Tag: youths

  • Swiss firm plans hospitality training for youths

    Young people or fresh graduates seeking new skills to improve their employability can gain from a hospitality workshop organised by the Swiss Education Group (SEG) on Saturday at the Eko Hotel and Suites, Victoria Island.

    Sally Mbanefo, Director-General, Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC), is one of the five speakers scheduled to speak at the training open to prospective students, fresh graduates or those considering a change in career.

    The training would expose the participants to careers in the hospitality industry including luxury event management, culinary arts, travel as well as tourism with the aim of helping them tap into the opportunities in a sector expected to provide up to seven million jobs by 2025.

    Participants will also be exposed to business knowledge, challenges and opportunities in the industry and how to overcome them, among others.

    Other seasoned speakers expected at the event are: Obinna Ekezie, MD/CEO Wakanow; Belinda Nwosu, Head of Hospitality department, Wavecrest College of Hospitality, Lagos; Nkem Odewunmi,  CEO Food Fashion Fusion; and Funmi Victor-Okigbo, MD/CEO No Surprises Events.

     

  • Foundation empowers youths

    Foundation empowers youths

    The Sarah Adebisi Sosan, (SAS) Foundation plans to give soft loans to youths in Irewe riverine community  of Lagos State.

    The initiative, which is anchored on the SAS new project, tagged: “Training for Rural Economic Development (TRED)”, held a two-day empowerment programme for Irewe youths.

    According to the Public Relations Officer of the Foundation, Mrs. Hameedat Balogun, the session had over 200 participants from the community.

    She said participants were trained on various empowerment schemes, which included how to produce liquid soap, body cream, shoes and bags and mosquito repellants.

    Balogun explained that the project was aimed at giving additional sources of income to the youth in the community aside their traditional fishing and mat making job.

    She said to further encourage the youths, the Foundation will also grant the youth soft loans to start their own small scale businesses.

    Some of the participants expressed gratitude to SAS for extending its activities to the community.

    A beneficiary, Temitope Oyefolu, said the scheme is a way of lifting the people out of poverty by enriching their lives through self empowerment.

    She thanked the founder of SAS, Princess Adebisi Sarah Sosan, for giving back to her community.

  • ITF trains 14m youths

    ITF trains 14m youths

    The Industrial Training Fund (ITF) has trained over 14 million Nigerians whose contributions to the overall growth of the country are immeasurable, its Acting Director- General, Mr. Dickson Onuoha, has said. Speaking with The Nation in Lagos, Onuoha said ITF, in the last few years, embarked on initiatives and strategies to equip Nigerians with skills for employability and entrepreneurship.

    He said: “Our renewed emphasis is premised on the fact that any credible effort at poverty eradication, job creation and an effective diversification of the economy as envisioned by the Federal Government will not meet with the required success if Nigerians are not trained.”

    ‘’In the last few months, especially with the coming of the incumbent management such efforts have been heightened.”

    Onuoha noted that as a foremost skills acquisition institution vested with the mandate of equipping Nigerians with skills, the management has commenced series of initiatives and strategies and expanded existing ones including setting in motion processes for the establishment of sector skills.

    He said the fund has established councils to provide opportunity for evaluation/ validation of skills requirements at national and state levels  periodically and expanded the technical skills development project.

    The project is a joint programme with the Nigerian Employers Consultative Association (NECA) to train 50 youths per centre through the Brown Field Model, using training centres of the organised private sector.

    Onuoha said the students Industrial Work Experience Scheme (SIWES) that is managed by the ITF but funded by the Federal Government, has been instrumental to the development of human capital.

  • SMEDAN, Sokoto train youths on entrepreneurship

    SMEDAN, Sokoto train youths on entrepreneurship

    The Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency (SMEDAN) and the Sokoto State Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency (SOSMEDA) have begun training 100 youths on entrepreneurship.

    SMEDAN and SOSMEDA organised the three-day training to provide the youth with skills on business development and establishment.

    At the opening of the training in Sokoto on Monday, SMEDAN  Director-General Dr Dikko Radda,  represented by the Director, Engineering, Technology & Infrastructure, Mr. Abu Ozigi, said Nigeria was unacceptably faced with large-scale youth unemployment.

    He said: ‘’SMEDAN is now set  to reposition itself for a focused delivery of business development services to Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) in the country, with particular emphasis on micro enterprises.

    ‘’SMEDAN is desirous that most of the enterprises in the micro category, which currently constitutes 99.8 per cent of MSMEs, grow to small and subsequently, medium enterprises. In this way, more jobs would be created and contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) would be enhanced.’’

    Radda said the two agencies were working out a sustainable funding mechanism for the beneficiaries of the training programme. This step, according to him, would subsequently be taken to upscale the gesture, while access to information on investments would be boosted.

    ‘’SMEDAN and Sokoto State Government have commenced discussions on the re-development of the Sokoto Industrial Development Centre (IDC). Furthermore, working with SOSMEDA, the agency shall provide access to information on investment opportunities in each local government area of the state,” he said.

    The Director-General, SOSMEDA, Hajiya Aishatu Hassan, commended Governor Aminu Tambuwal for according special priority and recognition to MSMEs.

    ‘’Such commendable efforts by the state government culminated in the recent establishment of the agency, while it provides sustainable moral and financial support to it. The training is aimed at further reducing poverty and unemployment in the state, while boosting the economy of the state,’’ she added.

    The Commissioner for Commerce, Industry and Tourism, Alhaji Aminu Bello, stated that the state government was taking steps to restore the lost glory of businesses in the state.

  • Appeal to Ijaw youths

    Niger Delta Avengers, citing the unfair allocation of oil blocks as part of their major grievances blew up Nembe Brass to Bonny trunk line belonging to Agip and Shell about last Saturday. This is the latest in the economic war that has reduced Nigeria oil production from 2.5million to 1.5million barrels per day. Delta State Information Commissioner, Jonathan Obuebite said ‘the activities of the group were adversely affecting Ijaw people whose only source of livelihood is the environment’. The Ijaw boys are shooting themselves in the leg. The communities affected will suffer the effect of pollution for the next few years. Investors are already moving to safer environments like Cross River and Akwa Ibom at a critical period when the area needs to get ready for the challenges of post oil period which globalised economy searching for renewable energy sets at 2030. Already Warri has lost its shine with the entertainment industry taking the greatest hit. In 14 years, oil as source of energy consumption will be near zero.

    The Ijaw unfortunately are Ijaw’s worst enemies. They have on account of a culture of entitlement been unable to compete with other ethnic groups such as Ikwere, a minority Igbo ethnic group that has dominated the politics of Rivers State producing the likes of Peter Odili, Rotimi Amaechi and Nyesom Wike. And while the Kalabaris showcase their Tam David-West, the Tamunos, Douglases, the Ijaw advertise the likes of Asari Dokubo who vacant-mindedly and without a sense of history denies the collective contribution of the rest of the federation to the liberation of Ijaw during the civil war and ex-militant, Government Ekpemupolo alias ‘Tompolo” who according to Chief Edwin Clark, lacks enough education to secure government job.

    But the fault is not in neither in Dokubo or Ekpemupolo’s stars but in the conspiracy of their leaders who in the past traded in their name in order to satisfy their greed. Most of the Ijaw leaders were in alliance with the north when Awolowo and his AG embarked on free education in the old Western Region. They were in politics in the Second Republic when Ambrose Alli of the old Bendel, Olabisi Onabanjo of Ogun State, Michael Ajasin of old Ondo and Lateef Jakande of Lagos established public universities to accommodate products of their free primary and secondary school programmes. But the Ijaw political elite and traditional rulers described by Saro Wiwa as ‘vultures’ denied their youth good education so that no one questions them as they collude with multinational oil companies to feed on the blood of the poor.

    What ill-educated Ijaw youths are now doing is nothing but a misdirected aggression. Their enemies are not Hausa-Fulani owners of oil bocks but their corrupt leaders and politicians who instead of confronting their past recently claim ‘Buhari’s war against corruption will lead to anarchy’. Ijaw leaders were part of past governments including that of Abacha regime alleged to have traded oil blocks to buy legitimacy. President Jonathan was Vice President for two years and President for six years. He had an opportunity to correct the mistakes of the past. But like many other Ijaw leaders, he merely empowered ill-educated Ijaw youths useful only for proxy war.

    Before him was Alfred Papapreye Diete-Spiff, a Naval Lieutenant Commander  who in 1967 at 25 years of age was appointed the first military Governor of Rivers State. His greatest legacy was the shaving of the head of Nigerian Observer newspaper’s reporter who had published a story about an impending teachers strike in Rivers on Spiff’s birthday. When Murtala Mohammed toppled Gowon government in 1975, Diete-Spiff who could not pay teachers in Rivers was cruising in the high seas in his private ship named ‘OginaBereton’ later seized by Murtala Mohammed who also allegedly stripped him of his rank. Spiff was later detailed to forfeit a total of 18 properties located in the Government Reserved Area, Trans-Amadi, Borikiri layout, Recreation Layout and Ogbunabali, all in Port Harcourt. He is today the Amanyanabo of Twon Brass in Bayeslsa State, a throne he ascended in 1996. When Umaru Dikko during the Oputa Truth Commission called attention to marginalization of Ijaws by their leaders,  Spiff before staging a walk out with Rivers delegates insisted no one would dictate to them on how to spend their own money.

    Melford Okilo who later became governor and senator served as Minister for Commerce and Tourism during Sani Abacha regime when most of the controversial oil blocks were allocated.

    Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, ‘Governor General’ of the Ijaw was said to be the mastermind of the then rampaging Niger Delta militants. His involvement in corruption and money laundering was exposed by governments of Britain, United States, South Africa, Bahamas and Seychelles as well as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and the World Bank under the Stolen Assets Recovery Initiative’. They revealed his portfolio of foreign assets which included accounts with five banks in the UK and further accounts with banks in Cyprus, Denmark and the United States; four London properties acquired for a total of £4.8m; a Cape Town harbour penthouse acquired for almost £1m, about £1m in cash stored in one of his London properties. When Britain’s Metropolitan police charged him to court, he jumped bail and escaped to Nigeria. He was later convicted in Nigeria but granted amnesty by President Jonathan, another Ijaw leader.

    Rivers State under Peter Odili (1999-2007) saw a surge in attacks on the oil industry by militants demanding greater benefits, kidnappings by ransom seekers, political violence and deadly robberies by gangs armed with AK-47 rifles.  EFCC in a 2007 report accused his government of ‘fraud, conspiracy, conversion of public funds, foreign exchange malpractice, money laundering, stealing and abuse of oath of office’. Human Rights Watch also issued a report detailing pervasive patterns of corruption and mismanagement at the state and local levels under Odili’s administration. In March 2007, Justice Ibrahim Buba gave “a perpetual injunction restraining the EFCC from arresting, detaining and arraigning Odili on the basis of his tenure as governor based on the purported investigation”. Odili was alleged to be the brain behind the split in Asari Dokubo-led IYC which led to the formation of MEND headed by Ateke Tom, Dokubo’s deputy in order to settle scores with Chief Edwin Clark.

    James Ibori was alleged to have spent Delta State money to fund Yar’Adua’s presidential election. On December 17, 2009, a Federal High Court sitting in Asaba, Delta State discharged and acquitted Ibori of all 170 charges of corruption brought against him by EFCC. Ibori was later found guilty of 10 counts of money laundering and conspiracy to defraud at Southwark Crown Court, London and on April 17, 2012, sentenced to 13 years. Some of his properties confiscated include a house in Hampstead, north London, a property in Shaftesbury, Dorset, and a mansion in Sandston, near Johannesburg, South Africa.

    Edwin Clark, 86, has been part of government since he was about 32. Kaita recently reminded him during one of his tirades against the north that he has always been a northern ally.  Clark shortly after a society wedding at age of 85 finally established Edwin Clark University in his village where students will pay about N400,000 per session. His response to critics of official looting by custodians of Niger Delta commonwealth was ‘‘who are they to tell us how we spend our money’?

    Ijaw youths, behold thy leaders.

  • N1b agric loan coming for youths

    A group known as Abia State Youths for Agriculture (YFA) has something big to look out for: a N1.340 billion loan from the Micro Small and Medium Enterprises Development Fund (MSMEDF).

    This was made known in a letter dated April 8 signed by Dr M. A. Olaitan of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to the Managing Director, Stateman Microfinance Bank Ltd, Uzuakoli, where the apex bank is asking them to provide collateral for the above sum.

    Speaking with The Nation, in Umuahia, the state Public Relations Officer (PRO) of YFA, Friday Chinedum said that the delay in accessing the fund is because they are yet to complete the provisions for the 30% required before the fund is released.

    “We are at the verge of doing that, which will not be long,” he said.

    Chinedum said that all hope is not lost in accessing the funds for the genuine farmers in the state and urged members of the YFA not to be dismayed as efforts are in top gear to ensure that they improve their farm yields this season with the loan.

    He said that members of YFA who have registered for the scheme will have nothing to regret, stressing that they should stop listening to those who intend to destroy the association through damaging and false statements.

    Chinedum said, “Our members should not listen to those who have the mindset to destabilise the association, as it is wrong for people to destroy the house they have helped to build, we need to be together to achieve our aim.”

    “It is expected that when the loan is accessed, we are going to train our members and youths in all areas of farming after which they will be given take-off loan which will be monitored to avoid misuse.”

     

  • CDC chair urges youths to be hard working

    Chairman, Community Development Committee (CDC) and SSA, Community Affairs, Ifako Ijaiye Local Government, Lagos State, Chief Ashimiyu Onifade has urged youths to be hardworking.

    He spoke during the election of the National Youth Council of Nigeria (NYCN) Ifako Ijaiye, Local Government branch in Lagos State.

    Chief Onifade urged youths to be careful and listen to advice from elders.

    “Youths have to work hard for what they get; don’t expect to achieve what you did not work for, present yourself very well, don’t misbehave, don’t be an enemy of your community, but be friendly to your society,” he said.

    Chief Onifade added that youths should work together for the betterment of the nation, nothing that to build a nation, you must first build yourself.

    He urged youths to put away the ambition of being without control, saying they should be open to learn from elders.

    Deputy Executive Secretary, Ifako Ijaiye Local Government, AbdulWahab AbdulKareem told the new leaders of the council to be alive to their responsibilities and show a sign of seriousness and positive change in the activities of the council.

    He added that they should be able to coordinate the affairs of all the councils in the local government and should be ready to serve and lead.

    He noted that the local government has always been and will always be there to assist the youths.

    Head of Department, Agric Research and Social Development, Ifako Ijaiye Local Government, Mrs Solo Adeyinka added that youths must be law abiding citizen. She said they must show practical examples of being a leader and work harder to lift the country following the present state of the economy.

    She urged them to come up with vocational skills asides their career, nothing that the local government empowers youths in vocational training and in provision of equipments for them to start up businesses of their own.

    She urged the new leaders of the council not to be biased, but should carry their followers along so that they can work in one accord to move the local government forward.

    Chairman, NYCN, Lagos State Chapter, Olayinka Oresile said the council is meant to be of benefits to her citizens so that they can be good citizens to the nation that would contribute to national development. He urged youths to be good ambassadors of their community.

     

  • ‘How youths can become great’

    Youths have been challenged to avoid social vices to safeguard their glorious future.

    This was the consensus at the Eagles’ Youth conference organised by Believer’s House of Freedom (BHF) and Star Diamond Group in Lagos last week.

    The theme of the conference that attracted hundreds of youths was discover the greatness in you.

    The convener, Pastor David Elo, said only youths that embrace zero tolerance to vices such as cultism, drug abuse and sexual immorality can be sure of a better future.

    The Senior Minister of Believer’s House of Freedom lamented that many youths were moving towards negative directions.

    Elo urged the government to pay more attention to youth development as well as creating platforms, programmes and opportunities for them to unleash their potentials, which will in turn be beneficial to the nation at large.

    “We don’t just want leaders but good leaders who can be a role model to the youth and whose life can be of emulation,” he said.

    He also lamented the increase in cult activities in the country and charged youths to flee from the act.

    On how youths can maximize the potentials, he advised: “Monitor your friends because negative influence has a way of affecting one’s destiny. Make up your mind that you want to succeed and look out for the talents that God has deposited in you. Discover it and work towards it.”

    The CEO of Star Diamond Group, Dr John Kome, called for youth development schemes to safeguard the future of the nation.

    He urged the current administration to ensure the adequate participation of youths in socio-economic development to redirect their focus from sexual immorality, cultism, drug abuse and addictions.

    Kome said: “If the government thinks Nigeria can move forward without the youths, it is a lie. Everyone wants to travel out of the country because they believe their best will show forth out there.

    “Our youths must abstain from sexual immorality and other bad acts; serve God and remain in Him. These are the secrets behind my wealth.”

  • Epina to train youths on ceramic manufacturing

    Epina Technologies Limited is to organise a training to hone the entrepreneurial skills of youths in the ceramics value chain.

    Its Chief Executive Officer, Professor Patrick Oaikhinan, said the training, which holds from May 16 to 18, at the Federal Institute of Industrial Research Oshodi, (FIIRO), would reduce unemployment.

    He told The Nation that the training would expose participants to the rudiments of ceramics production. He said at the end of the training, youths would also be able to set up their own businesses along the ceramics value chain.

    Oaikhinan, who noted that ceramics is a sector that has been under-exploited in the country, said it became necessary to organise such training in order to develop the sector to its full potential by developing local production in order to stop ceramic importation into the country.

    He expressed regrets that despite its wider application, ceramics seemed to get little attention of investors in the country due to lack of required skills for its production.

    He explained that the would-be entrepreneurs need little capital and small space to start production, adding that there are varieties of things they could produce at the back of their houses including jewelries and home utensils.

    Oaikhinan said the use of ceramic materials across a variety of applications has grown exponentially in recent years. According to him, these include transportation, communication, energy and manufacturing.

    In order to meet the growing production capacity required across disparate applications, the industry, he said, must drive innovation in manufacturing and nurture a skilled and knowledgeable workforce.

    The CEO of Epina Technologies said the firm is offering unique three days practical training in ceramics – a virtual programme bringing together all the resources from industry and education to provide expert advice and training to help attendees on their way to an exciting career.

    “Our trainers share their specialist knowledge and resources on raw materials processing to ensure that essential knowledge and skills are passed to future generations, enabling them to make significant contributions towards an ever more vibrant and forward-thinking industry,” he said.

  • N1b agric loan coming for youths

    A group known as Abia State Youths for Agriculture (YFA) has something big to look out for: a N1.340 billion loan from the Micro Small and Medium Enterprises Development Fund (MSMEDF).

    This was made known in a letter dated April 8 signed by Dr M. A. Olaitan of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to the Managing Director, Stateman Microfinance Bank Ltd, Uzuakoli, where the apex bank is asking them to provide collateral for the above sum.

    Speaking with The Nation, in Umuahia, the state Public Relations Officer (PRO) of YFA, Friday Chinedum said that the delay in accessing the fund is because they are yet to complete the provisions for the 30% required before the fund is released.

    “We are at the verge of doing that, which will not be long,” he said.

    Chinedum said that all hope is not lost in accessing the funds for the genuine farmers in the state and urged members of the YFA not to be dismayed as efforts are in top gear to ensure that they improve their farm yields this season with the loan.

    He said that members of YFA who have registered for the scheme will have nothing to regret, stressing that they should stop listening to those who intend to destroy the association through damaging and false statements.

    Chinedum said, “Our members should not listen to those who have the mindset to destabilise the association, as it is wrong for people to destroy the house they have helped to build, we need to be together to achieve our aim.”

    “It is expected that when the loan is accessed, we are going to train our members and youths in all areas of farming after which they will be given take-off loan which will be monitored to avoid misuse.”