Tag: French

  • Nigerian, French navies partner against maritime insecurity

    Plans are underway for Nigerian Navy (NN) and its French and Spanish counterparts to carry out a joint exercise against pirates in the Gulf of Guinea (GoG) region.

    The Flag Officer Commanding (FOC) Western Naval Command (WNC), Rear Admiral Sylvanus Abbah, during the visit of a French Naval Ship FNS GERMINA, said the exercise was to sustain the gains recorded against piracy and other maritime crimes in the last one year.

    The French warship berthed at the Naval Dockyard Ltd, Victoria Island yesterday, marking its first visit to Nigeria in 16 years.

    Noting the importance of the GoG to global trade, Abbah said world powers were interested in the security of the region.

    He said: “The French Navy is not the only one, countries are collaborating with us. This is why if there is any piracy attack, we are notified in time.

    “From the record of the last one year, piracy in Lagos has reduced.

    “Nigeria is a key player in the region and must participate in the sea exercise. We are happy to have FNS GERMINA. She last paid a port call to Nigeria in 2001 and today, she has visited. It shows the relationship between both nations is improving.”

    FNS Commanding Officer Commander Daetan Gayraud had said the 100 crew-member vessel was heading for Cote D’Ivoire and Gabon from Senegal ahead of the sea exercise.

    He said: “The ship is taking part in operations in troubled Francophone countries to assist in evacuating nationals. It is an operation that began in 1990. We also assist African navies in building capacity.

    “We will be in Nigeria for two days afterwards; we will proceed to Gabon to cooperate with their navies. After Gabon, we will have an exercise with the regional navies, including Nigeria Navy.

    “I hope the existing cooperation between the two navies will continue. We are very delighted to be received by an Admiral.”

  • Special case for French at UNILAG lecture

    The saying that there is strength in unity has made countries to cooperate on issues of common interests.

    With this saying, West African countries also crave for integration as demonstrated in their desire for a regional currency, market liberalisation and common efforts to increase agricultural output, technology and infrastructure.

    West African states also seek through integration to be linked to and recognised by other parts of the world through many channels such as language.

    In the light of this, the need for effective communication among West African countries to facilitate the integration was the focus of an inaugural lecture by a professor of French Language Education, Dr Carol Opara.

    Opara, Head of Department of Arts and Social Sciences Education, University of Lagos, delivered the institution’s 8th Inaugural Lecture for the 2016/2017 academic session recently in Lagos entitled: “Quest for Sub-Regional Integration: The French Language Education Factor’’.

    According to her, Nigeria is a key player in the West African integration process and needs to ensure effective communication with other countries in the sub-region through implementation of its bilingual policy of French as a second official language.

    “French as Nigeria’s second official language has great potential for achieving objectives of the integration that will improve Nigeria’s economic prospect and security and foster peace in the West African sub-region.

    “Nigeria is surrounded by French speaking countries — Republic of Benin in the West, Republic of Niger in the North — as well as others such as Mali, Chad and Cameroon.

    “Remember that when people understand the language of their neighbours, they are bound to live in peace, which is a global concern now.

    “Wars and misunderstanding can be avoided if people could speak with one language, as they will understand themselves better.

    “There is unity in language as it bonds people together irrespective of the colour of their skins and cultural affiliations,’’ she said.

    According to Opara, French is a language of diplomacy and integration as it is spoken in the five continents.

    She, nonetheless, observed that since the decision of the Addis Ababa and Yaounde conferences of 1961 and 1963, respectively, for ministers of education in West Africa to adopt French as a second official language, Nigeria had not done well in implementing the policy.

    “It only started opening up to that policy in 1998 when it was revisited, and eventually adopted it in the National Policy on Education,’’ she said.

    She identified incompetence by some French teachers, overpopulation in classes and inappropriate teaching methods as some challenges hindering effective implementation of the policy.

    “Also, some teachers may have the certificate but not proficiency in the language; they are just qualified on papers but do not have the competence for proper impartation of the language,’’ she noted.

    She said effective teaching and learning of French would assist Nigerians in getting international jobs and making them highly competitive in the labour market.

    She called for the appropriate method for teaching French to facilitate the development of the language, insisting that institutional strategies must also be right and appropriate.

    She suggested that security operatives should also be trained in French language to forestall aggression from French speaking countries.

    According to her, if Nigerian soldiers and other security personnel can speak French, they will be able to alert authorities when there are threats to invade the country.

    “There is need to train our border officials too in French language to communicate effectively with trans-border traders and other travellers to enhance free movement of goods and people in West Africa.

    “This will manifest in increased trading activities and investors from other member states will be able to do business in all places within the sub-region,’’ she said.

    She observed further that although French language teaching in school curriculum was comprehensive enough to foster the intended integration “it is deficient in implementation.’’

    She therefore called for strong advocacy and monitoring to effectively implement the policy.

    “To harvest the huge benefits of integration, Nigeria must adopt French Language as a compulsory subject, not only from Basic 4 to Basic 9, but up to the university level.

    “This may take a while, but the effort will be quite rewarding and University of Lagos, being a leading university in Nigeria, should play a leadership role in this regard by introducing French as a general/university-wide course.

    “This will give students an internal leverage and make them more competitive in the international labour market,’’ she said.

    Opara also called for an integrative curriculum to reflect the new objective and status of the language.

    In his remark, Prof. Rahamon Bello, the Vice-Chancellor, University of Lagos, noted that rapid national development and integration required emphasis on language of communication.

    He restated that Nigeria should embrace French language to enhance integration and social interaction.

    Similarly, graduate of Linguistics Chisom Ilo, agreed that ability to speak French would widen the chances of Nigerians to secure international jobs.

    She noted that since “French is spoken in many countries; Nigeria should not be left out, calling for early exposure of students to French to stimulate their interest in the language.’’

     

    • Popoola and Nwachukwu are of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)

     

  • ‎CRK still in curriculum of schools -FG

    ‎CRK still in curriculum of schools -FG

    The Federal Government has denied removing Christian Religious Knowledge (CRK) from the new curriculum of schools.

    The government also denied introducing Islamic Arabic Studies/French subjects in the new curriculum and that students would study either of the two subjects.

    Executive Secretary, Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council (NERDC), Professor Ismail Junaidu, made the clarification in a statement issued in Abuja on Tuesday by the Federal Ministry of Education.

    The statement said claims that Christian Students would be left with no option than to study Islamic Arabic Studies since French teachers are more or less non-existent in schools was also untrue.

    According to the statement, the Basic Education Curriculum which includes the Christian Religious Knowledge and Islamic Studies Curricula was approved in 2013 by the National Council on Education which is the apex policy making body in education in Nigeria, made up of all the 36 States Commissioners of Education and the FCT under the Chairmanship of the Honourable Minister of Education.

    The statement reads: “For the avoidance of doubt, the last review of the curriculum was approved in 2013 and implementation commenced in September, 2014.

    “In both instances, neither the Christian Religious Knowledge nor Islamic Studies was removed from the curriculum. In fact, at the commencement of the present administration, the Hon. Minister of Education sought and obtained the approval of the National Council on Education to make Christian Religious Knowledge compulsory for all Christian students and Islamic Studies compulsory for their Muslim counterparts.

    “The claims peddled on social media platforms and a national daily are to say the least speculative, false and unfounded. Specifically as regards the Religion and National Values Curriculum.

    “It is obvious after perusing these claims, that while some of the peddlers operate from the oblivious side of information, many resort to this out of mischief needless of being extended into the critical sector of education.

    “The Management of NERDC hereby reiterates categorically and unequivocally to all Nigerians that the subject offerings (Civic Education, Social Studies, Christian Religious Knowledge, Islamic Studies and Security Education) under the Religion and National Values Curriculum are distinct, as listed and taught separately on the time table.

    “In this Curriculum, no child should be coerced or compelled to learn or be taught in school any religious studies subject  but only one (out of the two) that restrictively relates to the belief system professed by the child and his/her parents.

    “Teachers had been trained in the six Geopolitical Zones to be able to teach these distinct subjects. They are well aware of the mode of teaching the Religion and National Values Curriculum as distinct subjects on the time table.

    “In view of the claims therefore, NERDC hereby states that: CRK is still taught in schools; as a separate distinct subject with the accompanying Teachers’ Guide.

    “CRK is not a theme in Civic Education. Civic Education is a distinct subject on its own which teaches the rudiments of good citizenship.

    “There is no subject in the Nigerian School Curriculum called Islamic Arabic Studies nor anywhere in the world as being speculated.

    “French is a compulsory subject from Primary 4 as dictated by the National Policy on Education Section  2 sub-section 23.7p 13.

    “Efforts are in top gear to print the Christian Religious Knowledge and Islamic Studies Curriculum separately in order to maintain their characteristics and distinctiveness.

    “As a Regional Centre of Curriculum Excellence, we are very receptive to good suggestions from all critical stakeholders especially ideas that are policy driven and within the scope of our mandate.

    “Indeed, we sincerely appreciate the organizations, institutions and individuals that considered it wise to contact us on this matter.

    “NERDC stands for integrity and excellence in educational research and development. The management stands for education for human dignity, economic reconstruction and value reorientation.

    “We therefore sincerely appeal to politicians and fifth columnist to desist from dragging education into the political melee capable of destabilising the education sector and mortgaging the future of upcoming generation of Nigerians.”

     

  • Macron takes over as French President

    Macron takes over as French President

    Emmanuel Macron, 39, has been inaugurated as France’s president and pledged to overcome division in societies.

    Macron, a centrist, took over on Sunday from President Francois Hollande, the socialist whose five years in power were plagued by stubborn unemployment and attacks.

    Macron – France’s youngest ever president – beat his far-right rival Marine Le Pen to the presidency, winning more than 65 per cent of the May 7 vote.

    “The whole world has watched our presidential election,” Macron said in his inaugural speech as president, which took place at the Elysee Presidential Palace.

    He added that “the world and Europe have today, more than ever, a need for France. They want a France that is sure of its destiny.

    “The world needs what French men and woman have always taught it — freedom, equality and fraternity.”

    He said France was not in decline, but at the start of an “extraordinary renaissance”, adding that he would boost employment, protect companies and engage with French people who feel ignored.

    “Republican secularism will be defended. We must find the deep meaning of what unites us today … France is only strong if it is prosperous.”

    Francois Hollande is delighted at the election of the former investment banker.

    Hollande launched Macron’s political career, and brought him from the world of investment banking to be an advisor and then his economic minister.

    “I am not handing over power to a political opponent, it’s far simpler,” Hollande said.

    Meanwhile, Macron is expected to reveal the closely-guarded name of his prime minister on Monday before flying to Berlin to meet German Chancellor, Angela Merkel.

    It is virtually a rite of passage for French leaders to make their first European trip to meet the leader of the other half of the so-called “motor” of the EU.

    Pro-EU Macron wants to push for closer cooperation to help the bloc overcome the imminent departure of Britain, another of its most powerful members. (Reuters/NAN

  • Macron favorite in opinion polls as France elects new president

    Macron favorite in opinion polls as France elects new president

    After a tumultuous election campaign filled with scandal and surprises, the French public began to vote on Sunday on whether a pro-European Union centrist or an anti-EU, anti-immigration far-rightist will lead them for the next five years.

    Opinion polls indicate they will pick Emmanuel Macron, a 39-year-old ex-economy minister who wants to bridge the left-right divide, resisting an anti-establishment tide that has seen Britons vote to leave the EU and Americans choose Donald Trump as U.S. president.

    But should an upset occur and National Front candidate Marine Le Pen win, the very future of the EU could be on the line.
    Macron, who wants to deregulate the economy and deepen EU integration, has a 23- to 26-percentage-point lead over Le Pen in the opinion polls.
    Forecasts proved accurate for the presidential election’s first round last month, and markets have risen in response to Macron’s widening lead over his rival after a bitter television debate on Wednesday.

    “We increased our equity exposure and added some French stocks after the first round.

    “The major political risk of a Le Pen victory appears to be disappearing,’’ Francois Savary, Chief Investment Officer at Geneva-based fund management firm Prime Partners, said.

    In a campaign that has seen favorites drop out of the race one after the other, Le Pen, who wants to close borders, ditch the euro currency and clamp down on migration, is nevertheless closer to elected power than the far right has ever been in Western Europe since World War Two.

    Even if opinion polls prove accurate and France elects its youngest president ever rather than its first female leader, Macron himself has said he expects no honeymoon period.

    Abstention could be high, and close to 60 per cent of those who plan to vote for Macron say they will do so to stop Le Pen from being elected to lead the euro zone’s second-largest economy rather than because they fully agree with the former banker-turned-politician.

    Sunday’s election will in any case not end the battle between mainstream and more radical policies in France, with parliamentary elections next month equally crucial.

    Once the presidential ballot is over, attention will switch to whether the winner will be able to get a majority in parliament, with one poll this week showing that such a majority was within reach for Macron.

    Much will also depend on both the candidates’ score on Sunday.

    Le Pen’s niece, Marion Marechal-Le Pen, on Thursday told L’Opinion daily that a 40 percent score would already be “a huge victory” for the National Front.

    Whoever wins will spell a new chapter in French politics.

    The major left-wing and right-wing parties — the Socialist Party and The Republicans — that have ruled France for decades both suffered humiliating defeats in the election’s first round.

    The campaign was hit by yet another surprise on Friday night just before the quiet period which forbids politicians from commenting started.

    Macron’s team said a massive hack had dumped emails, documents and campaign-financing information online.

    Pollsters will publish initial estimates at 8 pm (1800 GMT), once all polling stations are closed.

    More than 50,000 police officers will be on duty. Security will be a prime concern in the wake of a series of militant attacks in Paris, Nice and elsewhere in the past few years that have killed more than 230 people.

  • The next French President: Macron or lepen?

    In a few days time , precisely 23rd April, the French will go to the polls for the first round of the 2017 presidential election. The second round run-off should come up two weeks later, if none of the eleven candidates scores more than 50% of the votes cast.

    The outcome of the election should be of interest to us in the ECOWAS sub-region in general and in Nigeria in particular , if for nothing , at least for the place of France in the world – a permanent member of the UN, with veto power – and its continued influence in its former African colonies with its attendant impact on the Nigerian economy.

    A case in point is the French-backed CFA franc (directly tied to the Euro), the currency used by Nigeria’s Francophone neighbours, many of them ECOWAS member countries like Nigeria. O the Nigerian borders . A visit to Nigeria’s borders like Seme will convince you!

    The race to determine who will succeed President François Hollande at the Elysée Palace (their own Aso Villa) is now in its last lap. It is obvious that, barring any surprises of tsunamic proportions, the race will run into its second round run-off on Sunday 7th May.

    For anyone who has followed closely the recent campaign and events in France and especially the barrage of relevant polls conducted by different polling agencies and institutes, the run-off of the French presidential election should be between the two forerunners, Marine Le Pen and 39-year-old Emmanuel Macron. Not even the recent surprise surge in voter intention of the far left candidate, Jean- Luc Mélenchon, should ,we believe, change this summation.

    Marine Le Pen, daughter of the famous (infamous?) Jean-Marie Le Pen, founder of the far right party, National Front (le Front National} , has consistently topped the polls, until recently. The other frontrunner, Emmanuel Macron, a former minister of the economy of the incumbent Socialist President François Hollande, is running as an independent on the ticket of a movement called En Marche! (‘On the Move!’) which he formed on resigning from Hollande’s cabinet less than a year ago.

    He claims to be neither to the left nor to the right of the French political divide. With these two candidates as frontrunners in the race for the Elysée Palace , the 2017 French presidential election can truly and rightly be said to be an historic one.

    If the polls are anything to go by, for once in the history of the Fifth Republic, founded by Gen. Charles de Gaulle, we shall have a situation where the official candidate of each of the two major, mainstream political parties, the ruling Socialist Party , on the one hand, and the main opposition centre right party, the Republicans (Les Republicans),the new name of former President Nicolas Sarkozy’s UMP, on the other, could be absent in the second round run-off.

    This has indeed made the current campaign exciting, and intriguing. While Benoit Hamon, for the Socialists, and the embattled Francois Fillon, of the Republicans (LR), are running 5th and 3rd respectively in the polls, pundits and the man in the street in France and across the world continue to wager and argue as to whether the latter, once considered the next likely president , can make it to the run-off round by coming at least second.

    Time it was when Sarkozy’s prime minister for all the latter’s five years in power (2007- 2012), wa s seen as the next French President once he had beaten Alain Juppé at the LR primary against all odds . Right from the onset there had been no doubt that the blonde eloquent and no-nonsense Marine Le Pen (who even got her father Jean-Marie expelled from the party he founded) would be present at the run-off in May, having consistently been on top of the pack and credited with more than a quarter of the polled voter intentions.

    Should that happen on DDay it would be only the second time an FN candidate would do so in the history of the French Fifth Republic, after the shock result of 2002 that saw Marine’s father beat Socialist prime minister Lionel Jospin to the third place in a contest finally won by incumbent Jacques Chirac.

    This time around , the game has changed, or so it appears. Whereas the LR candidate, François Fillon was for long a close second in most polls behind Marine Le Pen , the scandal involving the former’s wife, Penelope, in a sinecure-type fake jobs allegation, for which he is under investigation, has now taken a significant toll on Fillon’s chances, at least at the first round, according to the polls.

    The man who was once seen as the probable next president of France, after he had won the LR’s primary against all expectations , is now running behind Macron and Ms Le Pen, and may, therefore, not get through to the run-off stage.

    On the other hand, Emmanuel Macron’s fortunes have consistently improved over the past weeks owing to a combination of factors, not least of which is the prevalent anti-establishment sentiment, anti-mainstream politician feeling . While the so-called Penelopegate (alleged use of public funds to pay Fillion’s wife as his parliamentary assistant, and even two of his children) obviously led to a loss of supporters for Fillon, the fact that Macron was able to attract supporters from both the left and the right of the political spectrum has helped him not only to displace Francois Fillion from the second position according to a cross section of the opinion polls but indeed to also catch up with Marine Le Pen at the top of the ladder.

    There has, obviously, been a bandwagon effect in favour of the young former minister of President François Hollande, only 39.The outsider, Macron, hardly known a few years back, is today the toast, as they say, of a sizeable, significant section of the electorate.

    The candidate of En Marche! has indeed been able to attract to his candidacy not only the traditional core centre politicians such as François Bayrou of the MoDEM Party,a recurring decimal in French politics, he has also garnered open endorsement by president Hollande’s recent former prime minister, Manuel Valls, and a host of such prominent members of the Hollande administration as the minister of defence, Jean-Yves Le Drian, and other top-flight politicians , like Daniel Cohn-Bendit.

    What is striking in all this, clearly a success story, that of a brilliant banker and economist turned politician, is that the winner of the Socialist Party primary, Benoit Hamon, has had to cry havoc and treachery to the high heavens for the fact that contestants at the presidential primary of the party had been made to make an undertaking that they would support the winner of that primary , come rain or shine.

    In other words, a major loser at the Socialist Party primary, Hollande’s recent former prime minister Valls, should normally be the last person to lend his support to independent frontrunner Macron, who had turned his back on the Socialist Party, at least not before the ineluctable run-off in May.

    But then, the opinion polls, for whatever they are worth, and woe betide any serious politician who would deny their relevance, have consistently put the Socialist Party’s official candidate far behind not only frontrunners Le Pen and Macron, but also the embattled Fillon, and now also one Jean- Luc Mélenchon, a far left charismatic rabble-rouser.

    All this has led to the now famous ‘vote utile’ (‘useful vote’) and would explain why a good many Socialist Party supporters have shifted ground and continued to endorse, strengthen and swell the ranks of the former socialist, turned independent, Macron. The latter’s En Marche! movement has turned out to be more than a mere slogan but a veritable rallying call.

    The membership of the movement to have hit 200,000, more than double that of the mainstream Socialist Party and about the same as that of the old Gaullist party that has continually governed France under different names and appellations: RPR, UDF, UMP, used by Sarkozy, and now Fillon’s LR. What’s in a name? The bandwagon effect referred to above may well be due to the perceived need by a non-negligible section of the French electorate, and their friends and allies abroad, notably in Europe, to stop the ultra-rightist National Party incarnated by Marine Le Pen from producing the next president of France. The reason is simple.

    If it is highly probable that neither the candidate of the ruling Socialist Party of President Hollande, nor that of the rightist LR Party (Les Républicans) of the immediate past president Nicolas Sarkozy would make it to the second round run-off, it is clear that only a candidate strong enough to give the FN’s Marine Le Pen a run for her populist, anti-EU, anti-immigration, and some would say racist ideology, come 23rd April, could ensure that the far right candidate does not find her way to the Elysée Palace. If Macron comes first at the first round and Marine Le Pen a close second, the race for the Elysée Palace in the run-off would be literally a battle royal.

    The lesser candidates, the French call them ‘les petits candidats’ :small candidates, prominent among whom could be a certain Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the candidate of the far leftist party, Le Parti de Gauche, with his movement called La France Insoumise (France Unsubdued) – rebellious? – and the Socialist Party candidate, Benoit Hamon on the one hand, and the combination of the supporters of François Fillion and the weight of abstentions, and today’s undecided voters, all combined, on the other, could very well determine who wins the race.

    The opinion polls in fact suggest that as many as 20% of those to vote on 23rd April are yet undecided, while abstentions could be as high as 30%. •Continued online •Ekundayo Simpson, Professor of French, CEO Interlingua Limited

  • US, UK, EU, France worried over Rivers re-run election

    US, UK, EU, France worried over Rivers re-run election

    Developed countries have expressed concern over Saturday’s re-run election in Rivers state.

    UK, US, French, and EU Heads of Mission in Nigeria in a Joint statement Friday called on the leadership of all political parties and their supporters to allow for peaceful election.

    They urged party leadership and their supporters not to use or incite violence.

    Paul T. Arkwright – British High Commissioner to Nigeria; W. Stuart Symington – United States Ambassador to Nigeria; Denys Guaer – French Ambassador to Nigeria and Michel Arrion – EU Head of Delegation to Nigeria all signed the statement.

    The envoy stressed that the leaders of all parties are accountable for the actions of their members and

    They also encouraged INEC and the security forces to perform their duties responsibly and impartially.

    They also urge all parties to respect the electoral process and raise any grievances peacefully and through official channels.

    The statement reads: “We note with concern the rising tension in Rivers state ahead of elections on 10 December. We call on the leadership of all political parties and their supporters in Rivers state to allow elections to go ahead peacefully.

    “We encourage INEC and the security forces to perform their duties responsibly and impartially. We urge all parties to respect the electoral process and raise any grievances peacefully and through official channels. We stress that the leaders of all parties are accountable for the actions of their members and we encourage them to urge their supporters not to use or incite violence.

  • Lagos trains 180 French teachers

    ONE hundred and eighty French teachers from all six education districts in Lagos State have received training to update their skills.

    The training, which was organised by the Lagos State Teachers Establishment and Pensions office (TEPO), held at the Teachers Resource Centre, in Owutu, Ikorodu, Lagos.

    TEPO’s Permanent Secretary, TEPO, Mrs Sewanu Amosu said the training was essential for the teachers because it offered diagnostic help to the participants in problem areas.

    She said the government was determined to resuscitate the language because of its relevance as well as focus more on the spoken character of it than its written knowledge.

    “The ability to speak the language is a major distinctive quality of the language. We should emphasise on the oral and not just the written part,” Mrs Amosu said.

    Resource facilitator, Prof Remi Sonaiya, said Nigeria’s development is dependent on it.

    “French is a language of the elites. You can contribute to the smooth running of many international organisations and agencies. You can become as well as train diplomats, aid workers, translators, interpreters, negotiators, broadcasters, airline announcers. All these depend on the quality of your spoken French and your ability to impact.

    “Put passion in your work. You must invest in yourselves so that you can be the best you can possibly be that money cannot buy,” she said.

    Another facilitator and director of the resource centre, Mrs Rhoda Ayinde, said the training was important because Nigeria is surrounded by Francophone countries.

    “We want our French teachers to give our students the very best because they have to be current. Our Pupils need to know that the knowledge of this language can open diverse doors and opportunities for them,” she said.

  • Kano, French Embassy float PG scholarship scheme

    Kano State government and the Embassy of France in Nigeria, have initiated a joint scholarship scheme to sponsor postgraduate training of 12 indigenes of the state in reputable French universities in the next three years.

    Under the arrangement, Kano government would provide accommodation, upkeep and travel expenses, while the French Embassy would take care of beneficiaries’ registration, tuition and health insurance, according to Deputy Governor Prof Hafiz Abubakar.

    The government, which disclosed this at a ceremony at the Kano Government House, said the government had settled its part of the deal for one year.

    Giving highlights of the programme, Abubakar explained that Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje ‘’decided that the offer should be dedicated to lecturers of the state tertiary institutions’’, adding that beneficiaries were drawn from Kano University of Technology, Northwest University and the state polytechnic.

    “The aim is to build the capacity of lecturers, and the initiative clearly demonstrates the Ganduje administration’s commitment towards promoting learning and attaining higher education levels for citizens of the state,” Abubakar said.

    Abubakar who is the state Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, said candidates were meticulously selected and interviewed by a committee of the French Embassy, which  sourced the universities that offered the admissions.

    Abubakar, described the scholarship as first of its kind in Kano and a demonstration of the cordiality between the government and French Embassy, charged beneficiaries to be good ambassadors by exhibiting excellence in character and learning.

    At the event, Abubakar presented 15 partial scholarships offered to indigenes of the state by Near East University, Cyprus, to study Engineering and Nursing at undergraduate, masters and doctorate levels.

    Under the deal, the university would provide tuition and Value Added Tax for each student, while the government would provide living and travelling expenses.

    Mr. Denys Gauer said:  “Nigeria and France have in recent times increased their level of political cooperation, with exchange visits by our presidents.”

    Gauer said while both countries were working to address the security challenges facing Nigeria, his country, through the French Development Agency, was determined to execute more projects for Nigerians.

     

  • Chancellor hails French Language Village DG’s appointment

    Chancellor Espéranza University, Cotonou in  Benin Republic, Prof Pierre d’Alcantara Zocli, has commended President Muhammadu Buhari for re-appointing Prof. Rauf Adebisi as the Director-General and Chief Executive Officer of the Nigeria  French  Language Village (NFLV), Badagry.

    He noted that the re-appointment would allow Adebisi to finish the  programmes he started in the institution, especially as the institution held a forum where French language activities in higher institutions were reviewed.

    The Chancellor noted in his congratulatory letter to Adebisi that he looked forward to a rich exchange of educational ideas between both institutions.

    The letter reads in part: “As an institution rooted in the spirit of African innovation and progress, Espéranza University would like to mark the recent re-appointment of Prof Rauf Adebisi to the post of General Director (CEO) at the Nigerian French Village.

    “The Nigeria French Village initiative is yet another example of the Nigerian entrepreneurial spirit which Espéranza University has been working hard over the past couple of years to harness by equipping young Nigerian prospects with the academic and practical tools of entrepreneurship within an intra-African setting, thereby exposing them through immersion to the intricacies and opportunities of our cross-border trading corridor and the Francophone market.

    “In the light of these striking synergies between our respective works, we are keen to seize the moment and launch a conversation around the setting up of a strategic partnership between Espéranza University and Nigeria French Village

    “This would be the perfect opportunity to build on your past achievements and further the breath of your new term and future achievements. Espéranza University would be honoured to be part of what promises to be a landmark chapter in the story of Nigeria French Village and learn from your experience empowering Nigerian prospects.”