Tag: Ireland

  • British, Irish governments hold talks on Northern Ireland crisis

    British, Irish governments hold talks on Northern Ireland crisis

    Irish Foreign Minister Charlie Flanagan and Britain’s Secretary of State for Northern Ireland James Brokenshire planned to hold talks in Belfast on Thursday.

    They are to hold talks amid few signs that a power-sharing crisis will be resolved without elections.

    In an apparent move to help resolve the crisis, Northern Ireland Communities Minister Paul Givan, a Democratic Unionist Party politician, agreed to fund an Irish language programme after earlier saying the devolved government would not fund it.

    The Irish language is highly politicised in Northern Ireland, with unionists shunning it as foreign and republicans celebrating it as central to Irish culture.

    Givan said he had earmarked 60,000 dollars to fund Irish language courses for disadvantaged children.

    The reversal “was not a political decision’’ and was made because he had “now identified the necessary funding to advance this scheme,’’ he said.

    Barry McElduff, a Northern Ireland Assembly member from Republican Party Sinn Fein, welcomed Givan’s decision but said the DUP needed to change its “contempt for the Irish language.’’

    “The rights of the Irish language speakers need to be recognised and respected,’’ McElduff said.

    Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny met Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams, followed by telephone conversations with Arlene Foster of the DUP, and Sinn Fein’s Martin McGuinness, Kenny’s office said.

    The crisis began when McGuinness resigned as deputy first minister of the devolved government on Monday, after First Minister Foster ignored repeated calls for her to step down pending an investigation of a botched energy scheme that could cost taxpayers nearly 500 million pounds.

  • Ireland donates 1m euros to North East

    Republic of Ireland has made a commitment to donate 1million euro to support revival of farming in the north east.

    Ambassador of Ireland, Sean Hoy, stated this at the weekend at the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development in Abuja.

    Hoy said the support is to be disbursed and implemented by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations in partnership with the agriculture ministry to farmers in the region.

    The project would include women and youths in various Internally Displaced Persons camps spread across the north.

    Hoy said: “Our objective is to discuss funding from Ireland to the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). My government has just agreed to spend one million euro to the FAO for the emergency seed improve distribution programme in the north east of Nigeria.

    “Already our government has given many million to the emergency food programme.

    “What we want to do with this and we thought long about this is that we want to be one of the first to offer supports.

    “Farmers cannot stay in the IDP camps if there is a chance to return and every time it rains and the ground becomes wet and useful for agriculture it will become more restless so we are putting a huge vote of confidence in ministry of agriculture.”

  • Cross River, Ireland partner for development

    Cross River State and Republic of Island are to partner for the development of the Southsouth state.

    Governor Ben Ayade yesterday visited the Irish Ambassador to Nigeria, Sean Hoy, with a request for a stronger partnership that would engender growth and prosperity for his state and the Republic of Ireland.

    The visit came ahead of his visit to Dublin where he is expected to meet with key Irish investors as he continues his drive to industralise the state.

    While acknowledging the strong Irish heritage of the people of the state given their association with Irish missionaries, Ayade said the time had come for a more economically productive partnership between Cross River and Ireland.

    He said he would want Ireland to take advantage of the vast arable land in the state and invest in agriculture, especially in diary, feed milling, cultivation of tomatoes and potatoes for export.

    “In Cross River, we have a strong Irish heritage, especially in Calabar. I really will like to see a stronger Irish presence in Agriculture. I want Irish companies to take advantage of the potentials our state offers,” the governor said.

    Ambassador Hoy said Calabar had been home to most Irish missionaries and expressed his desire to visit Calabar.

    Hoy informed the governor of plans by the embassy to bring Irish musicians to perform in Calabar.

    The ambassador said one of the most celebrated rights activists in his country once served in Calabar as a young officer, adding that even the uncle to his country’s  Foreign Minister was a missionary in Calabar.

    He expressed the willingness of his country to invest in agriculture in the state, disclosing that his country currently produces ten times what it consumes.

    He praised Cross River for being a stand out state in the country, adding: “I have heard about your Cattle Ranch. It is amazing that as big as Nigeria is, everybody keeps talking about only one place; Calabar and the Ranch Resort. “

     

  • ‘Nigeria’s economy needs  professional entrepreneurs’

    ‘Nigeria’s economy needs professional entrepreneurs’

    Some measured optimism is being expressed concerning the emergence and ranking of the Nigerian economy as a member of the Top 20 League come the year 2020. Part of that optimism is freighted on the recent grading of the Nigerian economy as Africa’s foremost, following its breasting the tape ahead of South Africa. What the grading has shown is that, in spite of years of mismanagement, distorted planning and unrelieved corruption – particularly during the period of stratocracy, from the mid-’80s up to well into the Fourth Republic, is the remarkable  resilience of the Nigerian worker, tax-payer and the economy itself.

    Some development economists, like Dr.KayodeFamiloni, formerly of the Department of Economics, University of Lagos, Akoka, tend to argue that the remarkable stubbornness with which the Nigerian economy, since the Babangida regime’s structural adjustment programme (SAP), has resisted what is regarded as “an ever-dose of fiscal and budgetary distortion”, is a faint tip, under which there’s an iceberg of entrepreneurial spirit yet untapped. Dr.Rotimi Oladele, who’s the Executive Secretary of the Institute of Entrepreneurs, Nigeria, figures that it may require unleashing, with a combined force of unswerving political and economic determination, the near-limitless Nigerian entrepreneurial acumen underneath the iceberg – if Nigeria, with some fair ease, is to sail into the league of Global First – 20 (GF-20) economies, come the target date of 2020.

    There’s a pressing need, said Oladele, for what may pass for an approximation of renaissance in entrepreneurship in the Nigerian economy – not, necessarily, in the political economy or the macro unit, which, sometimes, is mistaken as the sole, rightful beneficiary of trillions of naira in government budget.

    It’s dysfunctional, in Oladele’s view, to act on such a marginal or far-from-progressive point.

    While Oladele advised against a vertical or horizontal economic planning and implementation, as the main speaker, at the induction of about 40 new members of the Institute of Entrepreneur, Nigeria, in Lagos, recently, he offered that the renaissance should be in tandem with the trend in global economic practice for which economic policymakers and entrepreneurs are into the acquisition of what  he called “diagonal” skills, in terms of informed, eclectic education, new entrepreneurial behaviour, attitude and practice, which, combined, are an index of a blustery force that propels economic growth or expansion, and micro economic activities.

    What Oladele’s argument implies is that it would require an encompassing economic model predicated on diagonal, inter-discipline skill acquisition behind policy-making and execution that accords recognition to army of entrepreneurs yet to be in the potentially rich medium- and small-scale sector of the Nigerian economy. It makes far less economic sense to have a budget, in trillions of naira, that, for want of a better expression, is almost hairlessly disdainful of how well to ignite a rewarding rejuvenescence in the relationship between the macro and micro sectors of the Nigerian economy.

    It makes, besides, far little economic meaning when such colossal budgetary allocations tend to ignore, at the price of sustainable economic growth and expansion, the creation or emergence and participation of new entrepreneurial ambassadors of the Nigerian economy. The basic principle of diagonal entrepreneurial skills, it appears, is borne out of the agonising experience of the countries of North America, the European Union and, to some extent, Africa and Asia, on account of the 21st Century’s first, global economic depression – occasioned by the collapse, in 2008, of the United States-based Lehman Brothers.

    By inference, Oladele’s view is linked to a binding need to have new entrepreneurs who’d drive the Nigerian economy. With diagonal entrepreneurial skills and behaviour pumped into the Nigerian economy, a solid foundation would have been laid, anew, by a countless number of Lehman Sisters, who would be determined to protect the Nigerian economy from the destructive practices and effects of the Lehman Brothers. It’s, perhaps, plausible to argue that there’s a need to have, henceforward, a founding team of Lehman Sisters, Nigeria – with Finance and Economic Planning Minister, Dr.NgoziOkonjo-Iweala, as the captain. The intent should be to test-run a project with an eye to handing the running of the Nigerian economy over to Nigerian mothers, who are, presumably, more entrepreneurial than their fathers counter-parts.

    Truth is that they are the less entrepreneurial fathers, who have mismanaged the economy of this blessed country.

    Currently, the country’s debt profile is, again, on the  rise.

    Oladele believes that the unsavoury debt peonage that was one of the Lehman Brothers-like experiences of the Nigerian economy, caused by the Babangida regime, could be avoided with a rebirth of the entrepreneurial spirit amongst key players in the macro and micro sectors of the Nigerian economy. Nigeria can be saved from the kind of economic catastrophe suffered by such countries as Iceland, Portugal, Ireland and Greece for which they had to go a borrowing from such multi-lateral institutions as the World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD).

    Oladele’s position as the acquisition of diagonal entrepreneurial skills and behaviour is instructive: it was the lack of entrepreneurial spirit that led, in part, to the collapse of some once-virile and dominant Nigerian business outfits, like textile industries, savings and loans (S and L) merchant banks, airlines, road transportation, print and broadcast media, hospitals, shipping etc. and the attendant loss of many jobs.

    Going beyond profit towards growth was what produced the Asian tigers. It has taken a driving entrepreneurial spirit to post the economy China to where it presently is; so close to that of the United States that, some say, it’s a question of time before it dominates the world.

    The absence of a culture of entrepreneurial  spirit in the Nigerian economy find a notable expression in the dishonourable idleness of most state governments, who do nothing with the huge petro-naira they collect from Abuja each month: no infrastructure, no economic development, no encouraging business milieu, no credible and sustainable employment opportunities for the teeming population of virile youths.

    Oladele says Nigeria must shift from the decay that is cover-dependence on oil and be, now, about other sources of financial capital – mostly solid minerals, with which the country is abundantly endowed, tourism and hospitality, a more aggressive, but less-hostile-to-business, tax and excise regime – sans the current regime of multiple  tax that is eating into the health of some promising, private businesses – agriculture not, necessarily, another fraud with an alias like “Green Revolution” – but one rested on an awakening of the river basin authorities, mechanised farming and a boost to agriculture in the rural areas, and many more.

    In which case, as Oladele puts it, it’s an exercise that would require patriotic professional entrepreneurs. An economy blessed with patriotic, professional entrepreneurs is a bright future. Armed with diagonal skills, it has a reserve of resources when the unexpected – a dislocation in economic activities on, say, happens. The real entrepreneurial is not the Nigerian business manager who stops at profit.

    He or she is the risk- taker, said Oladele, who can distinguish between business budget or capital and profit. Such an entrepreneur is a person who, guided by an engrafted entrepreneurial spirit, distances himself from the capital on which his enterprise leans. Such an entrepreneur has a cap on which is boldly inscribed “integrity.”

    It was a manifestation of the professional entrepreneurial spirit in the skippers of the multi-national company that they targeted the youths and a popular musician to revive their ailing business. If it’s a rejuvenation of the agricultural sector, the professional entrepreneurs – some of them facetiously referred to as  Oladele brought-ups – are ready to take over.

    Solid minerals – coal, iron ore, steel, lead – rubber, palm oil, cocoa, ground-nut, hides and skins? Yes, the professional entrepreneurs are ready; ready to create not only employment but also generate tax. There are professional entrepreneurs who are willing to fix the network of both federal and states roads, based on some mutually-agreed terms – including time-bound collection of tolls. It creates wealth and profit, just as it drives growth and sustainable employment.

    Oladele believes that Nigeria would do well to redesign its educational curriculum such that the products of its universities would be well equipped with entrepreneurial skills that would make them less dependent or have to wait in vain for government jobs, as is presently the case. It helps crime that springs, in most instances, from unemployment.

    •Uzuakpundu is a Lagos-based journalist

  • Controversy over death of Nigerian bizman in Ireland-The connection  of mother of three

    Controversy over death of Nigerian bizman in Ireland-The connection of mother of three

    His words were touching. They were such that could have flown from the inner recesses of a heart concerned about the plight of a dear one. They were words of faith and hope posted by Blessing Adeyemi, an Ireland-based Nigerian businessman, on his Facebook wall.

    It was an expression of his feelings after his socialite and human resource specialist friend, Taiwo Jamani, went into coma following an attack allegedly carried out against him by one of his friends in Dublin, who accused Jamani of dating his girlfriend and mother of three.

    “Please and please,” wrote Adeyemi, the CEO of Lati Solutions Promotions, “the fear of the worst is on people’s minds. Not because they want it to happen. Just fears. All we can continue to do is pray. Jamani is in coma, but he will come out of it in Jesus name.”

    In the message posted on October 17, Adeyemi had added: “It is a week today. Loved ones and friends are still praying for you to respond to treatment, to come out of this coma. Please, fight back and respond for the sake of your kids, wife and loved one. Everyone is praying that you come out of this. It’s not your time yet nor ours in Jesus name.

    “This kind of issue is not only about having faith, but having a strong belief in God, the miracle-worker. He will, from heaven above, lay His healing hands on you and make you respond. He will work His miracle through the doctor’s hands and answer the prayers that are being said for you all over the world. May your sins not stop the prayers from being answered.”

    Jamani, owner of Data Link Company, Dublin, was allegedly attacked by 37-year-old Jooda Akanbi (a.k.a Sharon) on October 10, on Main Street in Dublin town at about 12.20 pm after an argument broke out between them.

    An eyewitness, who told the police that the two men began with a shouting march, said: “I think one was waiting for the other because the boot of his car was open and there were two bats in it, even before the fight began. Then, the man with the bat held it high over his head and brought it down hard on the other man’s head, and he just slumped to the ground. It was shocking. It’s not something you expect to see.”

    Adeyemi’s sorrow was compounded when 45-year-old Jamani later died at about 4 am on November 12, in a Beaumount hospital, after going into coma for a month. Obviously devastated, Adeyemi, who knew the genesis of the crisis, described as untrue the insinuation in some quarters that Jamani was killed because he was dating a single mother of three named Biola.

    He recalled that when the issue of Jamani’s alleged romance with the mother of three came up, he intervened in the matter along with other friends. But he said he never imagined that it could degenerate into loss of life.

    He said: “Jooda had accused Jamani of sleeping with his girlfriend, Biola, a single mother of three. But when I asked Taiwo (Jamani) if it was true, he told me that it was a lie. But the boy had been threatening to kill Jamani.”

    According to him, at the time Jooda attacked Jamani, he was out of job. So, he could have acted out of frustration. He stated that Jooda had been charged with assault, which carries a maximum sentence of five years imprisonment. “But now that Jamani is dead, he is going to face murder charge,” he added.

    Adeyemi, who has vowed to do everything to get justice, also said: “No one else can play his (Jamani”s) role in my life. He was my closest friend. We will do our best. I’m one of the witnesses in the case.”

    Adeyemi also revealed that when Jooda first arrived Dublin, it was Jamani that housed him.

    Asked what plans were being made for Jamani’s family, Adeyemi said: “It is too early to think about relocating Jamani’s family to Nigeria. The focus should rather be on bringing the guy (Jooda) to justice.

    “ Biola, the lady at the centre of the incident, was in court when Jooda was first arraigned, and she is going to be a star witness when the murder case against Jooda comes up in court.

    “Biola has never admitted to being Jamani’s girlfriend. She said there was nothing between her and Jamani. She admitted dating Akanbi. We all know and she doesn’t deny it.

    “Adeyemi and Jamani had been together for 17 years. They both moved to Ireland from Holland in 1999.”

    Adeyemi wondered why someone would kill another fellow because of a single mother of three when there are many single Nigerian ladies in Ireland.

    Asked if he would discourage Nigerian single girls from coming to Ireland, he said: “No, I will not discourage them. But that depends on their aims and reasons for coming here.”

    Jamani is due for burial today at Flemingston Cemetery, Balscadden Balbriggan, Dublin.

  • Nigerian firms for Dublin Web Summit

    Two Nigerian technology companies, www.insidify.com and www.mymusic.com.ng have been selected from thousands around the world to participate at the Web Summit in Dublin, Ireland.

    A release by the organizers of the summit said the event is billed for October, “the companies will be given the opportunity to pitch to, and meet, some of the world’s leading executives and CEOs from Facebook, Cisco, Box, AOL, Paypal, Kaspersky and Microsoft alongside leading ventures capital firms like Google Ventures, Kleiner Perkins, Andreessen Horowitz, NEA and others,” the statement added.

    According to the statement, international personalities like Robert Scoble and Tony Hawk will also be at the event in addition to media from the Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, New York Times and more.

    Paddy Cosgrave, founder of the Web Summit, said: “We are delighted to have these two great young technology companies from Nigeria joining us for the Web Summit this October. The quality of the participants is a real testament to how much the ecosystem in Nigeria has evolved over the past few years.”

    The summit will have in attendance NASDAQ which will be opening their market live from Dublin – “this is the first time that this has happened outside of New York since the Facebook IPO,” the stated explained

    No fewer than 80 companies from over countries will be exhibiting at the Web Summit, alongside some of the world’s most internationally renowned investors, entrepreneurs, and global media.

    The companies were selected for their outstanding potential not just in Nigeria, but internationally.