGBE sought experts’ views.

    On June 9, the over 1,420 mi-grants rescued from the Mediterranean  Sea and turned away by Italy and Malta, arrived in Spain’s port of Valencia aboard four vessels. One of them was The Aquarius, which rescued 630 migrants.

    According to The BBC, the migrants aboard The Aquarius alone were from 26 countries and the largest groups (about 150 ) including 11 children and seven pregnant women, were from Sudan and Nigeria.

    Last November 29, Federal Commissioner, Hajiya Sadiya Umar Farouk of the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons (NCFRMI) ranked Nigerians as the fifth largest number of migrants irregularly crossing to Europe.

    On February 26, European Union (EU) Ambassador to Nigeria, Ketil Karisen, said Nigeria accounted for 60 per cent of the 10,000 illegal migration cases recorded between last November and January.

    The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) reports that between May 28 and June 10, 2,225 illegal migrants arrived in Italy.  The top three nationalities of the migrants were Tunisia, Eritrea and Nigeria.

    IOM’s Missing Migrants Project, which tracks migrant deaths or disappearances in the process of migration, estimates that in the first half of this year, a minimum of 790 migrants died en route Europe by drowning, cardiac arrest and hypothermia, among others.

    Even those who do make it to Europe are often classified as illegal immigrants and deported.

    Irregular migrants’ expectations

    So, why do migrants put themselves through such harrowing experiences? The Migrant Project, which helps migrants understand the risks related to migration, said its research showed that many of such travellers were misinformed.

    Part of the migrant project’s research on the issue was published in June 2018 as an Abridged Messaging Manual titled: “Irregular Migration in Nigeria”.

    Project Co-ordinator of The Migrant Project, Ms Clare Henshaw, said: “For example, in our research, 72 per cent of Nigerian potential migrants said that they expected to receive government support in finding a job in their intended destination country.

    “The overwhelming majority of Nigerian potential migrants said they expected to find a job in their destination country within four months (92 per cent), while 68 per cent of respondents expected to be working within two months.

    “Similarly, almost 20 per cent of Nigerians interviewed expected to become citizens of their destination country, an extreme rarity for West African migrants and asylum seekers.

    “Migrants often assume they will achieve success in Europe and believe that they will quickly find a job and make money easily, but this is not true. The small percentages that do stay have great difficulties finding a job, and their precarious legal situation makes them vulnerable to exploitation.”

    The realities for irregular migrants

    Men, women and children – no one is spared the reality check of ill-advised migration.

    Twenty-six-year-old Mercy Osabouhiem’s story exemplified the experience of many irregular migrants. She told IRIN, a Switzerland-based news agency focusing on humanitarian stories, how she was taken captive and repeatedly sexually assaulted in Libya after crossing the Sahara Desert last May.

    Osabouhiem said: “Every night, shooting guns up and down… No food. No water. And the water they have there is salty. It’s not good for the stomach.

    “Sometimes the man would come. The man has many boys, a lot of boys that work with him, so beating us every day, every night… Even raping, almost every night, rape every night. He said we should pay money. If we don’t pay we don’t go anywhere.”

    How expensive is irregular migration?

    The Migrant Project research found that smugglers usually lie about the costs and ask for more money while on the journey. Migrants also often have to pay large bribes to officials.

    It said: “The Migrant Project spoke to many potential Nigerian migrants who said they thought the journey would only cost around $1,000 (N360,500). Others estimated it to cost around $4,000 (N1,442,000) to $6,000 (N2,163,000).

    “However, the journey costs a lot more than this. In fact some Nigerian migrants have reported paying up to $24,000 (N8,652,000). The journey across the sea from Libya to Europe costs around $3,000 (1,081,500) alone.”

    Also, irregular migrants can also become a financial burden on their families and have to ask for more money to support themselves, especially if they are kidnapped and their families must pay a ransom for their freedom.

    Cost of living in Europe

    For irregular migrants, who eventually make it to Europe, their problems do not end there. They are also faced with the challenges of survival in a country where they are, more often than not, unwanted.

    “The daily costs in Europe, such as accommodation, transport and food, are very high. In many European countries, the average family will spend around $700 (N252,350) per week to live. Migrants, who are in Europe illegally, have a hard time finding a job and governments do not offer any support. Without a job it is impossible to access housing, buy enough food or save money. Many migrants end up homeless.

    “European immigration laws are becoming stricter. There are hardly jobs for irregular migrants. There is also the problem of language barrier,” the report added.

    Who are Nigeria’s irregular migrants?

    Nigerians of all ethnic, religious, sexual and other demographics have been found to engage in irregular migration.

    The Migrant Project said its research in Libya showed that Nigerian migrants are almost equally divided between men and women aged between 16 and 34, including a sizable number of youth. They are often unemployed and most speak  Edo, Yoruba or Hausa, with an intermediate level of English.

    Alternatives to irregular migration

    What can be done to stem the tide of irregular migration?

    The Dean, Faculty of Law, University of Lagos, Prof. Ayodele Atsenuwa, in a paper titled: “Analysing current issues in global immigrations”, advised Nigerians to “stay and tap from many business opportunities” in the country rather than going to suffer unnecessarily in strange lands.

    She noted that it was unfortunate that while some Nigerians are leaving in search of greener pastures because of the economic situation, other who migrated illegally are brought back in shame.

    Atsenuwa said: “I am not saying our people should not travel, they should follow due process, go through an immigration personnel and lawyers for proper counselling and guidance. There are so many opportunities in Nigeria.

    “At this point, the Immigration Lawyers have to rise to this task of addressing the issues of human smuggling, trafficking in persons, strategies for eradicating illegal migration, labour exploitation, generating jurisprudence, developing programme/reports on immigration as well to provide knowledge and information to prospective migrants etc, and above all, create demand for quality service as Immigration Lawyers.”

    On the increasing cases of illegal migration repatriation and deportation of Nigerians, the Don said it was unfortunate that while some Nigerians are leaving in search of greener pastures because of the economic situation, others, who migrated illegally, are brought back in shame.

    Immigration Lawyers Forum Nigeria (ILAFN) Chairman, Silas Udoh, urged the Federal Government to address the problem of labour exploitation and abuse by foreign companies.

    According to him, creating a productive and developed economy was one of the measures to reduce mass irregular migration by Nigerians.

    Henshaw said her organisation addresses the problem in several ways, including providing skills acquisition, technical training, trading, further education and employment for returnees and would-be migrants.

    The organisation, she added, also promotes a behavioural change campaign.

  • EU sanctions five people for organising Russian elections in Crimea

    Five people involved in organising the March 18 Russian presidential elections in the occupied Ukrainian territory of Crimea were put on the European Union’s sanctions list on Monday.

    The EU has imposed a range of sanctions over Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014, carried out in retaliation for Ukraine ousting its pro-Russian president in what Russia has condemned as a Western-backed coup.

    Read Also: U.S vice president urges Mueller to ‘wrap up’ Russia probe

    EU member states decided to impose travel bans and asset freezes on five individuals, who held positions in electoral commissions in Crimea, which the EU considers “actively supporting and implementing policies that undermine the territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence of Ukraine.”

    The decision brings the total number of individuals sanctioned by the EU over the Ukrainian conflict to 155.

    NAN

  • NGO trains 300 Adamawa traditional rulers on conflict resolution

    Managing Conflicts in Nigeria (MCN), an NGO, has trained no fewer than 300 traditional rulers, comprising District, Village and Ward Heads, on conflict resolution in Adamawa.

    The State Team Leader of MCN, Mr Abdulkadir Bello, made this known to our reporter on Monday in Yola.

    Bello spoke at a capacity building programme on conflicts resolution for traditional rulers and community leaders in Adamawa and Mubi Emirate Councils.

    He said the programme organised by Green Horizon, was funded by European Union (EU) and managed by the British Council.

    Bello said the traditional rulers were trained on traditional justice system in areas of mediation skills to handle conflicts such as land disputes, destruction of farm produce by cattle and inheritance, among others.

    The Technical Leader of MCN, Dr Ukoha Ukiwo, explained that the training was designed to strengthen community level conflict management mechanism, and enhance reconciliation and stability within communities affected by displacement, among other objectives.

    Speaking on behalf of Adamawa and Mubi emirate councils, the Dan Galadima of Adamawa, Alhaji Lawal Ribadu, and the Madaki of Mubi, Alhaji Abubakar Wambai, lauded the programme and re-iterated the commitment of the traditional institution to ensure the programme succeeded in addressing conflicts in their respective domains.

    Giving a breakdown of success so far recorded by the programme in the two benefitting emirates, Prof. Aminu Gurin of ABU Zaria said 457 disputes between January and March, this year

    According to him, the disputes comprised 213 from Adamawa emirate council and 244 from Mubi emirate council.

    He urged other traditional institutions to key into the programme to achieve sustainable peace and development in the country.

    NAN

     

  • EU: Non-oil export key to economic diversification

    The non-oil export sector must play a major role in Federal Government’s economic diversification agenda, the European Union (EU) in Nigeria has said.

    The agenda, according to the government,  is aimed at repositioning the country for sustainable growth and development

    Its Head of Delegation in Nigeria, Ambassador Ketil Karlsen, stated this during a visit to the Executive Director/Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Mr. Olusegun Awolowo, in Abuja, during the week.

    According to Karlsen, the NEPC chief had one of the most important jobs in Nigeria given the Council’s enormous task and mandate to drive the diversification of the economy from dependence to oil to non-oil.

    He said NEPC has been using the Zero Oil Plan (ZOP) to support government as it looks to stabilising the economy, its democratic governance and processes through diversification.

    While acknowledging the strong partnership between NEPC and the EU Commission, Amb Karlsen said he was keen to learn about the progress of the ZOP.

    Karlsen also touched on the EU’s Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA), which he said, has mutual beneficial opportunities for Nigeria and the EU.

    He solicited NEPC’s support as a strategic partner in advancing wider understanding of the benefits of  EPA.

    Karlsen said the Continental Free Trade Agreement (CFTA) was also germane for increased trade among African countries and the EU, as it seeks to create a single market for goods and services, with free movement of business persons and investments.

    Responding, Awolowo said the Council was more than ever before positioned to drive the diversification agenda of the government, using ZOP.

    To underscore this, he said a National Committee on Export Promotion has been set up by the National Economic Council, headed by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.

    The NEPC chief said the Federal Government, through the Ministry of Budget and National Planning, had mainstreamed the ZOP into the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP), with particular emphasis on boosting supply of foreign exchange from non-oil sector by driving growth in five key areas.

    These, he said, were concentrated on generating $30 billion from 11 strategic products, exploring the competences within the comparative and competitive advantages of states through the ‘One-State-One-Product (OSOP) programme, review of trade agreements to prioritise Nigerian exports to 22 newly targeted export destinations.

    Others are the domestic sourcing of products through the launch of first National Export Aggregator as well as strengthening of Export Development Fund (EDF) scheme to enhance competiveness of locally produced goods.

    Besides, he said the Council, along with United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) and other relevant government agencies, are in the process of testing the outcomes of the National Quality Infrastructure Project (NQIP).

    The NQIP, according to him, is aimed at improving quality, safety, integrity and marketability of Nigerian goods and services as well as removing technical barriers to trade.

    This testing, Awolowo explained, would be a trial export of Nigerian beans following extensive work carried out by UNIDO and the Federal Government Inter-ministerial Committee on Zero Rejects, midwifed by NEPC in response to the EU’s ban on importation of Nigerian beans.

  • 2.7m EU users affected by data privacy scandal – Facebook

    Facebook says up to 2.7 million Facebook users in the European Union have been affected by the data privacy scandal, a spokesman for the European Commission said on Friday.

    “Facebook confirmed to us that the data of overall up to 2.7 million … people in the EU may have been improperly shared with Cambridge Analytica,” said Christian Wigand, a commission spokesman.

    On Wednesday, Facebook admitted that it had “improperly shared” the personal data of 87 million Facebook users, an increase of more than 30 million from previous estimates, with the British data analysis firm Cambridge Analytica.

    The firm used the information, without users’ consent, to support the campaign for Britain’s exit from the European Union, as well as the 2016 election campaign of U.S. President Donald Trump.

    The U.S. social media giant revealed the full extent of the data breach in the EU in a letter Thursday evening responding to questions by EU Justice Commissioner Vera Jourova.

    “We will follow the letter in more detail, but it is already clear that this will need further follow-up discussions with Facebook,” Wigand said.

    He noted that Jourova is set to have a phone call with Facebook’s Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg “On Monday.”

    dpa/NAN

  • EU prepares Nigerian women for 2019 polls

    Nigerian women possess leadership traits needed to drive the nation into prosperity. But to harness these, they must be given the opportunity, according to the Head of the European Union (EU) Delegation to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Ambassador Ketil Karlsen.

    At a seminar on women’s participation in Nigeria’s political process held in Abuja on March 23, Ambassador Karlsen said it was an irony that the Nigerian women noted for their courage and outspokenness are relegated to the background in the politics of their country.

    The event hosted by the EU to mark this year’s International Women’s Month, brought together eminent female politicians and other politically-conscious women and civil society actors from across the country to discuss the fate of women politics. It had had the theme, “How do Women Win Election in 2019?” Among those in attendance were the wife of the Senate President, Mrs. Toyin Saraki, Senator Binta Garba, who chairs the Senate Committee on Women Affairs, and Mrs. Bisi Fayemi, leading gender activist and wife of Minister of Solid Minerals.

    Welcoming participants to the seminar, Ambassador Karlsen said the idea was to discuss how to get women in the country to be more educated in politics, promote their rights and make sure there are better opportunities for them. . “We are opening the door a little bit. We are reminding ourselves that women’s right is not only for speeches at occasions. It is something that should guide our works and our lives every day of the year.”

    Much as gender imbalance is not a peculiar Nigerian problem, the EU Head of Delegation said the country would be short-changing itself by not making the political more space inclusive to enable women to contribute in shaping its destiny. “The statistics in this particular country makes it very clear: only six female senators, if I’m not mistaken, 15 female members of the House (of Representatives) and five (female) deputy governors in this great country, the biggest country in Africa. We need to ask ourselves whether this is good enough.”

    Relieving her experience in politics, Sen. Garba said her path has been dogged by the same factors that have made the political arena hostile to women with political ambitions. “Culture was against me, religion was against me. Women were used against me,” she said.

    It did not help that she hailed from Adamwa state and was campaigning in a constituency that was predominantly Muslim while she was Christian. But Sen. Garba said she stood her ground. While respecting the institutions and the religious leaders, she said she did what was needful, and those things she did spoke for her when it mattered most: “With those little things I was doing within my community, it was the women that stood their ground and said, even when Binta was nobody, she made some certain inputs towards their livelihood. That was how I became a member of House of Representatives.”

    She also had to deal with hostility of Imams and even church leaders, who questioned why she should contest election in Kaduna. “But, within me, I have this fighting spirit, and I told myself that I must be the voice of those voiceless women, whatever it would cost, I would never, never succumb to any pressure whatsoever.”

    Sen Garba came to the House of Representatives as the youngest of all 360 members in 1999,at barely 28, and she put it down to her persistence, focus, determination and refusal to succumb to intimidation and  frustration n account of her gender.  “It might not be today, but someday, somehow, I know that women in Nigeria will definitely stand up with men.”

    Sen. Garba who has been a federal lawmaker since Nigeria returned to democracy in 1999 said in 2006, former Governor of Adamawa state, Boni Haruna, asked her to contest for the Senate in her home state of Adamawa, and promised to assist her. Sen. Garba has been a senator representing Adamawa North since then.

    She urged women to be firm when they are interested in politics and be close and fair to their constituents. While appealing to all women in the country to vote for their fellow women who show interest in politics, irrespective of their political affiliations, she urged that the “35% Affirmative Action” which seeks the allocation of 35 percent of all political offices to women be enshrined in the nation’s constitution and in political parties’ constitutions.

    Mrs. Saraki expressed delight with the release of the abducted Dapchi girls, and described the loss of five of the girls as unfortunate. “I want to say that those who seek to intimidate our girls and women and prevent them from accessing education or fulfilling their potentials would never succeed in Nigeria,” she said.

    Citing a recent US Agency for International Development’s (USAID) report, she said: “When 10 per cent of girls go to school, a country’s GDP on the average increase by 35 per cent. When women have the same amount of land as men or ownership of land, there is over 10 per cent increase in crop yield.” The wife of the Senate President said allowing women to make good use of their potentials yields good dividends to any nation, adding that they should not be deterred from making needed contributions to nation building through politics. According to her, the UN estimates that gender inequality costs Sub-Saharan Africa an average $95 billion yearly.

    In a keynote presentation, the Senior Programme Manager, Global International Idea’s Programme on Political Participation & Representation (Sweden) Rumbidzai Washika-Nhunda said many women and youths around the world don’t like joining political parties because they see men as being patriarchal. The problem lies within the socialization, political and socio-cultural context,” she said.

    Identifying intra-party democratic processes as one of the key problematic areas, she said the character context and political context have inhibited women from entering into politics to present themselves as candidates for position of power and decision-making.

    “We need to realize that this is a transformative agenda. This is an agenda of redistribution of power and privileges,” she said of the imperative of allowing women in politics. She argued that only a few men would be willing to allow women to be elected into political offices. In as much as men could represent women, she noted, women’s physical bodies are needed in elective offices, and that numbers matter in a democracy.

    According to her, only about half of the countries of the world manage to help a critical minority in parliament, executive or any position of power or decision-making. She listed Sweden as one of the countries that have been fair to women in terms of political inclusiveness. “It’s suicidal for any political party in Sweden not to subscribe to the principle of gender equality and women’s political empowerment.

    She urged Nigeria to take a cue from countries like Rwanda, Bolivia, Mexico, South Africa, Senegal, Namibia, Uganda, Angola and Zimbabwe, which have some forms of legislative quotas. “We need to understand that every gender quotas, like for instance, the provision in Kenya which is also reflected in the electoral law, which is also being reflected in the political parties’ law, cascades in the political processes where the different political actors interact.”

    Washika-Nhunda maintained that when a country adopts legislative gender quotas, they are not doing women favour, stressing that it is a democratic imperative. She said it called for concern for a society to neglect 50 percent of its potentials. She also urged women in Nigeria to mobilize themselves for the 2019 general elections.

    However, Washika-Nhunda yet disabused the minds of people who reason that women alone are capable of electing themselves into power. “The democratic argument that women should vote for one another does not work. If it was applicable, all our parliaments across the world, and in particular in Africa would be having at least people who are aged 35 years and below. Why? The youths in our countries are at least 40 to 50 percent.

    Ms. Ida Hockerfelt of the Sweden Embassy in Nigeria told the gathering that her country was working on making information on women who have and are making impacts around the world available for people to access online, especially on the Wikipedia, the hub for such information, globally. She said such information would spur women across nations to rise and break barriers on their paths to success and seeing themselves as equal to men.

    According to her, only 10 per cent of information on the Wikipedia is for women. She said the efforts would further promote the cause of gender equality and significance of women in global polity.

     

  • World Bank, EU train workers

    The World Bank and the European Union (EU) in collaboration with Delta State Government has started the training of over 100 workers drawn from 52 Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) in the state on financial reforms.

    The Project Coordinator of the World Bank, EU-sponsored State Employment and Expenditure for Results (SEEFOR) project, Mr. Benson Okojo, said the training was to build the workers’ capacity on adequate budget preparation.

    “We were able to identify 52 MDAs under our International Public Sector Accounting Standard (IPSAS) platform,” he said, adding that the exercise would enable them to understand the reforms that were being implemented under the SEEFOR project intervention.

    Okojo said one of such reforms was under the project’s Component B, which is budget reform. “A lot of changes are being introduced. We are changing from the old ways of preparing budget according to the heads, sub-heads of each sectoral budget to the new coding structure that has been informed by the adoption of IPSAS,” he said.

    According to him, the adoption was approved by the Federal Executive Council in 2010 and in 2011, there was a Federal Allocation Accounting Committee (FAAC) that now designed a new national chart among the three tiers of government.

    Ojoko said Delta State was among the first five states that had adopted the new national chart of accounting, adding that having adopted the chart, the state has been working by organising workshops and trainings for relevant stakeholders.

    “This includes budget officers, accountants as well as staff of the Ministry of Economic Planning for the implementation of the programme in the state. This has made it possible for the state to prepare the 2018 budget, which is already online and the World Bank had applauded the state for this effort,” the Project Coordinator said.

    He, however, stated that in spite of the progress recorded by the state in the area of budget preparation, there were still lapses that needed to be corrected.