Tag: industry

  • Fed Govt. eyes automotive industry to boost economy

    The Federal Government at the weekend said the automotive industry has the potential to grow and develop the nation’s economy.

    Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment, Aisha Abubakar stated this during the opening ceremony of the 18th Abuja Motor Fair held in Transcorp Hilton.

    She stated that the government was currently holding high level discussions with global equipment manufacturers to develop the Nigerian automotive sector as part of plans to diversify the economy.

    According to her, the automotive sector, occupies a critical catalytic role in Nigeria’s Economic Revolution.

    She said: “It is instructive to note that the present government has placed high premium on the automotive industry in Nigeria which has a potential to contribute immensely to the growth and development of the country’s economy.

    “The government is supporting the industry because of its strategic and catalytic role in economic development. Therefore in our present economic challenges, government is in high discussion with global Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) in ensuring that the Nigerian automotive sector is developed.

    “This will not only facilitate the mass movement of people, agricultural products, mining, railway equipment, military hardware but will also create jobs and employment for our teeming youth.”

    Represented by the Deputy Director, Engineering Division  at the ministry, Mr. Ibikunle Adams, the minister emphasised that the ministry would strengthen partnership with the private sector to leverage and catalyse resources for development and growth.

    She added that government was also fine tuning its procurement policy to support preferential purchase of local vehicles.

    “On the part of Nigeria’s automotive industry, government is not only looking at the supply side issues but also the demand side is giving prominence. The ministry is giving all the necessary support to ensure that Nigeria Automotive Design and Development Council (NADDC) come up with vehicle purchasing scheme that will enable Nigerians buy made in Nigeria vehicles.

    In his address, Minister of Science and Technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, stated that the government would promote the production of automobile in Nigeria.

    The minister who was represented by Director of Planning and Policy at the National Science and Engineering Infrastructure, (NASENI), Onyechi Nonyem, added that the ministry would partner with critical stakeholders in the road transport sector to ensure development and growth of the sector.

    “Agencies under Ministry, like the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI), are in the forefront of promoting the production of automobiles and automobile parts for road transport use,” he stated.

    The Managing Director, BKG Exhibitions and Chairman of the Organizing Committee, Ifeanyichukwu Agwu, stated that automotive sector had the capacity to reduce over 30 per cent of Nigeria’s job deficits and create up to two thousand industries.

  • Tourism, creative industry ‘new oil’, says Lai Mohammed

    Tourism, creative industry ‘new oil’, says Lai Mohammed

    THE Minister of Information, Culture and National Orientation, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has said that tourism is very important for Nigeria in the prevailing period of economic diversification as it, with the creative industries, represents the new oil for the nation’s economy. He described tourism as the low-hanging fruit that the nation could develop to help  the economy fight recession.

    He made the statement during the national celebration of the World Tourism Day (WTD) in Eko Atlantic City, Lagos. He said: “As the federal government works day and night to pull Nigeria out of recession and put our economy on the path of sustainable growth, it is becoming increasingly clear, like President Muhammadu Buhari admonished, that we must think out of the box. We must find other sustainable means of earning foreign exchange outside of oil, to grow our country’s GDP and create jobs for our people. Agriculture and mining are viable options but tourism is the low-hanging fruit in this regard, and we must not hesitate to pluck it.”

    Speaking on the Eko Atlantic City, the minister said: “The venue we have chosen for this year’s celebration, Eko Atlantic City, attests to this fact. While I will like to reiterate Nigeria’s readiness to explore and exploit tourism for the benefit of its economy, I can confidently add that Eko Atlantic City has what it takes to drive tourism in Nigeria. And this is just as well, because while the role of the government will be to provide the enabling environment, the private sector will drive the growth of tourism. This is a win-win model for the government and the private sector, and I commend Eko Atlantic for being in the forefront of actualising this mode.

    “For those who may not know, Eko Atlantic, when completed, will be a tourist haven. The city will boast of 450, 000 residents and 300, 000 commuters, which is a boon for the myriad businesses to be located in the city. In addition, it will have a registered Free Economic Zone to encourage economic activities.

    “As you are also aware, shopping malls attract tourists the way bees are attracted to honey. The shopping mall here in Eko Atlantic will be the largest of its kind in Sub-Saharan Africa. The 10 million square metres of space in the city will also boast an impressive retail layout for shopping, vast amenities for entertainment such as food courts, cinemas and playgrounds, an ample parking space and a canal that can be used for water transportation and water sports.

    “Nigerians who are looking for relaxation spots and exquisite shopping malls will no longer need to jet to Dubai and similar destinations, because Eko Atlantic City will be a better destination than Dubai. This is not a joke! Whereas you can only comfortably soak in the sights and sounds of Dubai for a maximum of four months every year due to the prevailing inclement weather there, Eko Atlantic City offers, in addition to the massive shopping mall, 365 days of sunshine and clement weather.

    “This is an added incentive for foreign tourists. In short, the city will have everything you need for tourism to thrive: security, modern infrastructure, good weather, uninterrupted power supply, potable water supply, etc.”

    The World Tourism Day is an annual celebration by the United Nation’s World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) slated for September  27.

  • Boost for hospitality industry in Imo

    Boost for hospitality industry in Imo

    The hospitality industry in Imo State got a boost with the inauguration of a reputable eatery, the King’s Dine Restaurant and Lounge owned by veteran actor Kanayo O Kanayo. Located in the heart of Owerri, the state capital, the new restaurant, according to the operators, will give customers value for money.

    Despite its high number of hotels, Owerri, before now, could not boast of quality restaurants where diners could eat, relax and have fun.

    Speaking at the opening ceremony, which was attended by the cream of society, Kanayo said the investment, was in response to the government’s call on indigenes to invest in the state.

    The actor assured customers that they would have a taste of world-class services at affordable cost.

    Besides, he said, the investment would also create employment for the youth, adding that about 30 graduates have already been employed as pioneer staff.

    Kanayo urged the government to continue to create enabling environment that will attract the sons of the state and others to invest in the state.

    In his speech shortly before commissioning the restaurant, the State Deputy Governor, Eze Madumere, commended the Actor for investing and adding value to the hospitality and tourism industry in State.

    He assured him of government support since he has decided to heed the clarion call by the state government to invest in the state and help boost the economy and create employment.

    The Deputy Governor tasked the management of the restaurant to patronise the local farmers in sourcing their recipe, while urging farmers to rise to the occasion and tap into the supply chain in the hospitality sector by growing the needed farm produce to support the industry.

    Madumere described the restaurant as one of “the most exquisite hospitality outfits that can readily compete with the best in the world,” adding that Imo State remains a preferred destination for tourism due to the infrastructural development and security.

    He called on other well-meaning Imo sons, daughters and other Nigerians to take the advantage of the incentives and facilities in the State to invest in manufacturing, tourism and any other sector of their interest.

     

  • Boost for hospitality industry in Imo

    Boost for hospitality industry in Imo

    The hospitality industry in Imo State got a boost with the inauguration of a reputable eatery, the King’s Dine Restaurant and Lounge owned by veteran actor Kanayo O Kanayo. Located in the heart of Owerri, the state capital, the new restaurant, according to the operators, will give prospective customers value for money and a new experience as they dine and wine in a cosy environment at pocket friendly prices.

    Owerri, with one of the highest numbers of hotels in all the state capitals across the country, before now could not boast of quality restaurants where diners could eat, relax and have fun under a secured and conducive atmosphere.

    Speaking at the opening ceremony, which was attended by the crème de la crème of the society, Kanayo, who is an indigene of the state, said that the investment, was his response to the repeated call by the state government on the illustrious sons of the state to invest in the state.

    The actor, was almost mobbed by desperate fans, said that the brand, will be a clear departure from what used to obtain in the state, assuring that customers will have a taste of world-class services at affordable cost.

    He stated further that apart from quality service delivery and value for money which are the hallmark of the restaurant, the investment will also create employment for the youths of the state, adding that about 30 graduates have already been employed as pioneer staff.

    Kanayo urged the government to continue to create enabling environment that will attract the sons of the state and others to invest in the state.

    In his speech shortly before commissioning the restaurant, the State Deputy Governor, Eze Madumere, commended the Actor for investing and adding value to the hospitality and tourism industry in State.

    He assured him of government support since he has decided to heed the clarion call by the state government to invest in the state and help boost the economy and create employment.

    The Deputy Governor tasked the management of the restaurant to patronise the local farmers in sourcing their recipe, while urging farmers to rise to the occasion and tap into the supply chain in the hospitality sector by growing the needed farm produce to support the industry.

    Madumere described the restaurant as one of “the most exquisite hospitality outfits that can readily compete with the best in the world,” adding that Imo State remains a preferred destination for tourism due to the infrastructural development and security.

    He called on other well-meaning Imo sons, daughters and other Nigerians to take the advantage of the incentives and facilities in the State to invest in manufacturing, tourism and any other sector of their interest.

  • ‘Cassava starch industry generates over N76.9b yearly’

    nigeria’s cassava starch industry generates over $240 million about N76.9 billion yearly,  90 per cent of which is from importation. But the industry has the potential to grow as population and income per capita increase, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Union Dicon Salt (UDS) Plc Mr. Chuka Mordi has said.

    According to Mordi, Nigeria currently has four major functional starch processing plants with a combined capacity of 27,000 tons. He said the nation’s annual starch demand of over 250,000 tons with a market size of $240m is met by importation of corn starch, and this provides an opportunity for import substitution, which is in line with UDS’s strategy.

    UDS Plc is a company operating in the Nigerian consumer goods sector. It has been diversifying into the agro industrial sector, with an initial concentration on cassava and starch processing. The firm has already finalised agreement with GEA Westfalia of Germany to build the largest industrial starch processing facility in Nigeria.

    Mordi said the potential for Nigeria’s starch market is huge, as Nigeria is the largest cassava growing country in the world, with an estimated annual output of 45m tons, which continues to grow annually.

    He, however, said over $600m worth of cassava products (flour, starch, glucose and animal feed) are imported, largely as a result of uncoordinated harvest and transport of high grade cassava in commercial quantities.

    Mordi told The Nation that cassava production is largely done at subsistence level, with the local market/human constituting the highest consumers of the produce and less than five per cent for industrial uses. He, therefore, said opportunities exist for the production and processing of cassava products, mostly starch and maltose for food and industrial use.

    Cassava starch, a food grade product refined from cassava roots, is the major component of the cassava plant. It has thickening and binding qualities and is used as binder and thickener in convenience foods. But Mordi said Nigeria processes very little of its current output for starch compared with other countries.

    According to him, all the major starch processing factories in Nigeria operate at less than 20 per cent of their installed capacity, producing about 27, 000 tons of starch per annum. The 20 per cent domestic production capacity, he said, fall short of the nation’s current demand for starch, put in excess of 250, 000 tons per annum.

    To meet local supply, the CEO said starch end-users resort to importation of starch, which presents a clear opportunity for investment in starch processing for import substitution. He said the company’s investment in cassava processing involved the installation of a 10, 000 Metric Tons Per Annum (MT PA) starch processing plant for the conversion of cassava to starch.

  • ‘Ban Ponmo to nurture leather industry’

    ‘Ban Ponmo to nurture leather industry’

    Failure to nurture the leather industry is costing Nigeria a lot in terms of loss of foreign exchange. To reverse this, experts see the closure of the Ponmo (hides) processing section of Oko-Oba Abbatoir, Lagos, as a positive step, as it is expected to boost supply of hides for export, reports, DANIEL ESSIET.

    Exportation of hide, skin and leather products is big business that sustains a lot of producers, processors, brokers and dealers. This is because it is one of the top raw materials needed globally in the leather manufacturing industry.

    China is the largest buyer of hides, same with Taiwan, the European Union (EU), Thailand and Vietnam.   But the Nigerian hides, skin and leather industry has not built a reputation as an agricultural export engine. This is linked to challenges related to cattle hide supplies, skin market access barriers and uncertain conditions in the leather manufacturing sectors.

    Despite the increasing export value, the hides and skins industry faces a shortage of supplies, even as   cattle slaughter rates have increased to 2,000 cows daily in places, such as Oko Oba Abattoir, Lagos.  There is a continued trend of increasing slaughter rates and cattle hide availability.

    But the challenge is that the hide (cow skin) is eaten largely as ponmo  than being used as leather for shoe lining.

    President, Animal Science Association of Nigeria (ASAN), Pastor Taiwo Adeoye, noted that ponmo derived from hides, a material critical for tanneries, has been popularised mostly by the people of the Southwest.

    Combined with sheep and goat skins from an average of 15,000 slaughtered daily, leather potential in Lagos State alone can fetch more than $5 billion in value-added products. The more than 5,000 slaughtered cattle hides available daily nationwide, if used for leather products, will fetch about N624 billion locally, aside foreign exchange earnings and jobs created.

    The consumption of cow skin, he said, has been an age-long practice which no government has been able to stop, adding that the industry is creating jobs, but that it ought to provide more if repositioned and made a major agricultural exports.

    Nigeria, according to him, is losing out in the pack of countries competing for the $75 billion global leather industry because of ponmo consumption. He  blamed the situation on the country’s neglect of leather products in favour of oil production and consumption of its hides and skin as ponmo.

    He said before ponmo was brought to the market, a lot of various unhygienic substances, such as trash, wood, charcoal, rubber tyres and so on, are thrown into the furnace to sustain the blazing heat. To  prevent this, the Lagos State Government has shut and dislodged the cow skin processing section of the Oko-Oba abattoir and Lairage Complex in Agege.

    A statement by Tunbosun Ogunbanwo, Asst. Director, Public Affairs, Lagos State Ministry of Agriculture, said the Commissioner for Agriculture, Mr. Toyin Suarau, led a team from the ministry in the company of men of the state Task Force to shut down the cow skin section of the abattoir.

    Suarau said: “Closure of the ponmo section and dislodgment of the processors became necessary because of the health hazards inherent in the unhealthy processing of ponmo.

    “The ponmo processors use heaps of burning tyres, thereby, emitting thick toxic smoke into the air endangering residents of the adjoining neighbourhood. This bonfire emits a thick toxic smoke, which spreads from within the complex to adjoining neighbourhoods, endangering lives including those of the processors themselves.’’

    The commissioner stressed that the toxic smoke and unhygienic way of processing the cow skin was harmful to human health.

    “I wish to make it clear that the use of tyres for cow skin processing was reported to the state government sometime ago and was dealt with. The return to this unhygienic method of processing in the complex leaves much to be desired and this is why the state has closed the ponmo section of the complex,” he said.

    He noted that the health effects of burning tyres alone are enormous, let alone using them to process human food. He pointed out that burning tyres releases toxic soup with hundreds of the various toxic pollutants and small particles.

    Such pollutants, according to him, settle deep in the lungs while airborne emissions from open tyre fires present serious impact to health and the environment.

    Suarau said the state would not condone any act of illegality and harmful health practices in any of its abattoirs, adding,  “to this end, the state government has deployed a number of veterinary officers, animal workers to abattoirs to ensure that set standard for animal slaughtering and processing are adhered to”.

    “The state government would continue to monitor abattoirs and slaughter slabs and would not hesitate to close down abattoirs and slaughter slabs that are unhygienic.

    “Also, slaughter slabs and abattoirs which are not compliant with the relevant laws governing meat slaughtering in the state, will be closed down.”

    He said animal slaughtering and processing have called for serious attention because the animals must be inspected before and after their slaughtering according to the meat inspection law.

    Meanwhile, Registrar, Nigerian Institute of Animal Science, Prof Emmanuel Iyayi, has commended Lagos State on the closure, hoping  it would discourage the consumption of the popular delicacy.

    He said his organisation will support any step taken by the government to promote healthy and profitable use of hides and skins for export growth.

    The former Minister of Agriculture, Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, last year said  the Federal government, may have concluded plans to discourage the consumption of the popular delicacy.

    Adesina told stakeholders at a seminar that the primary consumption of livestock products may need to be reduced because of the need to promote the use of hides and skin for leather production.

    Generally, the love and demand for “ponmo’’ meat keep rising by the day.

  • ‘Hospitality industry in Lagos can generate over N846b yearly’

    ‘Hospitality industry in Lagos can generate over N846b yearly’

    The Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, International Maximum Resources & Chemical Industries Ltd., Prince Madugba Raphael Chiadikobi, says Nigeria can leverage the untapped opportunities in the tourism/hospitality industry to diversify its economy. In this interview with Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA, the industrialist, ex-banker and hotelier says hospitality is lucrative, with Lagos alone capable of generating over $3 billion (about N846 billion) yearly, if the government puts the right things in place. According to him, there is a need to fix power, which is a pain in operators’ necks, and also reexamine some Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) policies. 

    How would you assess the economy so far?

    To be honest with you, we are making progress in one area: security. There is no business that can thrive when there is crisis. The moment you are able to sort out the issue of security, more people will have the confidence to invest. But if there is no security you won’t dare. That is the area I can give our President and his team a pass mark. But when you come to the issue of food security, it also boils down to security, because most of the agricultural products come from up north and when there is no peace there, they will not come. Most food items are very expensive now, particularly tomatoes.

    How are operators in the hospitality industry coping with the scarcity and high price of tomatoes?  

    It’s a very bad situation. If you are making a sauce before with N2,000, you are going to make it with N4,000 now. If we served you a meal at probably N1,000 or N1,500 before and you come now and we say it’s N3,000 you will flare up. That is natural. But the reality on ground is that the government is not helping issues. The first thing I told you when you came in was that we woke up this morning to buy Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) or diesel at N180 per litre. How can you survive under this? So, if the government can get the energy sector right, leave the rest to us. If the energy sector is fixed, our problems are half-solved. Why it is not difficult, from my own perspective,is this: What is the source that we are using to generate this power? They say it is gas. And they are still flaring this gas till tomorrow, wasting it. What stops the government from building the turbines where these gases are, so that nobody will go and cut the pipe that is directing it to the power plants? That is one point. Then, we have more than eight states in Nigeria that can produce coal. What stops them from building turbines and using coal to fire them and generate electricity?

    How does the energy crisis affect operators in the hospitality industry?

    Terribly! It affects us much more than any other sector. In the banking sector, their generators will be on from probably 7.00 am  till 10.00 pm and they power down. The ATMs operate with solar. But the hospitality business is 24/7, you don’t power down. Even if it is one guest you have, he expects you to put on the light for him. So, it’s affecting us in every area; it affects our margin. Even the noise pollution alone, if not that we are using sound-proof generator; we have three generators, two are sound-proof, one is basic. The cost implication is very high, and sooner or later most of us that claim that we will give you light 24/7 will have to adjust. This is because where you bought 50 litres before probably for N6,000 we buy now it N9,000.

    Some people are calling for a review of the power sector privatisation. Do you think this is the way to go? 

    For me, it was a wrong step to privatise it in the first place. Government should have taken total control of the power sector, improve it, and then ask the citizens to pay. We are paying, but we are not getting electricity. Where I leave in Ogudu I have not experienced power  for three days, but I pay bills. Here, since yesterday, we have not seen light. So, it was a wrong step in the first place. Previous governments never planned for the rainy day. That is one of the credits I am giving to the current president because he is trying to diversify to solid minerals and agriculture, although, Return on Investment (RoI) on agriculture takes longer time. The profit is not all that fantabulous.

    How can tourism/hospitality industry contribute to economic diversification? 

    Hospitality business is a very lucrative business when things are done right. So, the government should look into it very well. In Nigeria we celebrate mediocrity more than merit. That is one of the problems we have in this country. As big as Apapa is, the only five star hotel here is Rockview. As I talk with you after that Rockview we are next to them. This is not my own assessment, but of people who have been dealing with them that came here within these two months of our test run.

    How much can the government can generate from this sector if some of these issues you highlighted are resolved?

    I cannot give you an exact figure, but within Lagos, from our own feasibility study, it’s more than $3 billion (about N846 billion) annually. This is based on the feasibility study by the firm we commissioned to do feasibility study for us.

    As a former banker, how would you assess CBN’s policies?

    The CBN policies, especially the one on foreign exchange (forex) is very oppressive and draconic in the sense that most of us that have children abroad we cannot send money to them. Not all of us are politicians and not all of us are living on stolen funds. I was calling my bank this morning that please I need to buy about $3,000 for my children; that I want to pay their rents because the month has ended, they were asking me all kinds of questions. So, the policy is very draconic in the sense that a CBN ought to just give the directive, formulate policies and allow the system to run. Like the Bible will say, let the chaff and the wheat be growing together and at the right time they will be separated. By tightening everything you are killing businesses and when there is no business to be done, the next thing is unemployment, anarchy and crime. When Sanusi was there; I so much liked his policies, honestly. Sanusi as I said was one of the best CBN governors Nigeria ever produced.

    Why do you say so?

    As an experienced banker, I was questioning people in the bank. For instance, which sectors in Nigeria were supporting all those billions net profits banks were declaring? Those were purely engineered balances, only on paper. As at 2005 when Soludo said all banks should recapitalise to N25 billion,  most of them did not capitalise, all they did was to credit shares, ask their members of staff to fill the forms that they have bought them or even given them soft loans. But when Sanusi came, he was an insider; he knew what they were doing. So, when he was telling people that a first generation bank was having problem, people never believed him. I told people that second generation bank went to the capital market in that 2005 at N10.90, almost N11. Within six months after raising the so-called N25 billion, they even claimed they raised N35 billion. Then, they went back to the market and hiked their share to N17, N25 and I said this was a lie. When they went public the first time it was sold at N10.90. I bought 100,000 unit shares. In fairness to them, two second generation bank are the only banks that are giving good returns to their shareholders. Others are balderdash. As big as one first generation bank is, it’s rubbish. I got my dividend yesterday. I have about ninety something thousand. They gave me N7,000 dividend, and these are the shares they sold N37 per unit in 2007. So, operators in the system were not honest ab initio and any foundation built on falsehood one day will crash. So, what Sanusi did was to try to clean up the system for which people castigated him that he came to witch-hunt. Today, a bank sacked 1, 040 members of staff. Last time, it was a third generation bank, about 300. So, I don’t know where we are heading to.

    Why did you veer into hospitality business after 19 years in banking?

    I was in the bank for 19 solid years, and during that time I was nursing the ambition to go into the tourism/hospitality industry. I was asking myself after bank what next? I started from the paint industry. I have a paint factory at Ogba, Lagos. We produce domestic and industrial paints and paints used for vehicles. The paints industry wasn’t all that moving properly so, I veered into another arm of the business by bringing in chemicals. That one later began to have problem as well because of the adulteration of chemicals. The China market may be a bit profitable, but the problem is that they have fake and substandard quality compared to the European market. I travelled to England with my children in 2005. I lodged in one hotel in Paddington, Central London and I loved the design and I felt I could replicate that in Nigeria. That was the motivation. You know it’s difficult to do business in Nigeria. The environment is not friendly, the government is not friendly. If you want to begin any business in Nigeria you must have nine lives to survive; it all depends on your determination, the zeal and energy you put into it.

    When did you leave banking?

    I left banking 11 years ago, precisely on May 31, 2005. While I was still in the bank, I had the paints industry. My paints industry started in 1999. So, I was working and earning salaries and investing it in the paints industry in the hope that whenever I leave I won’t start from ground zero; so that I will see where to hang because experience has shown that when a salary earner leaves employment and jumps into business the first one or two businesses he will do he may have problems because he is not used to that environment.

    What has been the response so far?

    In Apapa here, what you have mostly are brothels. This is the GRA side. Here we have a swimming pool, as deep as nine meters. When you lodge in any of our rooms, we make sure that you are comfortable. In other hotels, they just give you towels and tissue papers that is all. But here, no matter the room you’ve taken, in as much as you are parting with value to us, we provide you with the same items and even go further to give you dettol to show that we appreciate your patronage. Our rooms are very fantastic, expansive and affordable; we did not economise space. Compared with neighbours here, our standard room is their big room; they charge N15,000 per night while we charge an introductory price of N7,000 for the same room size. The one they take between N15,000 and N20,000 we take N10,000. We have 33 rooms.

  • Industry research strengthens German varsities, says envoy

    Consul-General of Germany, Mr Ingo Herbert, has said one of the reasons German universities are strong is because of a healthy research collaboration they have with industry.

    Herbert spoke at a seminar on education opportunities in Germany organised by Saturday Jackson Jason (SJJ) Educational Support Nigeria Ltd held at the Four Points by Sheraton Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos last Tuesday.

    “Big companies in Germany give researches to universities.  For instance, BMW gives research to universities, which help students to work on real life problems.  This is part of German success,” he said.

    The envoy said Nigerians should consider studying in Germany as a less expensive but qualitative alternative to the United States and United Kingdom, especially as tertiary education is tuition free.  He said his country attracts the third highest number of international students after the U.S. and UK.

    Herbert said education has been free in Germany since 2014 when the government directed universities it funds to stop charging both indigenous and foreign students fees.

    “Studying in Germany is free.  We have many good universities.  In 2014, of 2.7 million students in our schools, there were about 300,000 foreign students.  Twenty-five per cent of students in Technical Universities are foreign.  We have 121 universities among which are special universities for applied sciences; technical universities, and we have universities for arts and humanities,” he said.

    The envoy also told students they could access grants and scholarships from the Goethe Institute and the Germany Academic Exchange Services.

    A session on visa application was handled by Mr Sebastian Polzin, Deputy Head of Visa Section, German Consulate General, Lagos, who counseled intending students to be convincing about their intention to study in the European country.

    He said the decision to approve a visa application is taken by proof of funding, an assessment of submitted documents and the performance of the applicant during the interview session.

    “The number one reason of turning down an application even when all requirements are met is doubt of intention of the applicant.  It starts with applying the right way; presenting yourself the right way.  We are visa desk officers but we cannot read minds.  We analyse your interview and documents, and under the discretion clause, we consider your intention,” he said.

    Mr Saturday Jackson, Chairman of SJJ Educational Support Ltd, said his firm organised the seminar to create awareness about affordable and qualitative education available in Germany, which he has benefited from at undergraduate and graduate levels.

    He said there are now many courses taught in German language, adding that Nigerian students can take language lessons to enhance communication.

    Jackson, who studied Criminology at BSc and Masters level, said he spent 20 years in Germany and is now seeking collaborations between the country and Nigeria so Nigerians can benefit from high quality education the country offers.

    “They respect students more than anything in the world.  It is not only studying tuition free; while studying, you can access grants every month.

    To make navigating the German education system easier, Jackson, said the firm would offer Nigerian students an array of support services from the application stage to settling down in Germany for a fee.

    The services include: consultation, assistance with application/visa process/ accommodation search/internship and grants search, airport pick up, tour, and the like.

    However, the level of support services would depend on the category of fees paid by the prospective student.

  • Insurers Committee to rebrand industry

    The Insurers Committee is to rebrand the industry to enable members enjoy its benefits,  its Vice Chairman Sub Committee Publicity, Mrs Ebelechukwu Nwachukwu, has said.

    Mrs Nwachukwu, also the Managing Director of Zenith Insurance, made this known at a briefing after the third Insurers Committee session over the weekend in Lagos.

    According to her, the rebranding will deepen insurance penetration and ensure better service delivery.

    She said: “We want the insuring public to be informed on why they should not see it as unnecessary but a tool that can help them do other things. We believe that the industry rebranding will help to increase awareness, thereby making more people take up insurance.

    “The committee has appointed a specialist and consultant to work around the rebranding programme. We are also working towards standardising our practice for better practice of Insurance.”

    On risk based supervision, she said the road map and draft was ready and would be exposed to industry operators next month for their suggestions and impute before the final guidelines will be ready follow by implementation.

  • OBASANJO PLEDGES SUPPORT FOR ENTERTAINMENT INDUSTRY

    FORMER President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo has expressed his determination to support any venture that would promote the development of the entertainment industry as a major wealth creator and an effective tool against the pervasive youth unemployment in the country.

    Chief Obasanjo, disclosed this recently at his residence in Otta, Ogun State while playing host to the Performing Musicians Association of Nigeria (PMAN), Edo State Chapter led by its President, Hon. Maleke Idowu Moye.

    The ex-president praised Nigerian musicians whom he said had used their expertise to stamp their authority across Africa and the world at large. Chief Obasanjo, who was honoured by the Edo PMAN with Life Grand Patron of the association, thanked them for the recognition and promised to always be of assistance to them whenever the need arose.

    He used the opportunity to task Nigerian musicians to use their music to promote national cohesion and growth in the face of current challenging moments.

    Speaking earlier, Hon Maleke Idowu Moye said the Edo PMAN Executive Committee decided to appoint the former president as its life Grand Patron in recognition of the invaluable sacrifices he had made for the country, especially his knack for people oriented policies and programmes when he held sway as Nigeria’s president.

    “This certificate symbolises the admiration, love and reverence Edo musicians have for you,” he said.

    The Edo PMAN boss used the opportunity to solicit Chief Obasanjo’s support towards the actualisation of the Edo PMAN Entertainment Village project which he said upon completion would serve as a fulcrum for the advancement of the entertainment business in the state and

    indeed the nation, and in the process generate employment for the teeming unemployed youths.

    Highpoint of the visit was the presentation of the architectural design of the village to the former president who received it with admiration.