Tag: UNESCO

  • UN to help Africa harmonise education standards

    The UN on Monday has pledged to help African states to harmonise their education standards.

    Lack of mutual recognition of academic qualifications in Africa is hindering labor mobility, Abdul-Rahman Lamin, programme specialist at the Nairobi office of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), told a youth forum in the Kenyan capital.

    “We are therefore assisting African Union (AU) member states to harmonize their educational standards at the tertiary level in order to promote continental integration,” Lamin said during the Youth Dialogue on Education Conference on Inclusive and Gender Responsive Education.

    The conference, which aims to provide a platform for young people in Africa to share their experiences on different national context, was hosted by Plan International and partner organisations.

    In 2014, AU members agreed to sign a convention on recognition of academic qualifications in African states in the Ethiopian capital city of Addis Ababa.

    UNESCO is assisting African states to ratify the convention.

    Lamin said the UN hopes to create a platform where African states can exchange and discuss the progress they have achieved so far in implementing the convention of harmonisation of higher education.

    He said a harmonised education standards regime will benefit the continent because it will promote student and labour mobility.

    Lamin added that many African states are undergoing social and political conflicts that have resulted in many of their citizens seeking refuge in neighboring countries.

    “However, due to lack of harmonised education standards, the refugees are unable to continue their education or find employment in their host countries.

    “At the end, the host nation is not able to benefit from skills of the refugees due to restrictive policies,” he said.

    NAN

  • ‘Igbo language will not die in one million years’

    The prediction by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) that the Igbo Language will go into extinction by 2050 is not based on any empirical evidence, a professor of Linguistics at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), Boniface Mbah, has said.

    The don faulted the prediction, saying that those behind it did not have the knowledge of the reasons a language dies.

    Prof Mbah spoke on the controversial prediction after he delivered the 129th inaugural lecture of the school, titled: Mental spaces, domain construction and the limitation of possibility.

    The lecturer presented the inaugural lecture in Igbo language, emphasising that the language was too strong among its speakers to be allowed to go into extinction.

    According to Prof Mbah, Ndigbo in the Diaspora do not relent in promoting their language and cultural heritage despite other cultural influences, colonialism and technology. He added that its speakers also exported Igbo culture and cuisine to the West to survive.

    He said: “Anybody who is saying that any Nigerian language – Igbo, Hausa or Yoruba – will go into extinction doesn’t know what he is saying. Any language that is dying will not have a rural population of native speakers. As long as there are people speaking the language daily, it can never die.

    “Those who claimed that the Igbo Language will die based on the analysis that Igbo children are being brought up with foreign languages are not aware of how many children are being born as native speakers of the language. There is no empirical evidence that Igbo Language is going into extinction; it will not die in the next one million years.”

    On why he delivered the lecture in Igbo, Mbah said it would be hypocritical for him as a promoter of Igbo Language to deliver his lecture in a foreign language. He stressed that the only way languages could survive was to encourage people to communicate in their native tongues.

    He said “If I had employed English Language to present my inaugural lecture, many people would have merely heard me but would not have understood what I said. I believe it is a wake-up call to the Igbo nation to preserve our language.”

    He noted that Igbo linguists had been working to ensure the preservation of the language, pointing out that over 20 doctoral theses were researched and written in Igbo at the UNN.

    Mbah urged the Igbo in the Diaspora to brace for the challenge of ensuring that their language was not overtaken by the language of their host countries. He said they must teach their children the language to maintain their identity.

  • FCTA, UNESCO graduate 400 ICT trainees

    Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Malam Muhammad Bello has urged graduated trainees of the recently concluded United Nation’s Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO)/FCTA YouthMobile Information and Communication Technology (ICT) project in the FCT to use the skills they have acquired for nation building.

    The FCT Minister gave this charge in Abuja during the graduation ceremony for 400 participants of the UNESCO/FCTA YouthMobile project in the FCT drawn mainly from Abuja Municipal and Bwari Area Councils.

    Bello who was represented at the occasion by the FCTA Permanent Secretary, Mr. Christian Ohaa, said the next phase has been scheduled for Gwagwalada town and will involve 600 participants covering the southern axis of the FCT, namely; Kuje, Kwali, Abaji, and Gwagwalada Area Councils.

    He said the FCT Administration has committed over N96.7 Million by way of counterpart funding to match UNESCO’s support of N42Million.    ,

    The Minister while congratulating the participants urged them to justify the investment of both the global community and the home government towards the realisation of their full potentials by starting their own businesses where necessary.

    Bello said beneficiaries have been given skills required to excel, adding that government and the larger society expect them to translate these skills to increased productivity and employment.

    According to the Minister, “The importance of knowledge, they say, is not in having it, but in using it. Similarly, “to whom much is given, much is expected.” I therefore urge you all to leverage the skills you have acquired for self-actualization and for nation-building.   Let this serve as a clarion call for you all to live up to this dream and to brace up to the challenges of starting off your own businesses where necessary as well as being the torch-bearers of change.”

    Bello expressed appreciation to the UNESCO for the successful conclusion of the first segment of the YouthMobile Project. He said the knowledge gained would enable participants to contribute towards the building of inclusive knowledge-based society, by leveraging Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) skills.

    “I am glad to note the engagement of 15 beneficiaries from the first batch by SAP (a global leading software company) who served as facilitators at the 2017 Africa Code Week. Without doubt, the beneficiaries have been given skills required to excel and we expect it to translate to increased youth productivity and employment. Similarly, we hope it will also help in the promotion of peaceful co-existence amongst themselves and in our various communities,” the Minister stated.

    In his own remarks, the Director and Representative of UNESCO Regional Office in Abuja, Yao Ydo said the spirit of the education and cultural arm of the world body is to engage and partner with young women and men, in promoting peace, preventing violent extremism and engaging them meaningfully.

     

  • As planet expands, water quality, supply is declining – UN warns

    The UN on Monday warned that as the global population expands and the planet warms, demand for water is rising, while the quality and reliability of our water supply is declining.

    In the 2018 edition of the World Water Development Report, the UN said world should look to nature for better ways to maintain supplies of water, keep it clean, and protect people from droughts and floods.

    The UN said one response is to invest more in protecting ecosystems that recycle water, such as wetlands and vegetation, and spend less on concrete flood barriers or wastewater treatment plants.

    Audrey Azoulay, director-general of UNESCO, which coordinates the report, called for “new solutions” to tackle “emerging challenges to water security caused by population growth and climate change”.

    “If we do nothing, some five billion people will be living in areas with poor access to water by 2050,” she said in a statement.

    Demand for water is expected to increase by nearly one-third by 2050, said Gilbert Houngbo, chair of UN-Water, in the report’s foreword.

    To help manage competing demands for freshwater – whether to quench human thirst, water crops or produce electricity, UNESCO recommended “working with nature, rather than against it” in a bid to make water use more efficient, cost-effective and healthier for people and the environment.

    “For too long, the world has turned first to human-built, or ‘grey’, infrastructure to improve water management,” wrote Houngbo.

    “In so doing, it has often brushed aside traditional and indigenous knowledge that embraces greener approaches.”

    UNESCO outlined the benefits of “nature-based solutions”, which use or mimic natural processes to increase water availability, improve its quality and reduce risks linked to water-related disasters and climate change.

    Those solutions include changing farming practices so the soil retains more moisture and nutrients, harvesting rainwater, re-charging aquifers, conserving wetlands that capture runoff and decontaminate water, restoring floodplains and turning rooftops into gardens.

    UNESCO cited estimates that agricultural production could be increased by nearly 20 percent worldwide if greener water management practices were used.

    Richard Connor, editor-in-chief of the report, said switching to a “conservation agriculture” model could bring high and rapid returns, but achieving it on a large scale would require political will at the national level.

    “Agriculture internationally remains dominated by industrial (farming), and it can be a little more difficult to influence the private-sector interests that are involved,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

    He said some companies were adopting more sustainable practices, while consumers – mainly in Europe and North America – increasingly prefer organic, locally grown food.

    Inside cities, the challenge is to capture and filter more water using “green infrastructure” – from water retention ponds to wild spaces that double up for leisure activities.

    And out of town, in the basins on which cities rely, water users like farmers need to cooperate with municipal authorities to ensure enough clean water for all.

    UNESCO said New York, for example, has protected its three biggest watersheds since the late 1990s, resulting in an unfiltered water supply that brings savings of more than 300 million dollars per year on water treatment and maintenance costs.

    Connor said “grey” infrastructure – such as piped water to slums, dams to control water flow on rivers, or concrete walls to keep out big storm surges and floods – would still be needed.

    Yet while growing amounts are spent on green infrastructure and other nature-based solutions, evidence suggests they account for less than 1 percent of total investment in infrastructure to manage water resources, the report said.

    Connor pointed to the extra advantages of using natural ways to manage water, including the potential to boost biodiversity, jobs, health and carbon storage.

    “If you start to look at these co-benefits that often do not exist with grey infrastructure … it should tip the investment decisions towards more nature-based solutions,” he said.

    Reuters/NAN

  • UNESCO: no fund committed to Osun road

    The United Nations Education and Scientific Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) has said it did not contribute any fund to the repair of Olaiya-Ita Olokan Road, which leads to Osun Groove in Osogbo, the Osun State capital.

    This put to rest the controversy trailing the project.

    Clarifying the claims that the international organisation contributed over 70 per cent of the fund for the 2.8 kilometre road, UNESCO’s Communication Consultant (Regional Office) Mr Olusola Macaulay said there was no time the organisation was approached by the Osun State government to fund the road project.

    Besides, he said UNESCO is not currently funding any project in the state.

    Macaulay, who spoke with our reporter on telephone, said: “I can confirm to you that UNESCO did not contribute any fund to the construction of the road that leads to Osun Grove. And there was no time the Osun State government or its agencies approached UNESCO to support the project or contribute anything to it. We didn’t pay 70 per cent or any other fraction to the project, as being peddled. As I speak to you, we have no project we are undertaking in Osun State.”

    UNESCO’s clarification followed a statement credited to former Osun State Deputy Governor Iyiola Omisore that the international organisation paid over 70 per cent of the amount appropriated for the reconstruction of the road.

    Also, Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola, described Omisore’s claim as a falsehood.

    The governor said the resources invested in the project were sourced from Omoluabi Infrastructure Conservation Fund.

    He said: “UNESCO is not in any way involved in the finance of the project at all. It becomes imperative to state that rather than provide funds for the road, UNESCO requested the government to re-work and change the course of the road, which leads to Osun Groove, to retain its World Heritage Site status.

    “It is a known fact that UNESCO, as an organisation, does not give money for any counterpart project funding. Rather, such is given in kind and not in cash, as the former deputy governor (Omisore) would want the people to believe.

    “He should be told in clear terms that getting mischievous is not a good trait that endears an aspirant to the electorate, while lying so blatantly makes one to be rejected by God. The former deputy governor should desist from deliberate efforts at misinforming the people of the state and face his disgraceful and ignoble charges with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    “The Osun State government challenges Omisore or any of his cohorts to substantiate their claims with relevant documents to the effect that the project was funded by UNESCO, as they unscrupulously claim.”

     

     

  • Fed Govt seeks UNESCO’S help to train information managers

    Fed Govt seeks UNESCO’S help to train information managers

    The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) has been urged to assist Nigeria in building the capacity of public information managers, in view of the changing dynamics of the information landscape due to the advent of the social media.

    Minister of Information and Culture Alhaji Lai Mohammed made the appeal in Abuja on Tuesday when he received a delegation from UNESCO in his office.

    “The information era of the 60s, 70s and 80s are not exactly the information era of today. In the 70s and 80s even up to the 90s, we depended largely on the print, radio and television to mould opinions and views. But today, with the social media, I think it’s a completely new ball game and this is where UNESCO will also need to adapt, especially in the area of support they give to us.

    “Today, our young ones – I think it’s correct to say that about 80 per cent of them, don’t rely on the traditional media: newspapers or even radio or television, as their source of information. Today, they rely more on the social media. Even the traditional media today also have realised that unless they are also present in the social media, their impact will probably not be felt.

    “So I want to appeal to UNESCO…to look at how you can assist us in capacity building in the area of social media,” he said.

    Mohammed said such assistance becomes imperative because the social media has now become a platform for the dissemination of fake news and disinformation, which is a nightmare for public information managers.

    He, therefore, appealed to UNESCO to focus more on building capacity on how to manage information emanating from the social media.

    In the area of culture, the minister said Nigeria has now become a powerhouse in the creative industry through the proliferation of its films, music and other forms of entertainment.

    Leader of the delegation and Assistant Director-General of UNESCO for Africa Mr. Edouard Matoko said the organisation was ready to support the development and implementation of the Creative and Culture Industry Action Plan for Nigeria to build the capacity of the youth, especially in the film and entertainment sector.

  • Restoring the Balance Between Culture and Nature at Lake Chad

    Restoring the Balance Between Culture and Nature at Lake Chad

    Lake Chad is disappearing. The consequences of this ecological disaster reaches deep into the communities that are sustained by this ecosystem. This is as much a humanitarian and security situation as an ecological one.

    Last December, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported that 2.6 million people face crisis levels of food insecurity and that the number is expected to rise. Add to this the presence of the armed group Boko Haram in parts of the region, and it becomes clear that these issues require an international and multi-faceted response.

    This will be at the top of the minds of decision-makers, scientists and civil society representatives as they gather in Abuja for the International Conference on Lake Chad this Monday. UNESCO will be among them to launch the Biosphere and Heritage of Lake Chad project.

    This innovative project draws on UNESCO’s 20 years in the region and will bring to bear all of the organization’s expertise not only in science, but also in culture, education and communication to develop innovative solutions from the ground up.

    Just as two strands of DNA are necessary for life, humankind and the ecosystem are bound together. This is why we will work with our partners and the concerned communities to formulate an approach to the management of the Lake Chad Basin, that will rely on the interdependency of people and the environment, blending science and local knowledge to create sustainable solutions to the restoration of this precious water resource, which supports 30 million people in the countries that share the lake.

    With support from the African Development Bank, and in collaboration with the Lake Chad Basin Commission, we will train local scientists in the cutting-edge imaging technologies to track changes in the environment.

    On the basis of these findings, we will pilot innovative projects for the restoration of damaged ecosystems, including the forest home of several endangered species and the nesting spots of dozens of species of migratory birds.

    UNESCO’s International Hydrological Programme will support Chad, Cameroun and Nigeria to integrate the African Flood and Drought Monitor system to ensure more agile coping mechanisms for seasonal variations.

    We will work with partners to protect the Yuri cow, which for generations has been emblematic of the people of the Lake Chad region and which is now under threat of extinction, because protecting the environment is a way of life and both a scientific and cultural endeavor.

    Lake Chad is as much steeped in the history of humanity as it is in the waters of the Chari, Logone and Yobe rivers, which form it. For tens of millions of years it has been at the centre of a delicate but rich web of life. It was once home to one of our oldest known ancestors, Toumaï, who walked these shores 7 million years ago.

    Which is why UNESCO will support all of the governments of the region to prepare the way for recognizing new trans-boundary sites of the basin as a UNESCO World Heritage site and Biosphere Reserves to promote reconciliation, resilience and, ultimately, peace.

    We need to act now to break the cycle of ecological disaster, livelihood disruption, mass displacement and political upheaval, which leads to further ecological disaster.

    These waters, among the largest waterways of Africa, provide a unique opportunity to build relationships between communities and across borders. This teeming source of life must be preserved to restore the bountiful resources that once surrounded Lake Chad and restored the people’s pride in our shared heritage.

    Azoulay is the Director-General of UNESCO

  • UNESCO to train 300 experts to implement Lake Chad project

    UNESCO to train 300 experts to implement Lake Chad project

    UNESCO says it will train 300 scientists, decision makers and community leaders in techniques of water resources management for the implementation of the Biosphere and Heritage of Lake Chad (BIOPALT) project.

    Mr Getachew Engida, the Deputy Director General of UNESCO announced this on Monday in Abuja.

    He spoke during the launch of the project at the ongoing International Conference of Lake Chad (ICLC).

    The theme of the conference is: `Saving the Lake Chad to Revitalise the Basin’s Ecosystem for Sustainable Livelihood, Security and Development.’

    Engida said that the project implementation will employ trends in technology, scientific research findings to ensure long term planning and successful execution.

    “The project aims to enhance our scientific understanding of the complex factors altering the Lake Chad: the effects of climate change, human activity, and how we can adapt to these changes.

    Read Also: UNESCO urges govt to sustain mother tongue

    “We will bring cutting edge technology, including drones and other imaging equipment, and provide training.

    “These new findings will be shared via databases and atlases to strengthen scientific cooperation, to collectively devise innovative responses.

    “Chad, Cameroun and Nigeria will integrate the African Drought Monitor system to share data,’’ he said.

    Engida said that the interventions to be deployed in the restoration of the lake were expected to launch it to trans-boundary World Heritage Site, as well as boost animal farming.

    “To ensure the long-term success of this project, the local people must have a stake in it.

    “The training will eventually reach some 30,000 residents who will be empowered to make decisions for their community, yet in harmony with the whole ecosystem.

    “A community radio will also reach two million more residents to understand the implications of sustainable water management in their daily lives.

    “By creating a common knowledge basis, we hope to set the region on course to have several new trans-boundary World Heritage Site and Biosphere Reserve.

    “This international recognition would further bind the destiny of the diverse groups in the region in finding a long-term sustainable balance,’’ he added.

    Engida recalled that over two million people in the region have been displaced and close to seven million people in the area faced food insecurity.

    Engida said that the issue of Lake Chad impacts heavily on climate change and the Sustainable Development Goals of 2030 calls for the collective action to eradicate poverty and tackle climate change.

    He noted that the restoration of Lake Chad is a universal imperative, adding that the world will be poorer ecologically and culturally without it.

    The Lake Chad Basin shrank for the past 30 years from 25,000 square kilometres in the 1960s to 2,500 square kilometres in 2000.

    NAN

     

  • UNESCO urges govt to sustain mother tongue

    The United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) has urged the Federal Government to adopt language policies that would ensure the sustenance of mother tongue.

    The International Mother Language Day (IMLD) is observed annually across the globe on February 21, to promote awareness of linguistic and cultural diversity and promote multilingualism.

    UNESCO’s National Professional Officer in charge of Culture, Mr Ifeanyi Ajaegbo, told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja that the sustenance of mother tongue would ensure it does not go extinct.

    Ajaegbo said there was the need for government to protect its indigenous languages, in view of the multilingual nature of the country, adding that it should be in the school curriculum and individual interaction.

    “UNESCO research shows that one language dies every two weeks worldwide, taking away people’s history and cultural heritage,” he said.

    He urged the government, stakeholders and parents to ensure that they encourage children to learn their indigenous languages, as well as communicate in it in public spaces.

    The Convention on the Rights of the Child requires that governments ensure “the development of respect for the child’s parents, his or her own cultural identity, language and values, for the national values of the country in which the child is living, the country from which he or she may originate, and for civilisations different from his or her own”.

    One hundred and ninety-six countries including Nigeria are signatories to the convention; Upholding international law includes upholding this promise to speakers of mother languages.

  • Yobe to rebuild Birnin Ngazargamu, last headquarters of Kanem Borno

    Yobe to rebuild Birnin Ngazargamu, last headquarters of Kanem Borno

    Yobe Government says it is rebuilding the 15th century Birnin Ngazargamu, the last headquarters of the Kanem Borno Empire under the ‘Mai’ Dynasty, to boost tourism and academic research.

    The Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Alhaji Baba Malam-Wali, disclosed this to the News men in Damaturu on Friday.

    The news men report that the ruins of the ancient city which was the capital of Kanem Borno Empire between 1460 and 1809 are still visible in its site.

    Malam-Wali said the state government had constituted a committee under the chairmanship of the SSG with the Vice- Chancellor and the Registrar of the State’s University, historians, archeologists and Islamic scholars as members.

    He said the committee was collecting archives on the history of Ngazargamu at the Arewa House, Kaduna, and Ibadan Museum, while the University of Maiduguri was commissioned to create a model of the city.

    Read Also: UNICEF, WHO to vaccinate over 2 million children in Borno, Yobe

    “Some scholars in Germany have already indicated interest to work in the project,” he said.

    According to the SSG, the state government is partnering with the National Commission for Museums and Monuments to excavate the sites.

    “We have also communicated to UNESCO for consideration of the city as a world Heritage site,” he said.

    Malam-Wali also said that the site would showcase life in Ngazargamu, administrative skills, commerce and the rich Islamic knowledge the capital city was known for.

    “The city has huge tourism potential which will be exploited by the state government to attract scholars, researchers and tourists from across the world with financial benefits to the state,” he said.

    NAN