Tag: model

  • Chain Reactions unveils new model

    Chain Reactions Nigeria, a Public Relations (PR) and Integrated Consulting firm, has re-designed its business architecture to enable it strengthen its service delivery.

    In a statement, its Managing-Director and Chief Strategist, Israel Jaiye Opayemi, said the repositioning was  proactive.

    He said the re-engineering took about two years, and that it involved engaging a reputable firm of human cesource consultants.

    “The first thing we did was to shut what used to be our client service arm and converted it to a Strategy and Business Group, populated by business analysts, strategists, pop culture specialists, trends analysts, research analysts, experiential specialists and others,” he said.

    Under the new business model, it takes more than having the traditional skills for any member of staff of the firm who desires to work in the company to do “client service,” he said.

    Opayemi went on: “You must be able to crunch data and draw meaningful insights that will guide a client. So, for us at Chain Reactions, going forward, the minimum any client-interfacing executive of any rank must be is an analyst. Every client-interfacing executive must be a data analyst or data miner. We are putting this at the very heart of our business.”

    He said the new business model was the redesign of what used to be media department to content and creative department where message development, management, content development, copying writing, creative design, video production, earned media and paid media, are done.

    Opayemi said the agency had also restructured its digital arm. It is now called Data and Digital Group – which comprises data analysts, infographic specialists, online community specialists, reputation managers and content marketing specialists, he added.

    He said the unit would be managed by a consultant who specialised on new and emerging media.

    “This is also where our Creative Technologists who will deal with App development and other mobile solutions will function. So, again, you can see the importance we have placed on big data,” he assured.

    The firm has also reorganised its finance and administrative department into a finance and strategic planning group.

  • Afro Model Awards: UK searches for Nigerian models

    NIGERIAN models and designers desirous of raising their game and taking it global may have that opportunity on their laps already as organisers of Afro Model Awards, UK beam their search light on African talents.

    Established in 2011 by three partners, Afro Model Awards seeks to recognise, acknowledge and reward excellence of models, agencies, personalities, designers, and innovators throughout the fashion and style industry.

    Although the event features a lot of white and mixed race from countries like Barbados, Jamaica, among others, the award is expanding to feature more African talents. According to co-founder, James Durodayo Jegede, who is of Nigerian/Jamaican origin, the award is specifically created for black talents.

    “We created it to suit the black anatomy with categories like Best Behind which is one of the most talked-about in Afro Model Awards. The process is transparent and can be followed on www.afromodelawards.com. Our winners have leveraged on the fame from the Afro Model platform for international breakthrough appearing in videos for renowned pop stars like Nicki Minaj,” he explained.

  • WHO WINS AQUAFINA ELITE MODEL TONIGHT?

    WHO WINS AQUAFINA ELITE MODEL TONIGHT?

    TWENTY male and female models will tonight strut the Grand Ballroom of the Oriental Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos to compete for the 2016 Aquafina Elite Model Look International. The competition aims to showcase notable talents in the modelling, fashion and music industry.

    The selected contestants have been groomed in fitness training, makeovers, nutrition lectures, professional photo sessions and rehearsals for the finale.

    Two winners will emerge and they will go on to represent Nigeria in the Elite Model Look International competition scheduled to hold in Milan, Italy in November. They stand a chance of winning $150,000 USD at Elite Model Look International world finals.

    The event which has Aquafina as its major sponsor attracted over 1, 000 young Nigerians to Lagos. Of this lot, images of 60 contestants were selected and the list further pruned to 20. Aquafina Elite Model Look Nigeria is organised by Beth Model Management in conjunction with Upfront & Personal.

    Last year, Damilola Okunola and Funmilayo Akinjiola emerged winners of the Aquafina Elite Model Look competition.

    International models such as Cindy Crawford (USA), Tatjana Patitz (Germany) and Stephanie Seymour (USA) are all products of the Elite Model Look.

  • My experience in hands of ‘one chance’ robbers – Model

    My experience in hands of ‘one chance’ robbers – Model

    For  Busayomi Adeogun, Tuesday, June 14, is unforgettable day. It was a day she left her Fadeyi home beaming with smiles and confident of signing a modelling contract.

    But no sooner had she boarded a commercial bus at Fadeyi bus stop which had eight other ‘passengers’ in it, did her smiles turn to tears.

    “Immediately I entered the bus from Fadeyi going to Oshodi, the guy on my left side started complaining that the passenger at the back was trying to pick his pocket. The next thing, he changed position and sat on my right side saying Onipanu owa o.

    “Immediately, the one at the back hooked my neck and said ‘don’t shout’. The one beside the driver said ‘allow her to lie down on the floor’. They dragged me flat on the floor of the bus, collected my bag and started asking me questions.

    “Where do you work? I said I am a student. Which school? What course? What level? My name and state? I kept answering the questions as he searched my bag and collected all the money inside.

    “He collected my ATM and asked for my pin and I told him. He handed it to one of them and they dropped him. I was crying and begging them to not kill nor ‘use’ me. So many things were going through my mind.

    “I remembered my mum and siblings as well as a story that happened 27 years ago that cannot be forgotten in my family. I kept begging them to spare me but the man in front said it depends on the amount of money they find in my account.

    “He said if they find huge amount, they won’t hurt me but if I gave them a wrong pin or there’s no money in my account, they will contact my family or rape me till I breathe my last. They were eight men. I started praying silently and asking God for mercy. One was already touching my breast. Another hooked my neck down and a third person used his legs to pin mine,” she narrated.

    Continuing, Adeogun said they put pepper on her eyes and tried to unzip her jeans trousers to probably rape her or apply pepper there too.

    According to her, the man who was dropped after he was given her ATM card called and the one who sat in front passed something to the ones behind and she was ordered to close her eyes.

    “I didn’t close my eyes. I told myself that if I am going to die, let me die but I must see what they want to do. Next thing, he put pepper in my eyes, on my breast and was trying to unzip my trouser but couldn’t. I was screaming that I can’t see and was protecting my eyes from further pepper. I was also trying to hold my jeans so that they don’t pull it down to put pepper in my vagina or rape me, after all they have already collected and done.

    “They collected my phones, power bank, my sister’s money in my bag and the change I had there. They packed everything and threw me off at Coker, towards Oshodi and left. I am still not myself till now.

    “I have never been handled like that in my life. June 14, my terrible day. I just want to close my eyes and forget everything but I can’t. It keeps playing on my head and is hurting me more,” Adeogun wrote on her Facebook wall.

    Efforts to reach the police command’s spokesperson, Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent  (SP) for comment on the issue failed as at press time.

  • Uganda seeks NCDMB’s local content model

    A delegation from the Republic of Uganda has visited the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) in its quest to model the development of Uganda’s local content policies after the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development (NOGICD) Act, considered to have achieved immense benefits for the Nigerian economy.

    The 20-man delegation was led by the Director of Petroleum in the Ugandan Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development, Mr. Ernest Rubondo and the Counselor, Ugandan High Commission in Nigeria, Mr. Nurh Byarufu. Other members  included regulators, bankers, oil industry executives among others and they sought strategies for local vendor development, capacity building of their citizens to meet industry standards, ensuring compliance by operating and service companies, transparent bidding process among other subjects.

    In his remarks, Rubondo said the East African country was at the cusp of investing $20billion in the development of 15 oil fields, construction of a refinery and an export pipe line- projects, expected to be completed within five years.

    According to him, the leadership of the country were determined to retain a substantial part of the $20 billion spent within the country, hence their mission to share Nigeria’s experience in local content which would help their country succeed in that regard.

    Welcoming the delegation, the Acting Executive Secretary, Mr. Daziba Patrick Obah commended the Ugandan Government for identifying Nigeria as a shining example in the implementation of local content, noting that other African countries such as Kenya and Congo Brazzaville had also sought Nigeria’s mentorship of their local content initiatives.

    He also extolled the Ugandan officials for deciding to institutionalise local content at the onset of their oil and gas industry as it would guarantee tangible benefits for their citizens aside the revenue that would accrue from the sale of crude oil and gas.

    He said Nigerian Content has helped the government and the Nigerian people to reverse the flight of industry to foreign countries in the form of personnel, materials, equipment, fabrication and engineering designs. The Executive Secretary further said Nigerian government was the driving force behind the implementation process, stressing that strong political will was necessary to overcome powerful forces opposed to the implementation of local content.

    He advised the Ugandans to develop robust regulations  applicable to the state of their industry and technological base while encouraging collaboration with local and international stakeholders to domicile capacity in-country.

    Manager, Strategy and Policy Development Division (SPDD), Mr. Abdulmalik Halilu, said the percentage of Nigerian Content in the oil and gas industry had increased from less than five per cent before 2010 to 14 per cent in 2014 and 35 per cent in 2015. He added that the Board’s interventions were expected to increase local content levels to 50 per cent by 2017.

    According to him, contracts awarded by operating companies to Nigerian service companies had also increased from about 40 per cent of total contracts before 2010 to 75 per cent in 2015, while the target was to achieve 85 per cent by 2017.

  • Model of legislature-executive relationship

    In a presidential system of government like ours, where the doctrine of separation of powers is deeply enshrined in our constitution, each of the three organs of government enjoys its independence. Indeed, the framers of the deliberately set out to ensure that both the doctrine of separation of powers and principles of checks and balances are adhered to so as to safeguard our democracy from tyranny and dictatorship.

    This is why the executive, legislature and the judiciary are all run and inhibited by different individuals in a manner stipulated by  law.

    As a student of constitutional law and politics, I have overtime come to understand and agree with the  fact that of  the three arms, the legislature enjoys enormous powers more than any other. Perusing through pages of the 1999 constitution, one easily notices that it is replete with so many powers to the legislature.

    While lawmaking is the primary responsibility of the parliament, there are also other powers, functions and responsibilities that are constitutionally discharged by the MPs.

    These include but are not limited to confirmation of nominated ministers, ambassadors and heads of parastatals, powers to investigate any matter, especially those under the exclusive legislative list, summon any person, quasi-judicial powers to investigate and indict, expose corruption, powers over the budget and appropriation or power to approve expenditure of government, confirmation of appointment of Judges, including Justices of the Supreme Court, powers to impeach the president, and so on and so forth.

    The reason why the constitution accords the lawmakers such  powers and responsibilities is borne out of the fact that they are directly elected by the people. In other words, they represent the sovereignty of the people because in a democracy, sovereignty rests with the people.

    More than the two other organs of government, the legislators are the direct and number one custodians of the social contract and the parliament is the heart, nerve and hub of democracy without which there can be no democracy.

    More specifically, in Nigeria, where we have a bicameral legislature, whereas the Senate represents equality of states, the House of Representatives, on the other hand, represents equality of the people.  This is why there is hardly any tribe,  ethnic group or local government in Nigeria that does not have representation in the Green Chamber.

    This explains why the House is popularly referred to as the people’s chamber or House of the Nigerian people.

    Historically, this very important chamber has consistently been led by progressive young leaders and this tradition was upheld on June 9, 2015, when Barrister Yakubu Dogara was elected Speaker.

    Since his historic election, Rt. Hon. Dogara has not left anyone in doubt as to his philosophy, principles and leadership style. The Speaker strongly believes in dialogue, negotiation and consensus building, which are the cardinal pillars of his leadership.

    Today, the rancour and bitterness that trailed the election on June 9 last year have been effectively confined to the dustbin of history as a result of Dogara’s maturity, humility and politics of compromise, which saw the emergence of his opponents as leaders and chairmen of committees in the House.

    No wonder he has continued to enjoy enormous support and loyalty from his colleagues, who acknowledge his transparency and open-door policy.

    As one who opens new frontiers, the relationship between the House and the executive is more than cordial under Dogara’s leadership, as both the speaker and his colleagues are at peace with the ruling party and the government;  working together to deliver good to the people.

    It is his belief that the executive and the legislature must not fight or be engaged in a supremacy battle before they can work to move the nation forward.

    At every opportunity, he emphasises that the primary interest of leaders at all levels should be the people and not their ego or power tussle. At every fora, Dogara would make it clear that the bickering that characterised the relationship between the two arms of government in the past should never be allowed to rear its head again under the change administration of the APC because this government, which came on the promises of change, cannot afford to fail the people.

    Many pundits have asked: why is the parliament not slugging it out with the executive? Why is it that the legislature seems not to be utilising its powers to the fullest? Why is it that the House of Representatives does not adopt  confrontational approach in  relating with the executive? Why are they not fighting the executive?

    Speaker Dogara had cause to provide answers to these questions when he visited Olowo of Owo, Oba Dr. David Victor Folagbade Olateru- Olagbegi in Ondo State recently.

    The speaker underpinned the fact that the House under his leadership does not see their role or relationship as a confrontational one but that of support for whatever the executive is doing to lessen the burden of the Nigerian people and improve their living condition.

    “We don’t adopt a very confrontational posture just for the sake of proving that we have separate powers as allocated to us by the constitution, we cooperate more to ensure that good is delivered to the people,” he stated.

    He maintained that it is only when democracy is threatened that “we raise our voices”, adding, “I remember we have been doing that in this government. How we handled the crisis in Kogi State House of Assembly. It was actually an APC leader who led investigation into the matter and we condemned the impunity even as members of the ruling party. This is change we are talking about.ý”

    It is Dogara’s philosophy that as leaders, their primary responsibility is to work out solutions in the midst of crisis and not add to it or engage in petty squabbles, or issues that constitute distractions.

    Another clear example is the way and manner he handled the crisis that trailed the 2016 Budget as passed by the National Assembly. When concerns were raised by Nigerians and the executive on some provisions of the document, the Speaker adhered to the voices of the people and annouced that the House has resolved to re-examine the document.

    It is his belief that although the powers of appropriation as clearly stated in the constitution is vested in the National Assembly,  such powers should always be exercised with caution so that the public interest is not endangered.

    He has kept to his words, knowing well that working together, the three arms of government can deliver greater good for the greater number of Nigerians and lift them out of abject poverty since the primary purpose of government is the security and welfare of the people. This is also in line with his philosophy of non-confrontational approach to Executive-Legislature relationship.

    This is the change that Nigerians have been yearning for, the change they voted for and the change they need desperately in these difficult times.

     

    • Hassan is Special Adviser,  Media & Public Affairs to Speaker Dogara.
  • Ondo ’ll become model state, says Akinnola

    Ondo ’ll become model state, says Akinnola

    Akinyinka Akinnola is an All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship aspirant in Ondo State.In this interview with reporters in Lagos, he speaks on how zoning deprives the electorate of the opportunity to pick the best person for the job. MUSA ODOSHIMOKHE was there.

    Why are you in the Ondo governorship race?

    There have been a lot of developments in the country of recent. A wind of change is blowing all across the country and it is important that everybody should be part of this change. I found that most of the time people like myself with exposure and experience do not participate actively in politics, but we complain loudest when things are not going well. It is for us to get involved to bring a change to the country.

    Coming from the same district with the incumbent governor, what gives you the edge over other aspirants?

    The man on the street is less interested in where the governor comes from, but more in what the governor is able to do to better the life of the common man. What is important is the passion, the commitment and the competence to do the job. Too many times we have been short-changed by the politics of placement and positioning which insinuates that there should be a direct benefit from the people of a particular area because the governor comes from there. But, the fact is that a turn by turn approach to governance doesn’t give us the best we deserve. Let us look at it. There is representation for wards  at local councils and  for local governments at the state House of Assembly. The governor does not represent any ward or local government. He is the governor of the entire state and is not mandated to represent any group or area. Thus, his origin is of no importance. Ondo State is at such stage where it needs somebody who has the experience, the exposure and the commitment to put things in order. I believe people of Ondo and indeed Nigerians generally are getting more and more enlightened in this regard. So, what is important is the competence and ability to deliver.

    Revenue is at an all-time low. If elected, what would you do to ensure governance does not suffer?

    First of all, success in governance, like any other human endeavour, is determined by the quality of people you have in charge. I will assemble a team of competent people with more experience and knowledge than myself in their chosen field of endeavour. We have all had experience in the private and public sector, confronting problems and proffering solutions?.  We are going to take our eyes off the federal allocations because that can hardly sustain us as it continues to dwindle, and  concentrate on internally generated revenues through various activities  and programmes.

    What is the assurance that the delegates will vote for you at the primary election?

    First thing is that I am running on a platform that has democratic values. I mean my party the APC. The delegate system now being adopted gives a wider voice to party members as it is more inclusive. We are engaging the delegates. A lot of them we have spoken to and interacted with, and what I see is that people are beginning to understand that this is beyond a game of immediate gratification. Everybody has been pushed to the level where they cannot fulfil basic aspirations or take care of the family and they are realising that it is time to bring in sincere and appropriate people into government. It is about building confidence and  good relationship and we are developing this relationship with them everyday and I’m confident that by the time we go for the primary we will be in a position to appeal to a very large segments of the delegates to support us for the office.

    The incumbent governor has different ratings among different people. What do you hope to do differently?

    What we need to realize about governance is that continuity is the bedrock for growth. We’ll review all programmes we may inherit and certainly such programmes that are good and viable will definitely be sustained. We do not know the financial models upon which they are based but if these programmes are beneficial to the people and are financially viable in terms of sustainability they should endure. That is my view regarding that.

    As for what I hope to do differently, my experience over the last 30 years has been in engineering, infrastructure and manufacturing and that is what I really bring to the table here.

    Your sister was the immediate past minister from Ondo. Your late father was a former commissioner in the old Western State. And you are also running for governor. People are tempted to ask whether your family is the only one in Ondo State.

    My father was a commissioner in Western State more than 45 years ago and had since been in private business but constantly contributing to the progress of the state. Apart from industries set up in Ondo state during his stint as commissioner for Industries in the western region, he was also the representative of Ondo state on the federal revenue mobilisation committee and pushed for the adjustment of our boundary with Edo state that saw more oil installations falling within Ondo State and thus increasing our revenue from derivation. My sister Omobola Johnson is a very accomplished technocrat?. She was the Country Manager of Accenture in Nigeria and it was from there she was chosen to be on the Vision 2020 programme of the Yar’Adua government and she excelled. From there again she was called to be part of a presidential advisory committee with President Jonathan and it was from there she was selected to be minister. She is not a politician; she never contested for any office. She was  selected on her merit and she performed creditably well. I, in contrast to my father and sister,  am going in for an elective office along with about 20 other contestants to compete.

    So, there is no issue of the Akinnolas being the only family in the state. Everybody should have the right to compete and everybody should work hard to distinguish themselves.

    What is your position on zoning?

    Ondo state is very rich in terms of human capital. From all over the senatorial districts we have very competent people?. The question is do all these people always come into government and compete? In a competition – which this exactly is – I don’t think anybody should be saying anybody from here is good or anybody from there is better or it should be reserved for anyone. We should all come out and compete. The party (delegates) will decide who emerges at the end of the day and then the electorate will decide. Zoning, a lot of the time, doesn’t create an atmosphere where the best can be gotten. It doesn’t create healthy competition. And so without zoning, which is what the party is saying now that they are yet to adopt zoning as a formula, they are asking everyone to come out and compete.

    The theme of your campaign is ‘less politics, more governance.’? How did you arrive at this and what do you mean exactly?

    As you rightly observed, that is the theme of my campaign. Less politics, more governance. The reason we get into governance is because of the electorate: to provide services? To the people, security, social services and employment and so on. But we see that politics is given more time than governance. At a time government should busy itself with governance all you hear of is political scheming, re-alignments, camping and decamping, etc., etc. The amount of time that ought to be given to governance, relative to what it should be, is not so. Governance is about the executive and the legislature coming together to work for the people. All actions ought to be geared towards governance. There should be a shared objective and a cohesive plan of implementation that the executive, the legislature and the local government and our elected federal representatives key into. We should all hold each other accountable and extend to each other the regard the respective offices deserve.  Where there is weakness in terms of capacity within any of these groups we should work together to support them. Of course there will always be politics but what we are saying is that it should not be the main thing once we are in government. Governance is the reason people get elected to public office.

  • Integrated corporate governance as millennium model of leadership

    Integrated corporate governance as millennium model of leadership

    Profiling Corporate Governance

    Corporate Governance is a Leadership/Management course that is less about two decades old. Its modules are informed initially from three sources: Law, Economics and Organizational Theory. It is a neo-modernist instrument used principally by decision-makers.

    Decision-Making in the 21st century is made complex among other things by the ICT revolution in its mode, modem and media of information generation and transaction and delivery. These have the effect of multiplying the drivers of the market economy, and increase its operational variables. Also, decision-making process becomes more cumbersome due to obligations of ethics, profession, faith, government, or other relationships, thereby bringing the human mind under intense pressure and thus increasing the valence of error. How can these be contained, or in fact turned around?

    Lately, research by renowned neuro-scientist, Adele Diamond (UBC, Vancouver) provided decision-makers with 21st century tactics for coping with all the above. This proves that apprehension, comprehension and dissemination of information for interaction, transaction or reprocess have entered a new mode in the new millennium, but how much of these are being mainstreamed for the accompanying mass market? Or articulated by the relevant institution, the academia, to help mankind not only in theory but in real time?

    Beyond the much-touted “core” concepts of Corporate Governance (as dealt with in the 2009 CU-FISL International Conference) and which have now thrown up our latest enquiry into the subject, the latter comprises two areas: the “grey areas” (Ethics) and now the “millennial/exponential dimension” that introduced innovation. For the future promises of research these are found in NEUROSCIENCES, MINDFULNESS, MONTESSORI, et al.

     

    Contemporary Study

    It is noteworthy however that concerned institutions of the world have lately turned their attention to seriously consider Corporate Governance, often by tentative other names. The HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW (HBR) in its February, 2012 edition, vide a template of posers had sought a make-over for capitalism, titled The Capitalism Challenge. The intro of that subject is further sub-titled (as QUERY, RESPONSE and URGENCY) below:

    HBR/McKinsey (M-Prize for Innovation: THE CAPITALISM CHALLENGE

    QUERY: “Capitalism might be the greatest engine of prosperity and progress ever devised, but in recent years, individuals and communities have grown increasingly disgruntled with the implicit contract that governs the rights and responsibilities of business. The global economy and the Internet have heightened our sense of interconnectedness and sharpened our awareness that when a business focuses only on enriching investors, it implies that managers view the interests of customers, employees, communities and the fate of the planet as little more than cost trade-offs in a quarter-by-quarter game.

    RESPONSE: “It’s time to radically revise the deeply-etched beliefs about what business is for, whose interests it serves, and how it creates value. We need a new form of capitalism for the 21st century, one dedicated to the promotion of greater well-being rather than the single-minded pursuit of growth and profits; one that doesn’t sacrifice the future for the near term; one with an appropriate regard for every stakeholder; and one that holds leaders accountable for all of the consequences of their actions.In other words, we need a capitalism that is profoundly principled, fundamentally patient, and socially accountable.

    URGENCY: “This isn’t a new challenge, but it’s more urgent than ever, not just as an effort to escape reform and regulation from the outside, but to restore the public trust, to repair the moral fabric of the system, and to unleash the innovation required to tackle the world’s most pressing and important challenges.”

    (-The HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW, February, 2012)

    Deconstructing the above simply breaks up into: INTEGRATION; CORPORATE GOVERNANCE; MILLENNIUM; APPROACH and LEADERSHIP.

    Expatiating, “Integration” means reassembly into one functional or organic whole; “Corporate Governance” is simply the acceptable morality of the marketplace to which every participant in a society is subscribed; “Millennium” is that out-large phenomenon of Time that arrived on every citizen of the globe since year 2000 heralding many factors of Change to which we have all been struggling to accede or subdue for control or at least manage for our own good; “Approach” is simply methodology or system of arranging our strategies and response to all these challenges with responsibility; while “Leadership” is acting that responsibility to the joy of all, that is man and God.

    In every human society, above is what a responsible daily activity tries to achieve variously through the sectors of Education, Business, Governance, Hospitality, Faith, Sports, et al. How can they be brought altogether in one comprehensible whole…. avoiding the confusions enumerated by HBS above?

    That “lacuna” is the template of our enquiry, a foil. The solution will fill it.

    MANAGERIALISM” HERALDING CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

    On the verge of the great depression (cross-over from late 19th century) Berle and Means gave account of economic development in the US in the early 20th century, which tended to breed a powerful class of professional managers in whose hands were concentrated unprecedented economic power that were insulated from pressure of both stockholders and the larger public. In their postulation the warnings of Berle and Means even inferred that certain tenets of the democratic foundation were under threat of eventual eclipse by this new phenomenon, and this invariably triggered a trail of intellectual inquiry.

    MOTIVE

    By “distrust” or loss of trust, Harvard in the excerpt above is querying, what is truly in the heart of (a) man? Motive is crucial to business and ethics. Therefore compliance to business conduct no matter what is specified cannot be enforced on a rule and regardless of the myriad of legislations available. A Z. Mizruchi (University of Michigan, 1976) rightly discovered in his critique of the originating suspicions of Berle and Means about the notion of “Power and Control” (Managerialism) that there are various strands of consciousness emanating from the same phenomenon that makes it virtually impossible for any school of thought, his own among the others, the sociologists school, to categorically pitch their tent with the hypothesis of Berle and Means. Without a much better idea however they had to tamely agree in the end that this new system (Managerialism, precursor to Corporate Governance) was kind of a further extension of democracy.

     

    Research, Analysis and Results

    The second half of the 20th century however was rife with novel Management ideas especially of the humanist school, a trend that gave vent to such amusing behavioral descriptions as “peoples’ capitalism”, “soulful corporation”, etc. One common factor among them was the issue of Motive which was controversialised. What would be my motivation for taking a job for instance before I find myself(re)acting in a particular way? Many studies were conducted which queried severally the basis of motivation. At the end motivational impulse was variously thought to no longer be an outright economic factor. Values could mutate, and satisfaction become derivative. Upon this result however there are two different things to test for: (i) the research question which is Motivation and (ii) the Methodology of measure. The latter is perhaps more pertinent to the SCIENCE of Corporate Governance while Motivation deals with the curriculum that makes it up. Both will add up for Delivery.

    Methodologically speaking what these series of tests and result meant was that the linear-onlymentality of deductions till that point was failing and could lead the train of discourse astray. Reliability was gone. In fact beginning from this premise the imagination of the thinkers dilated wild, some adducing that entrepreneurial motivation were no longer strictly profit-driven. This was beginning to hit at many ultra-classical economic views, but the question then was could they sustain this tempo?  Sociologists, in one of their splinter schools chose to arm themselves rather with extant theories of class and social stratification, relying on Max Webber or Karl Marx. For instance  Blau and Duncan’s view  on  Class: “defined in terms of economic resources and interest… is no longer adequate for differentiating…(those) sic in control of the large capitalistic enterprises from those subject to their control, because the controlling managers of the largest firms today (mid-20th century) are themselves employees of corporations”.

    In other words a mentality emanates from this “employee” status and there is a pattern in which its implications can multiply in the operational structure in such a way that they manifest unaligned variables. After all the on-board structure which some professional managers have to present even in the face of the 2009 economic disaster is all that the world  actually expects, not the conundrums of uninvestigated moral (or more correctly, amoral) biases that led to their decision making.

     

    Verdict

    Thus came the qualitative round-off to the multitude of tests and data applied to measure and then to draw inferences from those study and comparisons done on the relations of power within corporations and their implications on democratic development, in the second half of the 20th century; conclusion today being that the airspace have become far expanded and the options made available are multiplied so greatly as to completely overwhelm the streamline of ordinal mentalities in its mode and measures. The demise here of ‘one- subject approach’ to research problems was already hinting at the beginning of many factors that would later crystallize as corporate governance.

    The inference here is that Corporate Governance as a discipline does not only bring together relationship among human reactants in the workplace, it also atomizes the failure of the institutions that were designed to regulate or control them. Corporate Governance also measures progress not only against expectations (or deliverables) but often against certain hidden keys that may bubble up time and again to surprise the enterprise. In this wise it means that even in the academia the velvet garbs that were once draped around the one-subject approach to problem-shooting are newly found inadequate to deal with the infinite variety of choices inherent in our time and need.

    Sociologists had thought to claim their space as the discipline that was found closest to behaviourism, perhaps, but being unable to prove it (by figures and numbers) had them hitting at the blank wall inadvertently. Corporate Governance as a discipline does now make offer of a new framework for the operationalization of measured reality, as may be found for instance in the mission statement or vision statement of an organization. How each one arrives at this statement though is yet a different issue.

    However the discipline of Corporate Governance is not a benevolent hydra-headed monster, only that it has its own ethical compliance framework against which the success of an organization can be measured, just as the honourable enterprise of academics does too. They are both systems, except that in the CG system output is more than the sum of the input integers, and the system may perform without necessarily subjecting self to the internal equilibrium of that entity (recall the introduction of SPVs); there are always “grey” areas to consider. And right now the latest risqué factor has been this “exponential” dimension of the new millennium. So, whether it is Ownership or Control or whatever any other issues that may be broached all are just but mere patterns of behavior among the interacting units, all sunk in an environment which is bound to throw up certain variables in the end that they themselves cannot completely appropriate.

     

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    greenhavenfoundation@gmail.com

     

  • Wanted: Open assets declaration model

    Wanted: Open assets declaration model

    In providing a framework for guiding public
    officers to carry out proper public behaviour, means are used. Value falls under the means as they are to encourage public officer to the ideals of the public service and irreproachable behaviour. The code of conduct for public officers outlines desirable values and spells out the consequences of not complying.

    One of these values is an assets declaration exercise contained in both theConstitution of Nigeria 1999 and Code of Conduct Bureau Tribunal Act of 1990. There is Freedom of Information Act 2011, which pushes the Code of Conduct Bureau under a legal obligation to make public the assets declared       by a public officer. These laws require public officers to declare both their assets and liabilities on assumption of office and every four years after the initial declaration.

    Assets declaration is a globally trusted standard, which not only lifts the ban on public trust, but decreases the incidence of corruption. It also restores hope and confidence of the public towards their servants because a public officer is a public delegate and a trustee of the commonwealth of the people. With assets declaration, it is relatively easy to identify corrupt public officers, making a comparative analysis of assets declared on assumption of office and on exit, so as to observe or detect ostentatious accumulation. This cannot be identified where the public officer declares an asset that is unidentifiable like an unidentified or missing land.

    Assets declaration is a traditional exercise in public service and the page we are now in our democratic experiment is assets publication. The Freedom of Information Act 2011 (FOIA) compels the disclosure of records in the custody of the Bureau to any interested party. The FOIA creates a duty on the part of the Bureau to maintain public register of assets disclosures of public officers to enable public access on application.

    The content of a declaration with the bureau is a public document and should be accessible to members of the public on payment of reasonable fees. Assets publication is part of stewardship to the public for the authority held on their behalf. It might be the most difficult case under a privacy exemption, since there is not only a strong right of privacy involved, but sturdy public need to know what material possession is owned by public officers before commencement of duty and some moment thereafter. Privacy of personal information of public officers in all commanding heights of leadership yawns at globally acclaimed open public administration sustained by Nigeria public law. Assets declaration devoid of publication has no relevance for the citizens and declaration without verification on the part of the bureau is a constitutional breach.

    The omnibus privity in the declaration and litigation process encourages the bureau to bureaucratize the process of investigation cum publication by effectively frustratingthird party intervention. Good enough, where applicants can establish public interest in their request, by the provision of the Freedom of Information Act 2011, access may be allowed to assets declared.

    The refusal of public officers to publish assets is far more injustice than privacy invasion. An effective assets declaration must be reduced to periodic publication. In a ubiquitous search for good leadership, the government must guarantee freedom to examine the record of officials, encourage investigation and make public a report or comments. On the part of the governed, they must ensure that they complement the government in verification of assets declared and also ensure that trustee lives within a genuine means of livelihood as required by law so as to enhance the overall development of the state.

    For assets declaration to be accessed easily it must be codified in digital form. This means that information can be accessed not just on manual record but also on digital or electronic templatewith unique identifying number. Officers of iniquity are ahead of the analogue assets declaration mechanism.

    By section 2 of Freedom of Information Act 2011, public institutions are to maintain information about public officials working with them. Files are sometimes lost in the registry of the code of conduct bureau and staff may find it cumbersome to sort out files in their custody for verification. The reporting system is the starting point for a case of breach of the code and the procedure needs to be simplified. Information and Communication Technology (ICT) is required to regulate assets declaration for easy publication. Electronic declaration of assets will effortlessly aid request.

    This will enable the assets of public officers to be posted on the Bureau’s website. Critics may suggest that applicants can handle files without even knowing the address or visiting the bureau, meaning assets publication may compromise confidentiality of information. There may also be the threat of creating phony e-declarations. ICT goes with its attendant benefits in time and money alongside the threat of manipulation. The threats can be overpowered, after all, a record of accounts and payroll for various public officers are managed on the computer. Electronic declaration of assets may be the best highlight for assets publication because it will assist complainant reporting system which is the starting point for a case of breach of the code.

    The bureau is under a constitutional duty to release contents of assets declaration formsof public officers’ including the one of the new sheriff in town without a prior authourisation of the declarant. In the year 2011, the constitutional Tribunal of Peru expanded public access to the assets declaration of government officials. The court stated that upon request by the public, assets declaration should be disclosed.

    The court added that any person in a public office has lost his right to privacy in transit. Similarly, the timing of disclosure is immediately the declaration is made and when the bureau or the public officer deems fit. In the United States for instance, public gets access to the document of declaration within 30 days of receipt of the declaration.

    In Latvia, all information about high ranking officials including the chief judge, speaker is published in the official gazette without request. Taking a cue from other countries where public access to assets declaration is allowed on fulfilling some conditions like paying a reasonable fee in processing or a reproduction of the report or for mailing it. Assets declaration should be published voluntarily in national dailies, especially as regards the assets of senior members of the executive, legislative and the Judiciary.

    The overriding allegation of corruption should pacify the definition of public interest. There should be an official mandate to invade privacy of an official tainted with corruption. Public officers must give account to the people. The peoples’ assessment is on service above self. The nexus is adopting an ethical process in an official decision-making circle of governance.

    A private individual that has a service or representative contract with the government has a moral and legal duty to publish his asset profile for the benefit of the public. No public officer is paid to act of his/her personal agenda. The court as a public institution must assist public interest to outweigh mere courtesy.

    The Code of Conduct Tribunal should be renamed Anti-Corruption Court and upgraded to the status of a superior court of record with the responsibility of handling only corruption cases from the proposed merger of investigative bodies like EFCC, ICPC and the Code of Conduct Bureau. There is a need for a special court to try all forms of financial crimes. The remedy for fiscal sanity is in the bowel of a specialized court and procedure. This will promote knowledge, timeousness, training and coherence.

    The case of a special court to expedite proceedings and attain the ends of justice is unassailable. The challenge before the proposed special court would be to define the boundaries of corruption related offences to be brought before it. Corruption is too specialized to be handled by an unspecialized court or tribunal. An effort to foist a distinct judicial arm to pronounce on the plethora of anti -graft legislations will produce overt patriotic fervor. Special court can fortify the moral conscience of majority of public officers. Venality can be lost on every public officer if the court is deciphered along the sentiment of jurisdictional gerrymandering.

    Much effort has been made by the Governments to make laws aimed at regulating the people, rather than involving the people during the making of the laws. For the fight against corruption to be won, the government must embrace the wishes and desire of the people in formulating policies. The culture of corruption is so established that existing provisions of the law need not only be enforced, but also demand constant decision of creative means of reshaping people to confirm to collective means and  morals. The pleas that have made progress in assets disclosure models have done so because the checks and balances of social contracts are operated to the hilt.

    Assets declaration is only worthwhile were Code of Conduct Bureau is empowered to probe peoples’ claim diligently. The bureau is a consequence of decades of deliberate weakening to enable acts of corruption to proceed unhindered.It will surprise everyone that the only court that can address breach of the code is the Code of Conduct Tribunal and the complainant can only be made by the bureau. So when the bureau is mute the breach continues and this accounts for the towering rate of venality, conflict of interest, cultism, private business in public service.

    In this new administration, the bureau must be all out to check this unwholesome act of ambulatory declaration by energizing the verification department of the organization. Assets Marshalls should be deployed to investigate declarations made before it is approved. National Orientation Agency should lead the sensitization unit of the proposed open assets declaration model.

    The standards under which disclosure will be granted is made clear in Freedom of Information Act 2011. The bureau must stop loose criteria in the Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal Act and disclose voluntarily when requested to so do. This inadvertently will reduce expensive law suits to secure disclosure.

    The code partially prohibits public officers from engaging in private business or trade. There is a window of opportunity in farming and it is unequivocally allowed in the code. Farming by a public officer should be encouraged as a way of augmenting the officers’ wages and should attract compulsory agricultural loan for public officers. Public officers that excel in farming should also be awarded.

    It is surprising that many low rank public officers collect pittance monthly and yet have enormous properties that cannot be justified. The result is the drain of public fund by public officers and the only way the state can tame it is by a genuine declaration, publication and verification of assets. Assets publication will reduce the incidence of corruption and this will in turn prevent the citizens from the neighborhood noise of generators that absence of the good supply of electricity forces us to endure.

    Continual publication of assets will undoubtedly strengthen the defence against domestic corruption and meltdown conflict of interest as secrecy of public officers diminishes dividend accrue to the public and also creates an impression that something is wrong. Assets publication is material for accurate public scrutiny of any public officer. This is the only available avenue to place remuneration side by side with properties acquired or inherited to review the credibility of public officers

    It takes more than a surgery to separate public officers from corruption. The media can complement the NOA in sensitising the public of the expected level of responsibility and accountability. But first, the media must itself have a good grasp of the code of media practice and the implication of each item to the conduct of government business. The guiding framework for conduct in public office is only the starting point of influencing the behavior of public officers.

    Community based organisations (CBO) should come up with an annual evaluation of compliance with the code of conduct in the country, but first must enrich public understanding of how assets publication will tame graft and develop new policy ideas and advocacy strategy to building a new public service. A new sense of public service that speaks about how public officers should conduct themselves and contribute to the making of a good society, a new public service where value and honesty is spelt out as a guidepost to service and performance. A new public service that remains green even when the officers are gone.

    The CBO’s must stimulate probing conversations in various communities on ethical goals and clear focus on public officers’ ethics. This should be embedded into peoples’ orientation strategy for the fight against venality since many corruption perception studies persistently show a high degree of mistrust by the public of their government. Adoption ofopen assets declaration model explains leadership that saw his trust sliding into the grave of self- annihilation on the account of corruption and tried to do something about it.

  • Juwah as model public servant

    Telecommunications has become the chief enabler of any economy. It is a sector that does not only directly contribute to the economy but it impacts other sectors, providing for them the conveyor belt to take businesses from small scale enterprises to mega-corporations. This is why the advanced nations and strongly emerging economies of Asia have taken the matter of telecoms very seriously. Whether it is the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of the United States or the Office of Communications (OfCom) of the UK, governments from across the globe have always insisted on the observance of best practices from their respective telecom regulators.

    In Nigeria, the statutory telecom regulator, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has borne the burden of midwifing the nation’s telecom sector, right from the days of the military when the commission was created by the Ibrahim Babangida regime via Decree 75 of 1992. But the commission never really flourished until the advent of democracy. Specifically, its impact began to be felt among the people in 2001 when the first set of Global System for Mobile (GSM) communications operators rolled out services. It marked a defining moment in the sector that has since 1886 when the first cable communication was established with England from the colony of Lagos.

    Before the GSM operators rolled out service in 2001, aggregate telephone throughput in Nigeria had hovered between 400,000 and 500,000 lines made up largely of analogue lines. The state-run telco, NITEL, was a monumental failure, made inept by public sector lethargy. Attempt to integrate the Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) genre of telephony was at the very best, fitful. Investment in the sector barely grossed over $50 million. New jobs were not created because growth and profitability were stunted. Government interference in the running of the sector did not help matters, either. And so, a sector that was supposed to enable other sectors attain efficiency and profitability was itself needing help.

    Today, however, the Nigeria telecom narrative has changed. The regulator, NCC, has proved beyond doubt that privatisation and deregulation are the best therapies for ailing public corporations and sectors once held bound by government inertia. Two iconic characters, both of them engineers, stand out in this journey from telecom backwaters to a nirvana where Nigeria is mentioned and qualified with beautiful superlatives in the global telecom canvas. Whereas Ernest Ndukwe (he succeeded the late Emmanuel Nnama) started what is commonly called the ‘telecom revolution’, his successor, Dr. Eugene Juwah, has not only sustained the revolution, he has indeed upped the ante, growing the telephone throughput from 88 million lines upon his assumption of office in July 2010 to over 130 million lines.

    Under Juwah, Nigeria’s profile in the global telecom arena has shot up to the acclamation of both the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO) and the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), the telecom arm of the United Nations.

    It is little surprise that he was honoured recently as The Sun newspaper Public Servant of the Year 2014. Juwah, the man commonly referred to as Nigeria’s Broadband Evangelist, was at his engineering and administrative best last year. It was the year that investments in the Nigeria telecoms sector grossed over a hefty $32 billion, it was the year that aggregate telephone lines in Nigeria crossed a record 130 million lines (in fact total subscriber base was at a time 132,186,840 lines) in a country of about 170 million people, thus pushing tele-density to as high as 94.84 percent.

    In 2014, total number of internet subscribers for GSM mobile galloped to over 70 million. But beyond numbers and statistics, 2014 marked the highest elevation of Nigeria telecom in the global circuit as Juwah was appointed the Chairman of the Council and Executive Committee of the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO) during the CTO Annual Council Meeting held in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Besides, it was the year the commission mopped multiple awards to justify its rating as Africa’s model telecom regulator.

    It was therefore most fitting that Juwah was honoured for his outstanding performance at the NCC and much more for his stellar achievements last year. Juwah’s success at NCC has stood Nigeria out at the ITU community. Nigerians who travel the world would easily recall the harrowing experiences they go through at most airports on account of the country’s poor reputation. Those who attend international seminars and conferences need not be reminded of how the global audience had sneered and sniggered at the mention of Nigeria at such meets. But not so with telecom! Juwah and his troop at NCC have given Nigeria a sweetly flavoured name among global investors and telecom techies including regulators from across the globe.

    Year after year, telecom regulators from other nations jet into Nigeria to understudy the NCC with the singular intent of deploying the Nigerian telecom regulatory template to foster regulatory excellence within their respective jurisdictions.

    Since the rollout of GSM services in 2001, issues such as quality of service and cost of service have dogged every discourse. Juwah never shied away from them. Step by step, without grinding the businesses of investors, he has rallied the operators to invest more as a way of ramping up the technical integrity of their networks. Even much so, Juwah was not oppressive of the telecom consumer. He has consistently advocated regulation with a human face. The review of interconnect rate, slashing of the cost of short message service (SMS) among others were carefully thought through interventions meant to help the consumer while also ensuring that the operators stay in business.

    At a time many thought that the nation’s telecom sector has hit saturation point in voice telephony, Juwah brought a fresh breath to the menu. The intensity of his Broadband evangelism has not only created more jobs in the sector, it has also positively impacted other sectors and by extension the larger economy.  The Nigerian public sector would need to copy from the leadership book of Juwah so that the revolution that has galvanised telecom in Nigeria would be replicated in other areas of the national socio-economic ecosystem. Meantime, let’s toast to Nigeria’s Public Servant of the Year 2014, the Delta-born Eugene Juwah.

    • Olanrewaju, an  ICT consultant, writes from Lagos.