Connect with us

Business

N’East Youth To Benefit From FG’s CTG Policy

Published

on

Minister of State, Industry, Trade and Investment, Hajiya Asiha Abubakar, says youths in the crises prone areas in the North-East would soon benefit from the national Cotton, Textile and Garment (CTG) policy.
Abubakar said this in Abuja recently during the graduation ceremony of first batch of the “20 Train the Trainees’’ workshop.
The graduands were given equipment to start-up their own businesses.
“To promote the policy, we need to focus on skill acquisition because Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) are key to development,’’ she said.
The minister said in the next three months the youth in the North-East would be trained in sewing, garment making and image consulting.
She said the policy was aimed at revitalising and boosting the growth and development of the cotton, textile and garment industry.
She advised the graduands not to sell the equipment that would be given to them but should rather seek for assistance from the Industrial Training Fund (ITF).
She said the Federal Government had given priority attention to the revitalisation of the CTG industry due to its huge job creation potential.
The Director-General, Industrial Training Fund (ITF), Mr Joseph Ari, said the graduands were the first set of the 100 youths that would be trained.
Ari said the training would be in five batches.
He said the fund was emulating the Brazilian model which used mobile workshop to train its youths.
He said it was one of the special intervention programmes to drive the Nigeria Economic Recovery and Growth Plan.
The director-general said the mobile workshop was introduced in the country in 2013 and was not put to use until he assumed office.
Ari said that the fund had designed strategies to enable it to achieve its mandate through the use of mobile workshops.
According to him, the fund engaged Style House, a Fashion Creative Consulting Agency in Nigeria with years of experience in the fashion industry to conduct the training.
He said the training lasted for three weeks, adding that participants had learnt all the practical aspects of the training.
“This training will go a long way in creating jobs as well as reducing restiveness among the youth,’’ Ari said.
He said that ITF was ready to provide dynamic and proactive services aimed at achieving its mandate in line with the government agenda.
The director-general said that the development of industrial skills was one of the most critical issues being faced by Nigeria presently.
He added that the emphasis on skills development globally was increasingly on employable skills as the practical requisite and immediate skills needed by companies in the labour market.

Continue Reading

Business

NIGCOMSAT Seeks Policy To Harness AI Potentials 

Published

on

The Nigerian Communications Satellite Limited (NIGCOMSAT), the country’s satellite operator, has called for immediate promolgation of policy action that will enable the country to harness the potentials of Artificial Intelligence (AI).
NIGCOMSAT, also warned that Nigeria risks missing out on Africa’s projected $1.2trillion share of the global AI economy by 2030.
Managing Director of NIGCOMSAT, Nkechi Egerton-Idehen, disclosed this in a statement issued at the weekend following her participation in the Meeting of the National Council for Communications, Innovation, and Digital Economy.
“Artificial intelligence is reshaping industries, economies, and societies worldwide, with projections that it will contribute up to $15.7trillion to the global economy by 2030. Africa stands to gain $1.2trillion of this if the right policies and innovations are in place”, Idehen said, citing a PricewaterhouseCoopers report.
The NIGCOMSAT MD underscored the transformative potential of AI in agriculture, highlighting its applicability in Benue State, widely regarded as Nigeria’s “food basket.”
According to her, machine learning tools could revolutionize agricultural practices by improving pest detection and optimizing planting schedules using satellite imagery.
“AI offers us the chance to not only flourish economically but also to achieve food security. However, we must ask ourselves if we are prepared to manage this technology responsibly”, she added.
Idehen also noted that internet access remains a significant barrier to AI adoption in Nigeria.
“For AI tools to be effective, basic digital infrastructure is essential. Addressing this gap must be a priority.
“AI is happening. We have the opportunity to manage this technology revolution responsibly, both in Africa and globally, through innovation and governance”, she said.
In August 2024, the Federal Ministry of Communications, Innovation, and Digital Economy released a draft National Artificial Intelligence Strategy, aiming to position Nigeria as a global leader in AI.

Corlins Walter

Continue Reading

Business

We Have Spent N1bn On Electrification -LG Boss

Published

on

The Chairman of Emohua Local Government Council, Chief David Omereji, has said  the council has so far spent over N1 billion  for the electrification of communities in the area.
Omereji said this while addressing staff of the council at the council headquarters recently.
He said the move was part of his administration’s resolve to ensure  peace and development of the LGA.
According to him,  the Council spent about N29 million on monthly basis for the maintenance of the Emohua Local Vigilante group known as OSPAC, with each member being paid a stipend of N100, 000 monthly.
He diaclosed that 11 out of the 14 wards are currently enjoying electricity, while efforts are on to light-up the remaining ones.
“I also want to use this opportunity to inform the political class for purposes of records and for the understanding of the people that the Council under my watch have done more than enough”, he said .
The Emolga boss explained  that all that have been achieved  were through the personal effort of the Council, without support from anybody as rumoured in some quarters.
Omereji further reaveled that a number of other projects, including roads, fencing of schools, hospitals, courts premises, and reconstruction of some abandoned buildings at the Council Headquarters are being undertaken by his administration.
He enjoined the people of the area to support his administration’s drive to bring purposeful development to the LGA.
The Emohua Council boss, who reiterated his hatred for noise making, stated that  his  works would speak for him, and solicited the support of staff of the council and the entire people of the area.
He noted the fact that some people may not be happy with his achievements, saying that he would remain focused, while  advising critics of his government to do so constructively with facts and figures.

King Onunwor

Continue Reading

Business

Ogoni Rejects NNPC-Sahara  OML11 Deal … Wants FG’s Intervention

Published

on

The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has raised some ethical questions over a Financial and Technical Services Agreement (FTSA) between Sahara Energy and West African Gas Limited (WAGL), an affiliate of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC).
MOSOP said the agreement was not done in good faith, not in the interest of the Nigerian people, and did not follow due process.
Foremost Ogoni born activist and  MOSOP  leader, Fegalo Nsuke, who made this known in Abuja, weekend, described the Sahara-WAGL deal as fraudulent, deceptive and an insult on the intelligence and integrity of the Nigerian nation.
Nsuke called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to cancel that FTSA between Sahara Energy and WAGL, noting that the agreement is fraught with irregularities and deceptive.
“What Sahara and the NNPC did in the FTSA between Sahara and WAGL is shameful and depicts high level corruption in public service of our country.
“WAGL is an affiliate of Sahara and the NNPC. How then can Sahara go into an agreement with its own affiliate? It’s as good as going into an agreement with itself. This is deceptive and fraudulent”, Nsuke said.
He continued that “Sahara Energy is certainly not a company the Ogoni people want on their soil and we are calling on Mr. President, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, to terminate any deal between the NNPC and Sahara Energy over OML 11, and to allow for an inclusive arrangement that considers a fair treatment of the Ogoni people in the distribution of revenues from natural resource extraction on Ogoni soil.
“The last Ogoni Congress has been unequivocal on the Ogoni demand for justice and has given a clear path to resolve the three decade old conflict between all critical parties.
“It will be good to explore this path to peace and development for Ogoni and for our country”.
Nsuke accused Sahara Energy and the NNPC of frustrating the progress made by MOSOP to achieve a permanent solution to the Ogoni problem.
He urged a presidential intervention with deep consideration for a fair treatment of the Ogoni people in order to permanently address the problem.
He noted that Sahara Energy should give up on the Ogoni area to allow for an engagement in the interest of the country and the people.
Recall that MOSOP and Sagara Energy have recently been engaged in a row in what MOSOP describes as an unholy relationship between Sahara Energy and the NNPC over OML 11.
MOSOP expressly rejected Sahara Energy and called for a fair treatment of the Ogoni people in natural resource extraction in Ogoni.
It noted that Ogoni people, led by MOSOP, paid the sacrifice to take the oil from Shell, hence “the position of MOSOP must be taken into consideration in decisions relating to resumption of oil production in Ogoni”.

Continue Reading

Trending