Tag: West Africa

  • Nigeria Academy of Education to host West Africa

    THE Nigerian Academy of Education (NAE) is preparing to host heads of educational institutions and government officials from the West African Sub-region at the inaugural edition of the West Africa Education Conference next month.

    The conference to be held in Abuja October 8-12 in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Education would feature talks about curriculum, certification, inclusive education, cross-border and Open Distance Learning (ODL), Culture and economy as levers for regional integration.

    President Muhammadu Buhari, who is also Chairman of ECOWAS, is expected to attend the conference which has the United Nations Under Secretary for West Africa, Muhammad Ibn Chambas, as Keynote speaker.

    Education Minister, Mallam Adamu Adamu and the NAE President, Prof Elizabeth Ike, are hosts.

    Prof Eke said member states would benefit from learning how education is run in neighbouring countries.

    “The region has common issues, albeit in varying degrees, like access, funding, teacher shortages, infrastructural problems and education of displaced children. Also, greater mobility of labour had been envisaged; unplanned rural-urban migration and slow improvement in girls’ education are still matters of concern.

    “But we know little of how our neighbours are handling these issues. Are there mutually beneficial practices and strategies to learn? These constituted the backdrop for conceiving the West Africa Education Conference,” Prof. Eke said.

    Beyond the conference, Prof Eke said NAE is seeking cooperation of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to boost education across all levels within the sub-region.

    The partnership which aims to promote cooperation, exchanges and similar supports among ECOWAS member states through its Department of Education, Science and Culture, rides on existing treaties like the ECOWAS Protocol A/P3/1/03, Article 5, 6 and 7 which relate to Education and Training at the basic, intermediate and higher levels.

    Prof Eke said in working with ECOWAS, the Academy would concentrate on activities relating to education, training, research and Community Support Service in the areas of higher education and training; youth, gender development and empowerment; language immersion, information and experience sharing, regional integration, academic mobility and other related activities.

    “This partnership makes it easy for us at NAE to facilitate exchange of information and documents of common interest that will ultimately lead to a rise in the standard of education across West Africa,” Prof Eke said.

  • Overland explores West African market

    TO explore West Africa’s aviation market, through the opportunities provided by the Single African Air Transport Market, Overland Airways has started flights to Cotonou, Republic of Benin and Lome, Togo.

    Speaking last week during the inaugural flight to both countries, Overland Airways Managing Director, Capt Edward Boyo, said the airline planned to boost integration through the flights.

    He described the development as historic and the beginning of an initiative to unite the over 400 million people in West Africa.

    He said: “Overland Airways has come to provide economic integration between Nigeria, Republic of Benin and Togo. We have come to promote trade, which happens when people move from one point to the other. It is possible for prosperity and economic development to come to our lands.

    “We are adding more value. Economic integration has no end; it only has a beginning. We are going to intensify the relationship between Nigeria, a very large economy in West Africa, and the rest of the 400 million people in West Africa, because we are not doing enough trade. Our people must trade with one another. This is what the Economic Community of West African States is all about.”

    He said ECOWAS had made it possible for people within the region to move from one place to another without visas, hence the need to provide the needed air transportation.

    Togo Civil Aviation Authority Director-General, Dokisime Latta, stated that the arrival of Overland was a good thing just as SAATM was a noble idea.

    According to him, Overland is the 14th airline to start flights to the country, and will be supported by the government and people of Togo.

    Nigeria’s Ambassador to the Republic of Benin, Kayode Oguntuase, said the arrival of Overland signaled the beginning of exploring the regional markets in West Africa, adding that it would facilitate trade between the countries involved.

    “Overland is coming at a very good time because there is a gap in air transportation. The roads are so bad that people avoid going by road. With this development, we can make 25 minutes journey from Nigeria to Cotonou and vice-versa. We are encouraged that Overland is here and we assure the airline that this land will be a rewarding one,” he said.

  • We remain committed to stability of West Africa, says Buhari

    PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari has said his administration will continue to work with Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) countries to ensure stability in the sub-region as cross-border crimes pose more challenges to people and governments.

    “ECOWAS is doing its best, and as you know, Nigeria is fully involved in the process of restoring stability in Guinea Bissau,” Buhari told the Ambassador of Guinea Bissau, Mr. Henrique Andriano Da Silva, at the State House, Abuja yesterday after receiving his Letter of Credence.

    The President, in a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said the relationship between Nigeria and Guinea Bissau had always been healthy, noting that as the country regains its stability, there would be more room for improvement.

    Buhari, who also received the Letter of Credence from the Ambassador of Thailand, Mr. Wattana Kunwongse, said Nigeria and Thailand had a lot to share in the ongoing effort to diversify the economy, with focus on the agricultural sector.

    “Our relationship has been very long and very commendable. We appreciate the help we get in agriculture from Thailand and we will keep working together,” he said.

    The Ambassador of Guinea Bissau said his country remains grateful for all the support it received from Nigeria during the prolonged political crisis.

    “We are very grateful for your commitment to ensure peace in Guinea Bissau and your soldiers have been in our country to ensure stability,” the ambassador said.

    The Ambassador of Thailand said Nigeria’s position as a “regional power” puts it in the spotlight for the recovery and stability of Africa.

    “Under your leadership and guidance, we believe the economy will recover and the entire country will be strengthened,’’ he said.

     

  • West Africa as a story basket

    Pidgin English may be widely spoken in some parts of Nigeria, but it is not in any renowned genre in the realms of African literature. This indigenous language – an amalgam of corrupted English and local languages – earned a space at the just concluded Story Making West Africa which showcased indigenous literary works in the West African sub-region.

    It was an initiative of the British Council Nigeria in conjunction with African Story Book Initiative. Participants were drawn from Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Ghana and Senegal.

    Mimi Werna, a young upbeat Nigerian mother and a rookie writer, displayed how an indigenous language could influence young impressionable minds through the rendition of her story book themed Magical Rainbow River. The reading of her book in English was a fleeting moment, but reading the same book in pidgin version, roused the audience – an assemblage of writers, illustrators, arts critics, British Council officials and sundry literature stakeholders from other African countries who converged on Abuja for the one-week boot camp.

    Mohammed Saleh, a polyglot, rendered his River of Blessings in English, Hausa and French. It is a story infused with the essence of unity of purpose; an allegory of how animals of different breeds, surmounted difficulties through collaboration and support to reach their goal.

    The import of visual as an influence of learning was not lost on the organizers. Each writer was also paired with an illustrator, who through creative illustration brought the stories to life. Those paired with the writers of the winning entries were: Edwin Irabor for the Magical Rainbow River; Idowu Abayomi for Aku the Sun Maker and Awwal Sakiwa for the River of Blessings.

    Lisa Treffry-Goatley, the publisher of African Storybook shared an inspiring story African Unity Race, hinting that several of the stories developed at the workshop would be considered for publishing, not just in English but in local languages as well.

    The workshop which started on March 12 and ended on March 16 brought together writers and illustrators in a residential workshop for the production of mother-tongue based multilingual storybooks. There were also trainers from the African Storybook Initiative. The workshop was a component of the broader Story Making West Africa project which aims to promote the arts, education and mother-tongue based multilingual education in Sub-Saharan Africa. Story Making West Africa workshop pilots an initiative to create stories in indigenous languages and is an opportunity for individual West African writers and illustrators to contribute to the production of these storybooks at any African Storybook reading level, in indigenous languages and English.

    Among the criteria for selection was the ability to write, speak and read competently in English and an indigenous African language. Writers of the following languages were especially encouraged to apply: Pidgin, Ashanti Twi, Ga, Krio, Mende, Themne, Limba, Pulaar, Wolof, Kanuri, Fulfulde, Ijaw and Igbo. Experienced language or literacy educators – teachers, librarians, lecturers and others engaged with educational work with young children or language teaching were also encouraged to apply for the resident workshop. Original idea for a story or a character or a traditional indigenous story put applicants at an advantage.  Similar criteria applied to illustrators who should be experienced in illustration for educational publishing.

    Louisa Waddingham, British Council’s Director of Programmes, said the workshop had contributed to the organisation’s agenda to help improve learning outcomes for students by creating accessible, low cost reading material in languages that they are most familiar with, and helping to build foundational literacy skills.

    She said: “It demonstrates our commitment to promote the arts, and mother-tongue based multilingual education in sub-Saharan Africa. I am pleased to see representatives from so many languages across Nigeria and from Sierra Leone, where I had the pleasure of living in; from Ghana and from Senegal.

    “For the British Council, this is an excellent opportunity to facilitate connections and collaboration across the sub-region and to help West African writers and illustrators contribute to the production of these storybooks at any African Storybook reading level, in indigenous languages and English.”

    She said it was amazing that about 15 stories were developed at the workshop within a very short period.

    Mohammed Ahmed, the Director of Schools Education and Society, said development of indigenous languages was attracting national and international attention, pointing out that the plan by the Ministry of Education to convene a meeting this month on how language could be used more effectively to support learning outcomes for all students was a right step.

    Ahmed said the initiative was a pilot programme to test and see if there could be demand for such educational materials if they were developed. “What we are really interested in is not just the workshop itself but the sustainability plan and the monitoring and evaluation plan we have built into it; to begin to assess how quickly these resources are getting into schools, how our children are able to use them and within the context of other education efforts to support teachers’ reforms, teaching pedagogies and so on.”

    Mrs. Dorcas Wepukhulu from Kenya, who is a Partner with African Storybook and a Development Coordinator for the project, said all the writers in the camp showed commitment to literature in Africa and displayed sense of collaboration, making the workshop unique due to its diversity. She believed that the workshop helped the writers acquire literacy in English and other languages they are familiar with for communication. “And we have seen the result from our pilot project, some of the kids who were not confident to stand and read when they are given the text can now gain confidence and interact in the language they are familiar with, and gradually they learn to read in English and other languages.”

     

    • Yoyo writes from Lagos
  • Osun airport MRO facilities: a model for maintenance of aircraft in West Africa

    Every year, Nigerian airlines spend billions of naira to service aircraft in the fleets outside the country because we do not have functional Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) facilities. Governor Aregbesola has called for the establishment of MRO facilities over the years which have fallen on deaf ears, and the country has continued to lose hard currency because her airlines do so abroad. One of the major challenges confronting the aviation sector in Nigeria is the lack of facility to carry out maintenance checks on aircraft.

    New Osun Airport MRO facilities will save Nigeria billions of naira annually, which is one of the lessons that the strategic mega project taught Nigeria. When the first phase of MKO Abiola International Airport, Ido Osun, Osun State, is completed, the facility will save the country foreign exchange of billions of naira per annum. As aircraft manufacturers move towards composite materials and avionics become more sophisticated, the Osun Airport hangar maintenance facility will need to respond to the new requirements. The aircraft maintenance facility will resemble an industrial facility which will require remediation of toxic effluents, air pollution permits, safety standards for working in hazardous areas and a high tech facility with laboratories and clean rooms.

    The Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) facility at Osun Airport is nearing its completion. On request of the state government, the federal government pledged support for the project, and the facility will become a national hangar. However, a nice and large hangar does not necessarily mean that the technical knowledge and man power will be available to run the facility and provide high-quality maintenance services. Who will become responsible for operating the facility and provide maintenance services? Will domestic and foreign airlines be interested in using the facility?

    In order to better serve several airlines in Nigeria, Osun Airport Aircraft Maintenance Repair and Overhaul facility is in good location. All facilities provide light airframe maintenance for both narrow body and wide body aircraft. Osun Airport facility is our home base, and covers nearly 2.7 million square feet (about 250,000 square metres or the size of 47 football fields). It was specifically designed to provide a smooth flow of work and material. Airframe maintenance work is performed in one area, aircraft engine maintenance work in another, and component maintenance in yet another. Meanwhile, all three are tied together by an efficient, reliable multi-vehicle transportation system capable of delivering material and parts quickly.

    Osun Technical Operation hangar features state-of-the-art design, and is devoted to specific responsibilities for the maintenance, repair and overhaul of your fleet.

    It has been revealed that West and Central African carriers expend at least $1bn on maintenance of their aircraft annually outside the region. This is as airlines in the country spend at least $1.8m regularly in carrying out C-Checks on their aircraft outside the country. The federal government has also said that it would formulate policies that would make Nigerian airlines to remain in business rather than allow them to close shop.

    Engr. Isaac Balami, the immediate past president of National Association of Aircraft Pilots and Engineers (NAAPE), has disclosed that all the airlines in the West and Central Africa expend $1bn in maintenance of their aircraft.  “Airlines in this region expend $1bn on the maintenance of their aircraft annually, but with this now, such maintenance can now be carried out within the region and this will reduce capital flight out of Nigeria and the sub-region.”

    Leasing of maintenance and repair space can be costly. Osun Airport will build its reputation on the availability of space and excellent service to aircraft maintenance, repair and overhaul companies. Osun Airport will provide multiple types of space availability and facilities to accommodate the needs of airport operation. With a smoother start-up and transition process, tools, equipment and materials to the airport with greater ease and less complication, Osun airport will deliver.

    After waiting for more than 20 years, the people of Osun are now set to witness the launch of the country’s best airport hangar facility. With an initial capacity of three million passengers a year, the mega airport is among the largest airports in Africa. Over time, its capacity is expected to rise to 10 million passengers a year, making it one of the highest-capacity airports on the content.

    The new multimillion dollar airport is seating on a 4,500-hectare piece of land in a less crowded area with no heavy traffic jam like in the overcrowded capital. It also has a larger terminal and runways with a capacity to host more people and flights.

    Boosting the economy in Osun

    With a new airport that can accommodate more passengers and flights, the economy of Osun is expected to expand. The government of Senegal also hopes that the airport will help to diversify the country’s economy, which has for a long time relied on Abuja. The airport will serve as the centrepiece of the “Airport City” and the team is already planning to develop commercial installations such as hotels, malls, and other business facilities around the facility. At least 1,000 local retailers will be allowed to operate duty-free shops on the site, which will have a direct impact on the local economy.

    Since the liquidation of Nigeria Airways by the federal government in 2004, which had functional Maintenance Repair and Overhaul (MRO) facilities that could occupy at least two Boeing aircraft at a time, airlines in the country have resorted to taking out their aircraft outside the country for required checks. Unfortunately, a country like Nigeria with its pedigree as ‘Giant of Africa’ does not have an aircraft MRO facility.

    Osun airport will be the first in Nigeria to provide a functional Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) facilities in the 21st century.

     

    • Donald writes from Benin City inwalomhe.donald@yahoo.com

     

  • India grateful to Nigeria, Benin for help in recovering missing ship

    India grateful to Nigeria, Benin for help in recovering missing ship

    India has thanked the governments of Nigeria and Benin for their help and support in locating a ship that went missing off West Africa coast with 22 Indians on board.

    India’s External Affairs Minister, Sushma Swaraj on Tuesday said the tanker had been released.

    Swaraj, who, on Monday, sought the assistance of the Nigerian Government in recovering the ship, shared the news of the release on her Twitter handle, @SushmaSwaraj.

    Read also: Indian envoy: MOOCs help youths skill up

    “I am happy to inform that Merchant Ship Marine Express with 22 Indian nationals on board has been released,” she tweeted.

    In a later tweet, the minister further thanked the governments of Nigeria and Benin for their help and support.

    The minister had earlier that she spoke with Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, who “promised all help and assistance in locating the missing ship”.

    She added that a helpline was also set up.

    The external affairs ministry had on February 3 announced that the vessel Marine Express (oil tanker), owned by Mumbai-based Anglo Eastern shipping company with 22 Indians on board was “presumably missing off the coast of Benin in the Gulf of Guinea”.

    The ministry’s spokesperson, Raveesh Kumar, tweeted that the Indian mission in the Abuja was in contact with authorities in Nigeria and Benin and both countries had coordinated efforts to locate the missing vessel.

    NAN

  • Google honours Keshi with Doodle

    Google honours Keshi with Doodle

    Google on Tuesday marked the 56th birthday of the late Nigerian football icon, Stephen Keshi, with Doodle.

    A Google Doodle is a special, temporary alteration of the logo on Google’s homepages that commemorates holidays, events, achievements and people.

    Mr Taiwo Kola-Ogunlade, Google’s Communications and Public Affairs Manager, Anglophone West Africa, made the assertion during a chat with Google in Lagos.

    According to Kola-Ogunlade, Stephen Keshi was born in Azare, Bauchi State, Nigeria, and was a member of the famed St. Finbarrs College Football Academy of 1977.

    He said that he was later called up for the Junior Eagles and subsequently the Super Eagles in preparation for the 1980 African Cup of Nations competition.

    “Football took Keshi all over the world as he played across Africa, Europe, and the U.S.

    “Known affectionately as `Big Boss’, he was beloved as a player for Nigeria’s national team, where he earned more than 60 caps and for representing the country at the FIFA World Cup and Africa Cup of Nations,’’ he said.

    READ ALSO : Google doodle honours Chinua Achebe

    Kola-Ogunlade said that after his great success as a player, Keshi moved into coaching, the next phase of his career, adding that when the “Big Boss’’ became the coach of the Togo national team, he brought his trademark passion with him.

    The Google manager said that against the odds, Keshi led Togo all the way to a qualifying spot in the 2006 World Cup in Germany.

    “He achieved his personal dream in 2011, when he became an indigenous national coach of the Super Eagles, cementing his place in African and world football history.

    “Coaching the Nigerian team, Keshi won the African Cup of Nations in 2013, and in 2014 became the first African coach of an African nation to make it to the knockout round of a World Cup.

    “Keshi is one of the only two men to win the Africa Cup of Nations as both a player and a manager, a testament to his wit, talent, and love for the sport.

    “A big cheer for this football legend on what would have been his 56th birthday!’’ he said.

     

  • West Africa’s rice production at risk, says study

    A study has  warned  that the dry-season irrigated rice in West Africa’s Sahel region has reached the critical threshold of 37 degrees Celcius – the tipping point.

    It added that further temperature rise could devastate rice yields in the region due to decreasing photosynthesis at high temperatures.

    According to the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the Sahel will experience higher average temperatures as well as changes in rainfall patterns over the course of the 21st century. These changes threaten food security and the livelihoods of the region’s predominantly rural population.

    “Our model shows that without adaptation, irrigated rice yields in West Africa’s Sahel region in the dry season would decrease by about 45 per cent, but with adaptation, they would decrease significantly less – by about 15 per cent,” explained the lead author Dr Pepijn van Oort, a  Crop Modeler at Africa Rice Centre (AfricaRice).

    Oort clarified that it was important to keep in mind that this is a West Africa average, and that there are big differences within West Africa. “Things are better in the cooler coastal regions and a lot worse in the hotter inland sites,” he added.

    “Also, more investigation is needed to understand clearly photosynthesis processes at extreme temperatures, as there has been almost no research conducted on rice at such high temperatures,” Dr van Oort cautioned.

    In addition, he said there is need to explore further adaptation options, such as shifting sowing dates more into the cold dry season.

    Although rice thrives well in hot and warm climates, high temperatures of more than 35 degrees Celcius can damage plant processes and lead to lower yields. Rice is also vulnerable to cold temperatures, which can slow growth.

    The study forecasts that in East Africa, rising temperatures will create new opportunities for rice. In East Africa rice is grown mostly in the highlands, which are often too cold for the crop, and this will improve with higher temperatures. Also, rice could benefit from increased CO2.

    However, improved water and nutrient management will be needed to have the maximum benefit, the study added.

  • Group plans ConMin West Africa

    The second international trade fair for construction machinery ConMin West Africa will take place in Abuja mid-next year. This is coming on the heels of the success of ConMin West Africa 2017,

    The German service provider for international exhibitions IMAG, with its Nigerian partner Afrocet Montgomery, is offering companies the opportunity to showcase their products in Nigerian market.

    The trade fair’s inaugural edition last June and the attendant national mining summit were very successful as it attracted over 1,500 visitors and 44 exhibitors from 11 countries. They included industry giants, such as Bosch, Case, Dangote, Elkon and thyssenkrupp Industrial Solutions.

    ConMin West Africa will see suppliers, manufacturers and solution providers showcase an array of products from the construction, building materials and mining sectors. The show’s organisers have unveiled a new pavilion for 2018 for sustainability; companies will showcase their products for water treatment plants, pipeline construction as well as waste systems. As last year, the conference will be accompanied by a business forum with technical sessions to which exhibitors will make contributions.

    The summit will once more take place alongside ConMin West Africa. This two-day conference will see experts share their views about the latest development in the sector.

  • Human trafficking: 40 arrested, 500 others rescued in West Africa

    Human trafficking: 40 arrested, 500 others rescued in West Africa

    Forty people were arrested and 500 people rescued after a swoop on human trafficking across West Africa, international police organisation Interpol said on Thursday.

    The Interpol-led action comes amid a global outcry sparked by footage of Africans being sold as slaves in Libya, often the final transit for migrants wanting to reach Europe.

    In a statement, Interpol said that some 500 people, including 236 minors, had been rescued in simultaneous operations across Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger and Senegal.

    Read Also: 16 Edo girls returned from Libya with pregnancy

    Forty suspected traffickers were arrested.

    “The results of this operation underline the challenge faced by law enforcement and all stakeholders in addressing human trafficking in the Sahel region,” said the operation’s coordinator, Innocentia Apovo.

    The 40 arrested face prosecution for offences including human trafficking, forced labour and child exploitation.

    “They are accused of forcing victims to engage in activities ranging from begging to prostitution, with little or no regard for working conditions or human life,” Apovo said.