Tag: Good news

  • When Good News translates to art on Owoyemi’s mind

    When Good News translates to art on Owoyemi’s mind

    The Artist is the opposite of the politically minded individual, the opposite of the reformer, the opposite of the idealist. The artist does not tinker with the universe, he creates it out of his own experience and understanding of life. In life when all else is lost, art holds fast, and that is the good news about art. Good news is the desire of every lover of good things. In these days of depressing headlines, uncertainty and odd occurrences all around us, good news is very welcome.
    What good news could there be at a period when the year 2016 is close to an end and everyone looks ahead with hope into the coming year 2017? The good news is that art is life, and this is the reason for the Good News exhibition. The exhibition brings to our visuality, with palpable imagery and in an innocuous manner, the catharsis of the artist – Owoyemi’s -own good news. The efforts in this exhibition in uncanny manner attempt to define the artist’s personality-artistic, religious and sociable.
    With dream of stardom, Owoyemi’s resilience and search for new grounds to launch his artistic leap is set in this Good News Exhibition. Taiwo Owoyemi is a committed artist and a believer in virtuous proclivity. The titles of his works on exhibit here, easily give him out. “Still Patriotic” is a mixed media, 2by4ft, featuring a damsel, sleek and stylised figure with two hands spread out. The figure with braided hair, held in seven places is symbolic. In African and Christian spiritual teaching, the head is significant in the destiny of an individual and seven is the number of perfection in Christian religious understanding. Besides, the eyeballs of the figure are patterned into the overtly depressed but laterally elongated face, enlivened by two dramatically formed eyes. The two bright eyes of the female figure, with dropping eyelids, stare at the audience. The blouse and pant of this feminine figure are adorned with signs and symbols ingeniously inlaid to create artistic points of tension and rest, for the eyes and emotion.  Many of Taiwo’s works in this exhibition are in this mould.
    In all the works featured in this exhibition, there is a pervading evocation of the elements of tension and calm in subtle manner. This is used in the patterns, signs and symbols as superficial character or clothing for the figures or forms that Taiwo has created. More so, Taiwo Owoyemi uses these elements as artistic strategy to find answers to the problem of light and shade in the three dimensional ambiance that he works. For example in another work titled, “My Choice”, Aluminum on Board medium, Owoyemi gets colourful with aluminum sheets sourced from discarded cans from industrial products. The audacity of usage of the elements of art as well as the unity and balance of structure and pigmentation is statesmentous of Taiwo development. He is no longer in the category of the juveniles, professionally. Taiwo has drawn the boundary in his practice, showing the difference between the charlatan and champion in Art.
    Taiwo’s works in this exhibition betray him! They reveal the aspect of him (Taiwo) that he probably would not speak about openly – his family, religious commitment and ideological learning.  A soft spoken, jovial, adorable, shy and determined personality who carries himself about quietly; Taiwo has been given out in the full glare of the public, by his artworks.
    The images in his artworks, of elegant women, idealised female forms, and jubilant female figures are Taiwo’s discrete homage to Bimpe, his wife who is also a committed and prolific painting artist. They are both blessed with children. In the same vein, the benign wordings of the titles of works on exhibit are another manner in which Taiwo unknowingly let out himself in this exhibition. The artist is an ebullient spiritual individual in the Christian group and the nomenclature that he brings to bear on his art works are insignia of his ideological and spiritual positioning. The interesting aspect of this exhibition is the manner the artworks excite the vision and emotion of the audience.

    •Prof Odiboh, Art Critic, works at the Department of Fine and Applied Arts, University of Benin (UNIBEN), Edo State.

  • Good news

    Good news

    •Excess produce requires us to save for the rainy day

    Farmers in Nigeria have, literally speaking, gone through hell over the decades. Indeed, since the discovery of crude oil in the country, agriculture, which used to be its mainstay, has been relegated to the background, such that Nigeria over the years became a major importer of all manner of agricultural products, including livestock, losing billions of hard-earned foreign exchange annually in the process.

    But things appear to be looking up for the farmers once again, with the sudden crash in the price of crude oil in the international market. The country is therefore forced to look inward and many Nigerians are now seeing the sense in returning to the farms. Mercifully, this appears to be paying off, as the country, Africa’s current largest producer of cereals and grains, is beginning to record noticeable improvements in these areas.

    Today, about 500 trucks of these products are said to be exported weekly to neighbouring countries as a result of the huge demand in the global market that is targeting the country’s surplus production. Paradoxically, what should be a thing of joy that calls for celebration has become a source of concern to the Federal Government. This concern was made public by no less a personality than Mallam Garba Shehu, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, in a radio interview in Kano.

    According to him: “Huge demand for our grains in the global market is creating an excellent environment for the mindless export of Nigerian grains across our borders and unless this is curtailed, Nigerian markets will be bereft of food by January next year.”

    Grim as this might appear, the government does not have to panic or even appeal to mere sentiment on this matter. Rather, it should take pragmatic steps to ensure that the farmers are encouraged to satisfy the local market first and have surplus for export. Having enough farm produce for local consumption and exporting the surplus is not mutually exclusive. In other words, Nigeria can eat its cake and still have it!

    The government should be happy that there is a high demand for grains from Nigeria from countries as distant as Libya and Algeria, and even far away Brazil. It is only natural that our farmers are more interested in exporting their produce; this is what free market is all about, a thing Mallam Shehu said President Muhammadu Buhari “is not in any way opposed to or intent on tampering with.” We are afraid the president could not even tamper with this unless he wants to kill the local initiatives that led to the renewed interest in farming and take the country back to square one.

    We appreciate the government’s anxiety about its plan to have self-sufficiency in food production but disagree that this could lead to famine anytime soon. On the contrary, what could defeat Nigeria’s journey to self-sufficiency in food production is for the government not to do the right thing so that farmers would see the need to sell their produce at home, exporting only the surplus.

    So, rather than keep appealing to base sentiment, the Federal Ministry of Agriculture should heed the president’s admonition to quickly present a quick plan for the purchase of surplus grains to be stored in warehouses across the country to save for the rainy day. Moribund silos should be reactivated. This would work better than asking traditional and religious leaders to put moral pressure on farmers exporting their produce at the expense of the home market. The government would be talking to the deaf if it keeps telling the farmers and other Nigerians to make sacrifices and be patriotic when there is no evidence that those in leadership positions are ready to do same.

    Our farmers have suffered enough; let them be now that their hour appears to have come.

  • Good news!

    Good news!

    •Job seekers should hook up to Lagos’ registration/labour exchange centres

    Lagos State government has taken a pragmatic step towards assisting jobless youths in the state, with the establishment of registration/labour exchange centre in Ojo Local Government Council. Five of such centres that would be established in five divisions of the state will have a data base of unemployed persons which would be used to develop an appropriate intervention programme for them as well as link them with potential employers.

    Mr Babatunde Durosimi-Etti, commissioner for wealth creation and employment, made this known at the commissioning of the centre. According to him, the comprehensive data generated there would assist the ministry in mapping out strategies to deal with unemployment.

    Lack of data base is the bane of most of the planning we do in the country. This is why most of our projections fail. For instance, do we know the number of graduates our tertiary institutions turn out yearly, not to talk of their disciplines to be able to plan for the graduates and use the data for national planning? The beauty of the Lagos initiative is that it captures general information or profiles of those registered, including education levels and skills. This makes the job of prospective employers and employees easier.

    Indeed, the idea looks very much like a similar scheme that the Federal Ministry of Labour ran many years ago, before the country lost its bearing. Then, the labour ministry used to take profiles of the unemployed with a view to linking them with potential employers and it recorded some measure of success. The only difference with the Lagos initiative is that it is taking advantage of technology which was not available before, as the profiles of the unemployed were then collated manually.

    Unemployment is a national problem that should be tackled by all tiers of government. But Lagos is the country’s industrial hub and home to many ethnic nationalities that left their various places of origin in search of greener pastures in the city. This has compounded the unemployment situation in the state, especially with the economic downturn that the country is passing through.

    It is gratifying that the government realised the danger posed by this time bomb and is taking appropriate measures to address the situation.

    That the Lagos initiative would be integrated to allow other Nigerians have access to the platform makes it the more fascinating. There are many people out there looking for jobs just as there are many prospective employers in need of certain skills; both are winking in the dark due to lack of a connecting platform. That, hopefully, would be a thing of the past when the registration/exchange centres fully take off. All the potential employer and potential employee need is to tap into the platform.

    With the proposed training that the state government hopes to give to those requiring such, to increase their skills and give them the requisite experience, we expect that overall; the initiative would help douse social tension in the land as well as reduce the rate of unemployment. More people can then sleep with two eyes closed, because the devil will be denied the idle hands that could have been his workshop.

    We urge those looking for jobs to take advantage of this giant step by the Lagos State government. We also plead with the government to make the process less cumbersome by having input into its operations since it would be private-sector driven. It is refreshing that the state has continued to lead the way with initiatives such as this, especially since the return to civil rule in May, 1999.

    We commend the state government for this idea and commend it to other states of the federation. The result will be more amazing if as many states as possible realise the challenge that unemployment posed and consequently move to address it.

  • Good news  for Nigeria  from Howard University

    Good news for Nigeria from Howard University

    On Saturday, at the Howard University in Washington D.C, Nigerians made history. Of the 96 graduating Doctor of Pharmacy candidates, 43 of them were Nigerians and of the 27 awards given, 16 went to Nigerians.

    IT  did not make headlines. For major news network, it also did not get any mention. Even when major newspapers reported the event, what caught their attention was on what President Barack Obama said when he delivered the commencement lecture at Howard University, Washington DC. But there was a major highlight that was ignored. A report said of the 96 graduating Doctor of Pharmacy candidates, 43 of them were Nigerians and of the 27 awards given, 16 went to Nigerians.

    Howard University also awarded a Doctor of Humanities degree to actress and activist Cicely Tyson, a Doctor of Laws to Ambassador Horace G. Dawson, a pioneering member of the U.S. Foreign Service and founding director of the Howard’s Ralph J. Bunche International Affairs Center, and a Doctor of Science to Dr. L.D. Britt, chairman of the Department of Surgery at Eastern Virginia Medical School.

    It awarded more than 1,300 bachelor’s degrees, more than 300 master’s degrees, and over 100 Ph.Ds. The top five areas of concentration were psychology, history, political science, social work and mathematics. Additionally, more than 400 students received professional degrees in law, medicine, pharmacy and dentistry.

    Howard University has the only dental and pharmacy colleges in the District of Columbia. The graduates represented 46 states and 35 countries. The youngest graduate at the ceremony was 20-years-old and the oldest was 74.

    Founded in 1867, Howard University is a private, research university that is comprised of 13 schools and colleges. Students pursue studies in more than 120 areas leading to undergraduate, graduate and professional degrees. Since 1998, the University has produced two Rhodes Scholars, two Truman Scholars, a Marshall Scholar, 30 Fulbright Scholars and 11 Pickering Fellows. Howard also produces more on campus African-American Ph.D. recipients than any other university in the United States.

    Speaking at the event, Obama emphasized that his election has not created a “post-racial society” despite improved race relations.

    Stressing the need to keep pushing for change, he gave the students at the historically black university impassioned advice on how to “shape our collective future.”

    Chief among that advice: Vote, “not just some of the time but all of the time.” He added: “When we don’t vote we give away our power.”

    He described the university as a “centerpiece of African-American intellectual life, and a central part of our larger American story.”

    Arguing that the U.S. — and the world — is a “better place” than when he graduated from college in the early 1980s, he said there is still work to be done, citing employment, achievement and justice gaps for African-Americans.

    “Be confident in your heritage. Be confident in your blackness,” he told the graduates. “There’s no one way to be black. Take it from somebody who’s seen both sides of the debate about whether I’m black enough.”

    Obama told the graduates to remember the ties that connect African-Americans: “That is our particular awareness of injustice, and unfairness, and struggle. … That means we cannot sleepwalk through life.

    “We have cousins, and uncles, and brothers, and sisters, who we remember were just as smart and just as talented as we were but somehow got ground down by structures that were unfair and unjust, and that means we have to not only question the world as it is, and stand up for those African-Americans who haven’t been so lucky.”

    That empathy should extend to “all people who are struggling,” he said.

    Finally, he advised the grads that creating change requires organization and strategy. That strategy has to include voting, Obama added:

    “People try to make this political thing really complicated … you know what? Just vote. It’s math. If you have more votes than the other guy, you get to do what you want.”

    Moreover, he said change requires compromise and “listening to those with whom you disagree.”

    Obama said when he received a bachelor’s degree in 1983, there were no Black CEOs of Fortune 500 companies and few Black judges. He said it was important to note the progress America has made in race relations since then.

    “To deny how far we have come would be a disservice to those who went before. There’s still so much work to do, so many miles to travel,” Obama said. “America needs you to gladly, happily take up that work.”

    Howard University President Wayne A. I. Frederick said President Obama was awarded a Doctor of Science degree (not doctor of laws or letters) to underscore how much the Affordable Care Act means to this country as a whole. He urged graduates to embrace Obama as a personal role model and to emulate his trademark graciousness.

    In his remarks, Obama addressed “a justice gap when too many Black boys and girls pass through a pipeline from underfunded schools to overcrowded jails.” However, he emphasized that passion alone was not enough to cement lasting change.

    “If you care about mass incarceration, what are you doing to pressure the Congress to pass the pending legislation that might alleviate it?” Obama asked. “Passion is vital, but you’ve got to have a strategy. And your plan better include voting, not just some of the time, but all of the time.”

    Obama credited two Howard University legal icons, Thurgood Marshall and Charles Hamilton Houston, for their leadership in overturning Jim Crow segregation laws.

    “The seeds of change for all America were sown here,” Obama said.

    Speaking from his own experience, Obama encouraged African Americans to continue to embrace their heritage and to “be confident in your Blackness.” Even so, he noted that there was no one way to be Black, and no litmus test for authenticity.

    “Look at Howard,” Obama said. “One thing most people don’t realise about Howard is how diverse it is. You shatter stereotypes.”

  • Good news in hard times

    Good news in hard times

    •It is cheering that Lagos has joined the league of oil-producing states 

    These are hard and harsh economic times for Nigeria. A culture of waste, indiscipline,  mindless corruption as well as lack of planning and vision on the part of the leadership at all levels has made the country a helpless victim of the current drastic fall in the international price of crude oil. Most state governments are unable to pay workers’ salaries and meet other obligations while millions of Nigerians sink deeper into poverty. Yet, despite this inclement situation, there is cause to keep hope alive in the possibilities of a bright future for Nigeria.

    The revelation, for instance, by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources and Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr Ibe Kachikwu, that the Federal Government is set to commence drilling activities for crude oil in the Chad Basin from the third quarter of this year is good news in hard times.

    With the decisive curtailing of the insurgency in the North East that had stalled the project, the minister explained that “a total of 1,962 square kilometres have been acquired and processed, interpretation is currently ongoing at about 90 per cent completion and drilling activities will commence by the last quarter of 2016”. Some of the benefits to accrue to the country from this development, according to the minister, is to increase the nation’s oil and gas reserves, enhance the hydrocarbon potential of the Nigerian inland basin, as well as creating new investment and employment opportunities.

    Equally heart-warming is the news that Lagos State is set to join the league of oil-producing states in the country. The wholly indigenous owned Yinka Folawiyo Petroleum Company Limited and operator of the Aje field located in Oil Mining Lease 113 offshore Lagos has announced commencement of crude oil production from the field. After over 25 years of exploratory, appraisal and development activities, the final hook-up procedures are reported to be in progress with a view to bringing the wells into production very soon. The Aje field reportedly has a production capacity of 40,000 barrels of oil per day and storage capacity of 750,000 barrels.

    Despite the present fall in the price of crude oil in the world market, petroleum and gas will continue to play a key role in the global economy and will remain pivotal to Nigeria’s economy. Yet, these  discoveries of petroleum resources in the North and Lagos should not stem our determination to diversify the economy and drastically reduce the country’s overdependence on oil revenues. The lesson should also not be lost on us that it is not really the revenues derived from oil that matters as much as our ability to productively and creatively utilise such funds to expand and modernise infrastructure as well as promote development and prosperity.

    Equally critical is the need to address fundamentally the concentration of the ownership and control of mineral resources in the Federal Government. This kind of unitary practice is a mockery of fiscal federalism and constitutes a major obstacle to the economic liberation and development of Nigeria. Apart from petroleum and gas, there are several other valuable mineral resources in virtually all states of the federation that are simply idle and untapped wealth because the states lack the constitutional authority to exploit such resources. It must be noted though that additional sources of revenue can only be beneficial to the vast majority of Nigerians if the current astronomical scale of corruption in the country is drastically curbed.

    This is why all patriotic Nigerians must fully support the present administration’s war against corruption.

  • Buhari as ‘Good News’ for Europe

    Buhari as ‘Good News’ for Europe

    Those who see President Muhammadu Buhari’s overseas trips as mere jaborees may have missed the point. The President’s Senior Special Assistant on Media & Publicity GARBA SHEHU appraises the trips and concludes that they have been politically and economically rewarding for the country.   

    Martins Schultz, the President of the European Parliament minced no words in describing why Europe is enamored of President Muahmmadu Buhari, so much as to give him the honor of addressing the continent’s  legislative arm.

    The big endorsement President Buhari got is on account of the outstanding wars he has waged so far against corruption and terrorism, wars that have been described as templates for Africa and the rest of the world. Increasingly, he is admired for delivering good governance humbly and honestly.

    This given opportunity, as many have noted, was the first time a Nigerian President – and the second African – had addressed the EU parliament.

    In his opening remarks, President Buhari did not miss the opportunity of acknowledging this recognition. “ I am honoured and humbled by my choice to address this occasion,” he told his receptive audience.

    Of recent, the EU countries have proved to be reliable strategic partners of Nigeria.

    Historically though, Nigeria – EU relations have been cordial, except for the period between 1993 – 1998 when the EU imposed sanctions on the country over the June 12, 1992 election crisis and then the outrageous killing of activist-writer Ken Saro Wiwa. However, the relations fully normalised from 1999, following the restoration of democratic governance in Nigeria.

    The EU has been a pillar of support for the consolidation of democracy in Nigeria, having sent high-powered election monitors to observe all national elections in the country since 1999.  The EU monitors’ assessment of the successive elections held had served as a barometer for adjudging their success or failure.

    By supporting our democratic process including the election that led to the transfer of power from a sitting government to an opposition political party for the first time in Nigeria’s political history, the EU and the international system have given a new hope for Nigeria.

    In acknowledging the support of the EU, especially in 2015, the President told the parliamentarians that: “Nigerians noted the huge contributions Europe made towards the realisation of acceptable, free and fair elections in our country. Today, I will tell this August gathering that the European investments are beginning to bear fruits. I am one of the returns-on-the European-investments of a democratic Nigeria.  Indeed, the present regime is the product of democratic choice consciously made by the people of Nigeria through the ballot box.”

    In what was perhaps the President’s longest speech outside Nigeria so far – he took 40 of the 45 minutes allotted to his address – he spoke about those hair-raising moments when Minister Godsday Orubebe seized national and international attention by stopping further announcement of presidential election results at the National Collation Center.

    Clearly, if there was any moment that the last administration came close to abrogating the nascent democracy, this was it.

    “The drama that took place at the National Collation Centre was a momentarily frightening situation,” said the President, as it was “unleashed by desperate agents of the status quo, with the purpose of maintaining their grip on the national resources for their selfish interests.

    “The maturity and patience, with which the officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), under Prof. Attahiru Jega, handled the matter, saved the struggle for democracy and the huge European contributions.  We must thank God that Nigeria survived this drama.

    “As I have stated in other fora, the action of Nigeria’s former President, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, is commendable. For the first time in the history of Nigeria, a Presidential Candidate and sitting President, conceded electoral defeat in defiance of calls by strong forces and agents and benefactors of the regime not to do so.”

    The Europeans have equally been very supportive of Nigeria’s war against terror and the ongoing efforts to rehabilitate the victims of the violence in the Northeast.

    It is noteworthy that the organisation has remained sympathetic and supportive of Nigeria in its efforts to tackle the menace of Boko Haram as it did support the country to tackle the Niger Delta crisis. In the course of these meetings, the EU acknowledged Nigeria’s counter-terrorism efforts and pledged continuous support to the endeavour. As part of such assistance, aimed at tackling the root cause of the Boko Haram insurgency in the North, the EU pledged at an earlier meeting, to provide intervention targeted at the North to reduce poverty and empower the youth for gainful employment to wean the group off the tendency, as was done in the case of Niger Delta in the wake of militancy in the region.

    As a leader with a genuine interest to work for the greater good of all the people and not just about self or national interest, President Buhari showed his acute awareness of the problems, not just facing his own country but Europe as a whole.

    His own government, he told the EU countries, is making concerted efforts to address the push-factors that propel migration, especially from Nigeria, as both destination and transit country.  “In this year’s budget, the government has provided for over 500,000 graduate employment in the teaching profession alone. We are equally collaborating with the states and local government areas, to strengthen skills acquisition centres, in order to train the teeming youth in various vocational skills, so that they can be self-employed, and eventually, become employers of labour. We are also making efforts to diversify the economy, giving impetus to agriculture and solid minerals exploitation, to create wealth and employment.”

    The President made clear that through support for our democratic process, the EU and the international system have given a new hope for Nigeria.

    Now it seems, the EU is saying to Nigeria that it is time to move forwards by boosting trade and investment.

    In this regard,there is the big outstanding issue of Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs), a section of it drawn up between Europe and Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) in succession to the APC (African Pacific Caribbean ) agreement that bound trade relations between Europe and West Africa, which has since run out.

    The new agreement has been signed by all but two of West Africa’s fifteen countries. Nigeria is yet to sign. This is evidently casing frustration with our country in Europe.

    The negotiations of the EPAs have achieved some progress, albeit with many fundamental issues still outstanding.  The sticking points include the ECOWAS Community levy, Rules of Origin, Dispute Settlements Mechanism, Most Favoured Nations Clause, ECOWAS demand on EU for provision of more funds outside the usual sources for the funding of EPA Development.

    Nigeria had indicated her reservations due to the fact that signing on to EPAs, in its current form, will negate its industrial revolution plan.  The industrial plan is aimed at changing the country from an importer of most goods to a manufacturing nation that could meet, at least, its domestic needs.  Nigeria also believes that the agreement will undermine the regional economic integration, as it has already created three different trade regimes in West Africa.

    In a clear demonstration of apparent frustration with the slow pace of EPA negotiations, which were slated to be completed between 2000-2008, the European Commission in 2011 adopted a proposal to amend the Market Access Regulation 1528/2007, governing trade with ACP countries involved in EPAs negotiations.  Under the proposal, the EU would end in October this year, the existing preferential regime of duty-free, quota free market access to EU markets for ACP countries that have concluded, but not signed or ratified EPAs.  It will be replaced by a new recalibrated generalised system of preferences (GSP+) which is designed to cut the number of countries benefiting from EU trade concessions by more than half, to around 80. Majority of ACP countries, especially those from Africa, will fall victim to this plan, as only the Caribbean countries have so far signed and ratified the EPAs on the platform of their regional group, the CARIFORUM.

    The ACP group views these proposals as a ploy by the European Commission to arm-twist them to rapidly conclude the EPA negotiations, in spite of their legitimate reservations and objections to some of its conditions.

    In proposing steps to break the logjam and kick-starting the momentum of negotiations before the 2016 deadline set by the Europeans, President Buhari first laid bare the concerns of the Nigerian businessmen and labour unions before the EU. He said given the mismatch of the two regions (Europe-ECOWAS) in terms of technology and manufacturing experience, the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) and Associated Trade Unions in particular, have raised concerns over the negative impact of the EPAs on Nigeria’s industrialisation programme. He gave assurance that “Nigeria is working towards addressing her own side of the issues. I’am therefore urging our European Union partners to also address our own concerns to allow for EPAs that are mutually beneficial and contribute to the prosperity of our people, in the context of our shared values and interest at promoting cordial bilateral trade relations.”

    One thing clear from these discussions is that although majority of the countries in the West African subregion have signed onto these agreements, even where they is perceived to have come short of their domestic, national interest requirements, the Europeans do not seem much impressed. The absence of Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy and manufacturing hub of West Africa will make any such agreement a nullity.

    Hopefully, the two groups will go back to the drawing board to see how they can achieve accommodation with each other.

    Beside the contentious issue of trade, there are various others that had been discussed and agreements signed with the previous administration. Although these are agreements that were well written, they are largely awaiting implementation.

    Under the EU’s instrument for stability and peace as part of the security cooperation cited earlier, the sum of ten million euros (€10,000,000) was earmarked in support of Nigeria’s efforts to fight terrorism.

    Development programming proposed for the interventions in Nigeria are in the areas of Governance, Health and Resilience (GHR) in northern Nigeria and electricity sectors. This is consistent with Nigeria’s priorities as contained in the Nigeria Vision 20: 2020.  In the meantime, the EU has earmarked the sum of 512 million Euros to Nigeria for the three identified programmes and projects listed above.

    Following Presidential assent to the legislation prohibiting same-sex relations in Nigeria on January 15, 2014, the EU swiftly reacted to the law at two important levels.  These were at the level of the European Commission, the executive arm of the Union and at the level of the European Parliament. It must be appreciated of the Europeans that they did not raise this potentially divisive, if not explosive issue in their meetings with President Buhari.

    It is also assumed that other issues of concern to them, such as border on child labour and human rights have been left for discussion at consular levels.

    At the economic level, Nigeria has remained EU’s major trading partner in the West African sub-region, accounting for about 60 per cent of the region’s external trade with the bloc.  However, the trade has largely been limited both in terms of products and destination market, with oil and gas making up about 94 per cent of exports to the EU, followed by agriculture and animal products, constituting three per cent. The EU absorbs about 22 per cent of all Nigeria’s exports and it accounts for 25 per cent of Nigeria’s trade, second to the United States. Hopefully, this should witness a rapid increase upon the conclusion of outstanding agreements.

    To further deepen relations between both parties, Nigeria under the previous administration and the EU agreed to hold a political dialogue annually, to review their relations, to agree on ways and means to strengthen them as well as share perspectives on global issues, developments, with a view to forging common positions on them.  The one scheduled for last year did not hold following the transition in the administration of the country.

    It is expected that the sixth forum will hold sometime this year, to be hosted by Nigeria.

    With new plans to boost investment and trade, experts on the Nigerian side believe that there are strong hopes for growth in the strategic partnership between this country and Europe.

    In addition to bringing respect and strength to the country, opportunities such as the one offered the President to address the EU parliament are the building blocks of political and economic development. It is expected that following this address, the legislators will give backing to their heads of government who have since last year received President Buhari’s shopping list. Although some have begun meeting up on promises made, Nigeria is still to hear from some others.

    The President has an unenviable job at a difficult time but the reception the EU  parliament gave home is the type to make the burden fell a little lighter. The last time Nigeria got this type of reception on the international stage would be hard to remember.

  • Another good news  for Bishop Okonkwo

    Another good news for Bishop Okonkwo

    The founder of The Redeemed Evangelical Mission (TREM), Bishop Mike Okonkwo, is on a roll of good tidings. It was no mini affair when the revered man of God celebrated his 70th birthday last weekend. The Vice-President, Prof. Yemi Osibajo, and Lagos State Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode, led the roll call of top dignitaries who attended the event in Lagos.

    In the next few months, the man of God will again roll out the drums as he gives his daughter and only child, Uche’s hand in marriage to her heartthrob. But while preparations are in top gear, information about the groom remains under wraps. An inside source told Celeb Watch that Uche will be walking down the aisle in November.

    Her wedding will constitute another milestone for Bishop Okonkwo and his wife of 35 years, Peace. Bishop Peace is the Proprietress of Word of Power Group of Schools and founder of Rehoboth Homes and Skill Acquisition Centre; a place designed to help stranded ladies and widows. She is also the founder of International Women’s Prayer Conference (IWPC), an interdenominational gathering of women that holds every month at the church’s headquarters in Lagos.

  • Good news

    Good news

    • That 48 Awaiting Trial inmates pass GCE excellently is something to cheer  

    It is very rare for any good or cheering news to emanate from Nigerian prisons. Tales normally associated with the country’s beleaguered prison system are those of sadness, sorrow, pain and despair.  Ironically, the International Centre for Prison Studies cites Nigeria as having one of the 10 smallest incarceration rates in the world, with an average of 32 out of every 100,000 Nigerians in prison. This translates to a prison population of approximately 60,000 out of a total population of about 160 million Nigerians. Yet, despite this relatively small number of prisoners in a populous country like ours, and the substantial revenues accruing to the Nigerian state, especially from oil, the prisons are largely as decrepit and dysfunctional as virtually all other spheres of our national life.

    Not only are Nigerian prisons overcrowded, they are chronically unhygienic and thus breeding ground for all kinds of diseases. A key feature of civilised societies is a prison system that treats inmates with civility and dignity. The aim of such prison systems is to reform the criminal as much as possible, with the hope of re-integrating such deviants as useful members of society. On the contrary, the hallmark of the Nigerian prison system is to further dehumanise the prisoner and make the criminal even worse than he or she was before imprisonment. Not only do inmates perpetrate the most atrocious crimes against each other, prison officials routinely exploit and brutalise those supposedly under their care and watch.

    It is against this background that we consider quite refreshing and encouraging the recent report that 48 inmates awaiting trial at Ikoyi Prisons in Lagos performed excellently at the last November/December 2013 General Certificate of Examination (GCE). Each of these inmates, of the 102 that wrote the examination, obtained the required credits to get admitted into higher institutions. While receiving a presentation of gifts to the inmates by members of the Ikeja Branch of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) during the Y2014 Law Week, the Deputy Controller of Prisons, Mr Emmanuel Bamidele, said the inmates “when they finally regain their freedom, can seek admission into any university of their choice since they are awaiting trial”.

    He further disclosed that the prison has a Rehabilitation, Restoration and Reintegration programme designed to enable the inmates get educated so they can lead useful lives after leaving prison. This is a most commendable initiative that must have been responsible for the opportunity given the inmates to study for and write the examinations. It is very important that people who find themselves on the wrong side of the law are not made to believe that they are in a hopeless and irredeemable condition. Even then, it is depressing that, as Mr Ekundayo revealed, out of 1,761 inmates in Ikoyi Prison, 186 are convicted while 1,575 have been awaiting trial for between five and 13 years.

    This points, once again, to the urgent need to undertake radical prison reforms that will involve speedy dispensation of justice to substantially reduce the population of inmates awaiting trial as well as ensuring that convicted prisoners live in dignity and decency. The condition of our prisons is one indicator of the quality of our values as a people.

    We commend the example of the Ikoyi prisons and urge that efforts continue to be made to sanitise and upgrade the country’s prisons. This is to provide inmates the opportunity and conducive environment for the acquisition of knowledge and skills to give them hope for the future. It is certainly unsatisfactory, for instance, that much of the near N47.5billion allocated to Nigerian prisons in the 2014 budget will reportedly go for recurrent expenditure rather than new programmes and facilities.

  • Nigeria’s image: Good news from Barcelona

    This headline will surely elicit excitement or scorn. Let me go straightaway to announce the good news: that Nigeria, this year, made it into the list of the 50 Most Reputable Countries in the World in 2012! This was the result of the 2012 Reputation Track conducted by the US-based Reputation Institute (RI), the world’s foremost organisation that imparts reputation knowledge and monitors reputation of organisations, places and leaders. The announcement was made at the just concluded 17th international conference on Corporate Reputation, Brand Identity and Competitiveness held from June 5-7 in Barcelona Spain. Nigeria was noted to have made some significant improvement in its reputation. Before now, the country was not even considered for ranking.

    The not-so-good news, however, is that Nigeria was rated 47th out of 50. It scored only 31.54% mark above Pakistan (26.59%), Iran (21.34%) and Iraq (20.32%). All the eight countries that scored below 40% (China, Colombia, Russia, Saudi Arabia, etc) were noted for poor/bottom tier reputation. Two other African countries – South Africa (33rd) and Egypt (39th) made the list in the weak/vulnerable reputation category. Canada, Australia and Sweden topped the list of countries with strong/robust reputation.

    The criteria for the ranking were three-fold: effective government, advanced economy and appealing environment. Under “effective government”, a country with robust reputation is expected to have adopted progressive social and economic policies, is a responsible participant in the global economy, is a safe place and operates efficiently. Under “advanced economy”, a reputable country is supposed to produce high quality products/services, have many well-known brands, is an important contributor to global culture, is technologically advanced, has a well-educated workforce, and values education. And under “appealing environment”, a reputable country is supposed to be a beautiful country, is an enjoyable place, offers an appealing lifestyle, and the people are friendly and welcoming to visitors.

    That Nigeria was indeed mentioned among the world’s 50 most reputable countries was therefore cheering enough for me at the conference, especially with all our concerns about corruption, insecurity, challenges of governance, poor economy, weak institutions, decayed infrastructure, high unemployment, among others.

    The fact that Nigeria was mentioned among the most reputable countries in the world would certainly excite many Nigerians, especially government officials who would now incorporate the information into their campaigns. But for serious minded professionals, this is a wake-up call for strategies to pull Nigeria up the reputation ladder in the ranking for next year. Besides, this result shows that reputation is not earned by sloganeering, propaganda or the so-called “image-laundering” which is the practice of quacks. Reputation is the result of hard work — effective governance, appealing place, good people and strong economy. Slogans are only devised to communicate the goodness.

    As the Reputation Institute clearly stated in its report, just like companies, the world’s places – its countries, states and cities exist in a reputation economy. How they are perceived by stakeholders, tourists, investors, students, workers and consumers can make the difference between having a robust or depressed economy. The economic impact of good reputation on countries is enormous: they attract more foreign direct investments (FDI), increased exports and foreign knowledge and talents.

    Investors want to invest in countries where their investments would be profitable and safe, where there are infrastructures to harness the investment, where the people are friendly, and where there is respect for the rule of law. Tourists want a beautiful place where they can go, watch exciting scenes, meet friendly people and go back home safe. Spain has no oil. Its economy is sustained mainly by tourism. In 2012, the country recorded 57 million tourists. Out of that number, Barcelona, where the RI conference was held – a very beautiful city- had more than 43 million tourists!

    The Nigerian government must find a way to build and manage its reputation through a strategic approach. Whoever is in charge must understand the concepts of corporate reputation and branding. Such a person must work very closely with the President (as is done in companies) and the key ministers of government. Indeed the Country’s Chief Reputation Officer (CCRO) is the President himself. What he says or does adds or subtracts from the country’s reputation.

    If the President truly leads by example, if he truly fights corruption, if he is truly in effective control of governance, if he truly promotes rule of law – all these will enhance the country’s reputation. That means that the minister or special adviser in charge of the country’s image/reputation must be the President’s and the Government’s key advisor. Indeed, like in the companies, he must exercise some level of oversight on all ministries and agencies of government, and report directly to the President.

    The government in Spain for instance, takes the country’s reputation very seriously. Two years ago, Spain found itself on the throes of serious economic crisis. The government appointed a Minister in charge of Brand Spain. The Minister, Carlos Espinosa de los Monteros addressed us at the conference and spoke very strongly on the strategies the government devised to rebuild the reputation of Spain and keep tourists coming in again. Spain was on the 18th position in the 2011 reputation ranking. In 2013, they moved up to 16th position. This was not achieved by mere sloganeering that Spain is good, come to Spain!

    Monteros told the conference that his office monitors every credible reputation ranking, every important newspaper article about Spain, every comment about Spain by critical stakeholders, every report of any misbehaviour of any government official or agency — and follows up to ensure that the right things are done. He was not employed as an attack dog. Monteros also ensures that good things about Spain – its strengths—are communicated effectively through various channels in many parts of the world, especially the G-8 countries where the major economic decisions of the world are made.

    I have a story to illustrate my point: When I arrived Barcelona Airport on June 4, my luggage was missing. I reported at the airport’s help desk. The officer in charge promptly contacted the airline which promised to deliver my luggage that evening. The officer went further to contact my hotel to confirm my reservation. Thereafter, she asked me to go to my hotel and wait for the luggage, which she promised would be delivered to me the next day in my hotel. By the time I got to my hotel, the information was already on display. And as promised, the next day, my luggage was delivered to me in good condition. The system worked for me; and I felt even better about Spain.

    Nigeria has a lot to learn from the Reputation Institute and Spain!

    · Sir Nkwocha, a fellow of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR), is currently Head of Corporate Communications at Indorama Eleme Petrochemicals Limited, Port Harcourt, Nigeria.