Tag: forum

  • Forum accuses EFCC of selective probe

    A pro-Buhari group, Buhari Northern Youth Awareness Forum (BNYAF), yesterday accused the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) of selective investigation.

    The body, which addressed reporters in Kaduna, said the anti-graft commission, in the last two years, beamed its searchlight on perceived corrupt individuals from the North, while those in the South had not been investigated.

    Its Coordinator, Comr. Muhammad Lawal, who was supported by the secretary and other members, said EFCC, as an agency under a President, who is known for his integrity, is not expected to be selective in its investigation, since most of the people under investigation served in the previous administrations, which is not limited to the North.

    He said EFCC had become a mouthpiece of people, mostly from the South, which made it difficult for the agency to investigate and prosecute corrupt people believed to be loyal to them.

    Lawal said: “We wish to congratulate the public and ourselves for the safely and healthy arrival of our father and man of integrity, President Muhammadu Buhari.

    “We have observed with keen interest unfolding events in the country and activities of key government agencies, which are part of the drive of achieving lofty goals of our administration.

    “It’s a fact that Mr. President came to power with integrity and desire to fight corruption. We remember in 2015 when we followed Mr. President to every nook and cranny of the country where we promised fighting corruption, the country’s worst nightmare.

    “Therefore, it is unfortunate to see how some people, whom Mr. President entrusted with fighting corruption, are undermining the change agenda. In particular, we have observed how an institution like EFCC has engaged in selective investigations and prosecution of people, who are perceived to be against the interests of some people.

    “It is known that corruption in the past was universal and perpetrated by people across ethnic, regional and religious divides, but unfortunately what we witness now is that fighting corruption and corrupt people is done against some people in the North, while exonerating perpetrators from the West.”

    He added: “More shocking is that EFCC is muscled by men like Prof. Itse Sagay and lawyers under the guise of human rights activists like Femi Falana and their cohorts. They have constituted themselves into authority in deciding who is corrupt and who is not, thereby unilaterally deciding who EFCC should invite, investigate and/or prosecute without regard to the rule of law or constitutionalism.”

     

  • NACCIMA to create jobs with youth forum

    The Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA) said it will inaugurate its Youth Forum to create jobs for youths.

    Its President, Iyalode Alaba Lawson, who made this known at the inaugural meeting of the Youth Forum in Lagos, said through the introduction of the Forum, NACCIMA will advocate for necessary reforms that will revolutionise the socio-economic environment and encourage job creation.

    A statement signed by NACCIMA Director-General, Emmanuel Cobham, said the critical role of youths in supporting entrepreneurship and development cannot be ignored. She said the initiative was in line with the Chamber’s mission to ensure an enabling business environment through policy advocacy.

    She also said NACCIMA aimed at promoting the growth and competitiveness of businesses through proper and prompt information dissemination, using modern technology comparable to the best universal standard of chambers of commerce and industry anywhere in the world.

    The Youth Forum, she said, will focus on training and developing young entrepreneurs to meet the demand in identified gaps in the existing value chains, while equipping and supporting them to overcome the challenges faced by entrepreneurs such as access to finance, lack of business knowledge, and lack of market access, among others.

  • Letter to APC Governors’ Forum

    Letter to APC Governors’ Forum

    SIR: For the All Progressives Congress (APC), its governors and legislators to be truly progressive and move Nigeria forward, as those controlling the reins of power today, they must help to create a constitution that will make Nigeria equitable and sustainable, thereby putting Nigeria on the path of progress. Religion that has been cause of disunity, violence, and retrogression must be boxed into privacy, since the constitution prohibits “state religion” so that religious people can take care of their religions in their shrines, temples, synagogues, churches, and mosques, while Nigerians unite to build a country of peace, progress and stability, where no one is oppressed.

    Nigeria can also not be progressive and sustainable if key positions are not taken care-of, rotationally among the federating zones or regions. We must forestall a feeling of marginalization. Restructuring is imperative. A return to the regional/district structure as it used to be before the military era will drastically reduce administrative centres and costs of administration.  Increasing Nigeria’s states to 54 from 36 will only worsen the economic situation.  Already, many states and local governments are unable to pay workers or owing workers several months of unpaid salaries and emoluments. Returning to the old region and district structure will minimize costs of administration and make funds available for infrastructure necessary for industrial advancement.

    The Sultan of Sokoto, Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar III, is quoted as calling for dialogue as the solution to the agitation for the breakup of Nigeria. The All Progressive Governors Forum has also asked the federal government to commence negotiations with all agitators.

    I am suggesting that the governors should not call on the federal government to engage in dialogue, but itself to help Nigeria find solutions along the line of equity and fairness, and use its influence on the APC and the legislators who are positioned to initiate change.

    APC governors and legislators can help, and I believe opposition legislators will cooperate for positive change. Let the political powers that be bring change now. In addition to the foregoing there should be change to roaming of animals in crop farms. Animals are better reared in private places by their owners. The governors’ forum should not under-estimate its own power and influence, please.

     

    • Prof Oyeniran Abioje,

    University of Ilorin.

  • MTN holds customer forum in Abuja

    MTN Nigeria has restated its commitment to providing world class service to its over 60 million subscribers nationwide.

    At a special customer engagement forum at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja, tagged “An Evening to Connect”, the Chief Operating Officer, Muhammad Zia Siddiqui, said: “Beyond our various customer touch points, we cherish moments such as this, when we have one-on-one interactions with our customers. One of the things MTN is doing more this year, is listening, celebrating and delighting customers.

    “We take customer feedback very seriously and in fact, we are only happy when our customers are happy. Our customers’ needs are paramount”

    The evening was part of ongoing efforts to appreciate customers’ loyalty.

    Siddiqui described the forum as an opportunity for MTN customers to engage in frank and open discussions with the brand, saying the forum will enable MTN’s senior management to feel the pulse of its customers, as well as address and resolve critical issues and complaints.

    Some customers who attended the forum were the Director-General, National Identity Management Commission, Aliyu Aziz and Executive Director Progammes, NTA Eugenia Abu, and others.

    Guests were serenaded with light music by a saxophonist, Perpetual Atife, who is an alumnus of the MTN Foundation Music Scholars Initiative.

  • Elders’ Forum to honour late Orlando Owoh

    Elders’ Forum to honour late Orlando Owoh

    Nine years after the demise of music maestro Dr. Orlando Owoh, Elders’ Forum, jointly organized by O’jez Entertainment Group and Evergreen Musical Company Limited, will be celebrating the musical legacy of the man, popularly called the African Kenery.

    Scheduled to hold on Sunday, April 30, the event will evaluate and honour the deceased’s immeasurable contributions to the growth, development and promotion of heritage Nigerian and African music, at home and in the Diaspora.

    The show is expected to relive the memories of the legendary Owoh with the hosting of delightful performances by one of his most profound successors in the person of his son, Chief Daisi Orlando Owoh.

    According to the organisers, the Elders Forum scheduled to hold at the O’jez celebrity restaurant, will afford the teeming fans of the African Kenery Sound an opportunity to savour those nostalgic songs from one of its most prolific ambassadors.

    To be honoured at the event is the oldest surviving member of the original Dr. Orlando Owoh’s band in the person of Mr. Tosin Akilapa.

    Also, a major highlight of this month’s event will be the presentation of a post-humous “Lifetime Achievements” award to the late Orlando Owoh.

    Owoh passed on in November 2008. The music legend had over 45 albums to his credit.

  • Forum backs school feeding programme

    Feed Nigeria Summit Secretariat’s Director–General Mr Richard Mbaram has said free meals and take-home rations under home grown school feeding (HGSF) will  enhance pupils’ performance and boost income generation and entrepreneurship in local communities.

    Mbaram said in Lagos that homegrown school feeding adopted by this administration would improve education, boost local economies and smallholder agriculture.

    To support the government, he said his organisation was planing a summit on how to work with development partners and the Federal Government to implement innovative solutions that can bolster agricultural performance.

    The summit set to hold between April 6 and 7 in Lagos, will bring together some of the most influential organisations and leaders in the food industry .

    The outcome of the summit will help support the government in implementing HGSF programme  and help them allocate resources accordingly.

    The event tagged: “Feed Nigeria, to Feed Africa” is a first of its kind in Nigeria, and will bring together prominent stakeholders, NGOs, government officials and ministries, campaigners, continental and international players and other influencers in the agricultural space, to discuss bugging issues aimed at advancing development of the agriculture sector in Nigeria. According to him, some of the key challenges faced by the food industry will be discussed in the summit.

    Mbaram said there was a need to bring together producers and leading industry representatives to agree to boost future production and open up opportunities.

  • Kukah, Soludo, Duke for forum

    Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Matthew Hassan Kukah, former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Prof Chukwuma Soludo and former Cross River State Governor Donald Duke are to speak at an event in Enugu  on March 2.

    Event Coordinator Prof. Ufo Okeke-Uzodike told reporters that Enugu Forum is a civic platform for development policy discourse.

    “Anchored by the African Heritage Institution (Afri-Heritage), formally known as the African Institute for Applied Economics (AIAE), Enugu Forum has provided a strong and genuine voice on issues that affect our continent, our country, and the Southeast.

    “It is not a secret that Nigeria is undergoing a period of economic recession and uncertainty, which has fuelled political tensions and social insecurity.

    “Given this backdrop, the Enugu Forum is organising a roundtable discussion on “Nigeria: A Prognosis of 2017” on March 2,’’ he said.

    Other discussants include former Minister of Education Dr. Oby Ezekwesili; former Minister of Solid Minerals and Education Prof. Akpan Ekpo, former University of Uyo Vice Chancellor and Prof. Osita Ogbu (Economic Adviser under ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo and Director Institute of Development Studies).

  • Forum lists rice as key to prosperity

    Forum lists rice as key to prosperity

    Participants  at a rountable on rice, which featured major producers, have said the crop is essential to the continued health, wealth and prosperity of Nigeria.

    This is contained in the communiqué issued at the end of the roundtable on the rice supply chain development held in Minna, Niger State capital.

    It was organised by Agribusiness Supplier Development Programme (ASDP).

    The meeting was convened by ASDP, which is being implemented by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD) and Nigeria Incentive-Based Risk-Sharing System for Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL.

    They stressed  the need to create a standard to reassure producers and consumers on the quality of Nigeria’s premium rice. The discussions also considered the essential roles rice research and access to new technologies play in improving the livelihoods of farm families.

    To address the challenges faced by commercial banks in lending to farmers, the forum called on the government and the private sector to sensitise farmers properly on available finances from the banks and other sources as well as use of inputs and good agricultural practices to boost productivity.

    It emphasised the  need to identify real farmers and verify their farm sizes and holdings using appropriate technologies. Farmers, the communique maintained, should be encouraged to always honour agreements and stop side selling to strengthen the relationship with the financial institutions and off takers.

    The forum advised that state governments’ interference in the anchor borrower scheme should be limited to facilitating loan recovery, and that there should be  social networking and cross guarantee to check loan default among beneficiaries.

    The participants urged that there  should be timely financial support to farmers and extension services, as finance is an essential ingredient for attaining self-sufficiency in rice production. The current procedure of lending to the farmers under the anchor borrower scheme,the  farmers said should be reviewed to make it more flexible.

    They urged the government to establish grazing ranches at appropriate locations for herdsmen to check the destruction of farmlands and farmers-herdsmen conflict.

  • Boost for rice output at UNDP forum

    Boost for rice output at UNDP forum

    How to improve rice production, among others, topped discussions at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) rice value forum held in Minna, the Niger State capital. DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    How to enhance rice production dominated discussions at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)   forum held in Minna, the Niger State capital.

    Held under UNDP’s Agribusiness Supplier Development Programme’s (ASDP’s) Rice Supply Chain, the roundtable was organised by the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, UNDP and Nigeria Incentive-Based Risk Sharing for Agricultural Lending (NIRSAL).

    Rice farmers, processors, marketers and researchers, representatives of some stakeholders proffered solutions to problems.

    They listed weaknesses in the value chain as fragmented and small- scale production, poor application of advanced science and technology and low level of mechanisation of production stages, adding that post-harvest technology was not being given proper attention.

    They said rice seeds used by farmers were left overs from the previous season; and the ratio of farmers using certified rice seeds has remained low. These problems, the participants said, led to high cost of production, low quality and poor competitiveness.

    UNDP Inclusive Growth Unit Team Leader Dr Robert Asogwa said the forum aimed to provide solutions to the problems to ensure a secure future for the rice sector.

    Asogwa said UNDP would continue to contribute to rice farming with enhanced agronomic practices and technologies for smallholder farmers.

    He said UNDP was ready to work with the government and the private sector to boost rice production through crop improvement, disease and pest management, sustainable and profitable farming, and capacity building  for farmers.

    According to him, the organisation had made some headway in cassava and had started getting positive results from the projects farmers were undertaking.

    He expressed the hope that the joint effort would improve the productivity and practices of thousands of smallholder rice farmers.

    NIRSAL Executive Director Awoshafe Babatunde said the organisation facilitated the N65 billion loans to farmers.

    To address the problem of agricultural finance, he said NIRSAL was working with banks and microfinance institutions to make long-term commitments of capital for developing agricultural markets.

    For him, credit alone is not enough, but that an holistic approach is needed, including a range of financial and non-financial services.

    He added that NIRSAL supports  value chain finance (VCF) approach and that efforts have been  made through creative financing and partnerships to facilitate investments in agricultural finance.

    Agriculture and Rural Development Minister Chief Audu Ogbeh said implementation of government programmes would help reduce post-harvest losses.

    Represented by the Director of Planning in the Ministry, Musa Alhassan, Ogbeh said: “The Federal Government has banned the importation of rice and there is surplus across the country. This means there is result and it shows that the farmers and all government’s policies are aiding agriculture produce.

    “We are rice sufficient in the country by 2017. Nigeria will be self-sufficient in rice production. We are getting close as there is improvement on what we have been getting before. This will boost our economy,” he added.

    Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Nigeria Office Programme Officer Dr Umar Halilu said a significant increase in rice productivity and production could only be achieved through improvements in production systems, so,  the techniques farmers use must be enhanced.

    He urged farmers to adopt affordable processing technologies provided by the agency to  enhance the rice value chain, reiterating JICA ’s commitment to providing technical support and advice  to rice farmers.

    Niger State Agricultural and Mechanisation Development Authority  Acting Managing Director Abubuka Sadeeq said rice was the key crop grown by mostly smallholder farmers in Niger.

    He said the state was ready to collaborate with UNDP and other agencies  to enhance capacity building and efficiency in rice production, ensure farmers adopted technologies and innovations in rice farming.

    ASDP has three-fold objectives: first, to improve the quantity and quality supply of agricultural products by farmers and SMEs to markets; second, to provide smallholder farmers and SMEs with support in accessing the agricultural supply chains of lead firms; third, to contribute to national economies by developing agricultural products that meet market quality standards, ASDP Agribusiness Specialist, Dr Nelson Abila said.

    The approach for a rice multi-stakeholder platform recognises that  producers, processors and retailers should not compete as individual entities, rather, they should collaborate as strategic value-chains competing with others in the market place.

    Senior Lecturer, Department of Agricultural Economics, Dr Opeyemi Ayinde, maintained that with increasing challenges in rice farming, including limited arable land, impact of climate change, labour shortage and limited resources, there was the need to harness innovative solutions and farming technologies.

     

    Milling

    The majority of successful mills are large scale located away from most rice farming areas.

     

    Adding value

    According to the participants, adding value to rice would increase income and  encourage more farmers to add value to the produce.

     

    Credit

    Farmers often lack access to independent credit, both for farming as well as after harvesting. The forces them to sell immediately after harvesting, when supply is abundant and prices low.

     

    Production

    Women Rice Co-operative Union Co-ordinator, Kogi  State, Mrs Esther Audu, said farmers cultivated rice/cotton on plots ranging from an hectare to a few.

    To grow rice, she noted, many farmers relied on family or hired labour. Some farms are mechanised, using the latest technology to optimise fertiliser application and minimise superfluous irrigation.

    She emphasised the need for the  government to make tractors available for farmers and also distributed seedlings, fertiliser and other inputs to improve their productivity.

    Mrs. Audu identified lack of mechanisation, low quality inputs and poor funding as hindrances to rice production.

    According to her, peasant women play a key role: planting, weeding, transplanting and harvesting.

    With the deluge of cheap imported rice in the market, rice farming is slowly becoming non-viable, and with the loss of it various farm jobs women do.

    According to her, many farmers are not benefiting from the Central Bank  of Nigeria’s (CBN’s)  Anchor Borrowers programme.

    Other farmers of the scheme decried the late disbursement of input, which they said, affect their harvest during the rains.

    For agriculture to improve and for the nation to attain inclusive growth, participants noted that  banks should lend to agriculture.

    External Relations Director, Nigeria Markets11, Mr Godson Ononiwu, said the country has agricultural potential, though the price, quality, and supply of its rice were yet to meet international standards. The main problems facing the industry, he said, were a lack of adequate warehouses and seeds, as well as an inefficient market system.

  • Forum seeks women participation in job creation, regional integration

    Forum seeks women participation in job creation, regional integration

    Strengthening opportunities for women involvement in agriculture was among issues addressed by delegates at the Second African Women Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum(AWIEF), which was held in Lagos. DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    Experts and thought leaders  at the Second African Women Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum (AWIEF), which was held in Lagos, have  urged governments across the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to work towards a strong economy and increased  women participation in food production and processing.

    The forum also held sessions on vital sectors and pushed for ventures to promote food production, value addition, job creation and regional integration.

    AWIEF founder and Chief Executive Officer, Mrs Irene Ochem stressed the need to empower women to ensure they attain their potential through agriculture.

    Mrs Ochem said the aim of the forum was to stimulate actions to accelerate Africa’s economic transformation, which require capacity building, inclusive growth and cooperation. She called for robust policies that encourage women to go into agribusinesses and adopt  farming practices that guarantee food security.

    One of the moderators and Chair, Run on Rana Energy Limited, Amina Ado, observed that agriculture represents a promising growth opportunity.

    Underscoring the role of women in agriculture, Ado said support for women would enable them to solve problems through food production.

    She said the Federal Government had inaugurated a roadmap for the agriculture sector, tagged:The Green Alternative: Agriculture Promotion Policy, 2016-2020, with the vision to revive the sector to boost food production. The policy, according to her, would serve as the fulcrum for economic diversification, inclusive growth and sustainable development.

    She said through the policy, farmers would have access to land, information, inputs, production management, storage, processing, marketing and trade and finance.

    In addition, she said there was a possibility of achieving economic diversification which would reduce dependence on oil.

    President, Ghana Association of Women Entrepreneurs (GAWE), Lucia Quachey, stressed the  need for women to work together  to  ensure they have access to the $300 million fund set aside by the African Development Bank (AFDB) for women to boost their businesses.

    She canvassed a regional strategy to promote women’s participation in the sector.

    She said economies could begin to close the gender gap by making it possible for more women to unleash their potential as farmers, entrepreneurs and business leaders.

    The sector, according to her, remains a significant contributor to poverty reduction and food security. She added that empowering women would benefit economies in terms of value addition, job creation and regional integration.

    Quachey, who is also the Vice-President, ECOWAS Federation of Women Entrepreneurs, expressed concern over the decreasing number of women in agriculture.

    She called for support for women to participate and benefit from transformation opportunities to improve their lives and livelihoods.

    She stressed that there was a need to develop women’s capacity to boost food production and create more wealth, if the economies of the sub-region must pick up.

    GAWE, according to her, supports women to participate profitably in value chain and agribusiness development by improving access to financial services, business skills and technologies and innovations for agro-processing.

    GAWE’s initiatives, she added, seek to enhance women entrepreneurs’ access to opportunities, including technologies that facilitate efficient ways of starting up or conducting a business.

    According to her, employment opportunities would increase as more women-led agro micro-enterprises in remote, rural communities take advantage of trade opportunities to boost revenues.

    She said through the initiatives, linkages were established between farmers and micro-enterprises.

    The association, she added, provides training on marketing and helps women producers explore opportunities and develop a catalogue of products.

    Agro-processing, a step-up in the industrialisation drive, is still underdeveloped but offers tremendous commercial opportunities Quachey said.

    Involvement of women, she noted, would bring in some of the revenue governments need for development if member economies advance women’s economic participation in agriculture and food processing.

    While the potential exists for women to position their products in new markets, continued support is needed to help them move  from local enterprises to big businesses.

    She said by increasing women’s participation and enhancing their efficiency and productivity, a dramatic impact on the competitiveness and growth of the region’s economies can be achieved.

    One solution she suggested to boost women participation was creation of agricultural co-operatives.

    The existence of such groups in Ghana, she noted, has provided an institutional framework for women to solve many of their problems.

    President, Sidi Osho Foundation and past Vice- Chancellor, Afe Babalola University, Prof Sidi Osho said feeding the burgeoning population would require significant improvements in agricultural productivity and appropriate mechanisation strategies.

    She said there was enormous potential in agriculture and women must be ready to turn them into major opportunities to change their lives.

    She added that large scale farming and well-developed infrastructure are the best way of drawing women into the agricultural sector.

    According to her, economic transformation is now urgent due to recent developments in the international economy.

    She pointed out that recent developments in the African economies have  made the need for agricultural transformation more urgent as the events have exposed the vulnerability of most economies to external factors.

    She emphasised the need for structural transformation in the agricultural sector and for the government to concentrate on the potential offered by industrialisation and food production. If women farmers increase their productivity and reduce  imports, this would reduce poverty, enhance food and nutrition security and support a more inclusive pattern of growth.

    She encouraged the audience to use the forum as an opportunity to galvanise more action on economic transformation.

    The Chair person, Partnership Opportunities for Women Empowerment Realisation (POWER), Mrs. Obioma Liyel-Imoke,who was  represented by its Executive Director, Mrs Ndodeye Bassey-Obongha stressed the need for increased investments in women  as they make up 43 per cent of the agriculture labour force.

    Although women have a large role in food production in many sub-Saharan African countries, she maintained that they will continue to have less access to land, fertilisers, seeds, credit and extension services than men.

    She said: “Women’s economic participation and their ownership and control over productive assets speed up development, help overcome poverty, reduce inequalities and improve children’s nutrition, health, and school attendance.”

    She explained that the organisation, Project Awake, is a community-driven project whose target beneficiaries are women “agric-preneurs”.

    Project Awake implementation, she  added,  is  done in agro enterprise clusters.  Each cluster is made up of 10 villages selected along mandate crop geographical mapping within each local government area.

    The project has created 2,960 women agribusiness owners from 183 cooperatives created in the 18 local government areas(LGAs) of Cross River State. In addition, she said the project has facilitated access to credit loan through bank linkages for 2,196 women farmers.

    For instance, she said  one of the  organisations, Mossi Women Cooperative, engaged in cassava farming received $2,896.74 as loan and had increased their farm size from 1.5 to 2.5 hectares.

    Another group, Beyin Business Multi-Purpose Cooperative Society (MPCS),she mentioned, could only

    buy only a maximum of 20 bags of rice for storage, but with the loan of N930, 000 ($4,730.42), they added N1, 000,000 ($5,086.47) from their savings and bought up to 413 bags of rice for the first time which they had processed and sold, raising a revenue of N3, 500,000 ($17,802.64) during the trading cycle.

    One of the highlights of the event was the unveiling of Women Economic Empowerment Initiative (WEEIN), a programme designed by the Lagos State Government in partnership with AWIEF to facilitate access to finance and other services needed by women entrepreneurs.