Showing posts with label Business Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business Day. Show all posts

Monday, May 13, 2019

Amazon Offers To Help Employees Start Delivery Business

In this Oct. 10, 2018, file photo Amazon Prime boxes are loaded on a cart for delivery in New York. Amazon, which is racing to deliver packages faster, is turning to its employees with a proposition: Quit your job and we’ll help you start a business delivering Amazon package. The offer, announced Monday, May 13, 2019, comes as Amazon seeks to speed up its shipping time from two days to one for its Prime members. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

BY JOSEPH PISANI

NEW YORK (AP)
— Amazon, which is racing to deliver packages faster, is turning to its employees with a proposition: Quit your job and we’ll help you start a business delivering Amazon packages.

The offer, announced Monday, comes as Amazon seeks to speed up its shipping time from two days to one for its Prime members. The company sees the new incentive as a way to get more packages delivered to shoppers’ doorsteps faster.

Amazon says it will cover up to $10,000 in startup costs for employees who are accepted into the program and leave their jobs. The company says it will also pay them three months’ worth of their salary.

The offer is open to most part-time and full-time Amazon employees, including warehouse workers who pack and ship orders. Whole Foods employees are not eligible to receive the new incentives.

Seattle-based Amazon.com Inc. declined to say how many employees it expects to take them up on the offer.

The new employee incentive is part of a program Amazon started a year ago that let anyone apply to launch an independent Amazon delivery business and provided $10,000 in reimbursements to military veterans.

The program’s expansion is part of the company’s plan to control more of its deliveries on its own, rather than rely on UPS, the post office and other carriers. Startup costs start at $10,000 and contractors that participate are able to lease blue vans with the Amazon smile logo stamped on the side.

Overall, more than 200 Amazon delivery businesses have been created since it launched the program last June, said John Felton, Amazon’s vice president of global delivery services.

One of them is run Milton Collier, a freight broker who started his business in Atlanta about eight months ago. Since then, it has grown to 120 employees with a fleet of 50 vans that can handle up to 200 delivery stops in a day. It has already been preparing for the one-day shipping switch by hiring more people.

“We’re ready,” says Collier.

Contact Joseph Pisani at http://twitter.com/josephpisani

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Italian Turmoil Hits Global Markets, Sending Stocks Plunging

Trader Peter Tuchman works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Tuesday, May 29, 2018. U.S. stocks are opening lower, following sharp drops in Europe triggered by political uncertainty in Italy.


NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks in the U.S. and Europe sank Tuesday following political turmoil in Italy, which stoked fears of instability in the euro bloc. Investors sold stocks and prices for U.S. government bonds surged as investors shifted money into lower-risk investments. Bond yields dropped, and with them, interest rates on mortgages and other kinds of loans. Banks plunged as Wall Street expected they would earn thinner profits.

Major exporters like technology and industrial companies and big drug and medical device makers also skidded. Those companies depend on strong sales outside the U.S. Investors dumped Italian government bonds, driving borrowing costs sharply higher for that country and rekindling fears of more financial strain for Europe's third-largest economy. They bought German and British government bonds instead, which are seen as more stable.

The political upheaval in Italy is likely to lead to new elections in the next few months, and investors are interpreting the new vote as a referendum and that Italy could move closer to abandoning the currency if populist parties win the election. It's not clear if that would happen, but if it did, it would have major implications for the European financial system and its economy.

"Eurozone membership will be at the forefront of the next election," said Alicia Levine, the head of global investment strategy at BNY Mellon Investment Management. "Should Italy leave the eurozone, it's clearly bad for European assets and it's bad for the European banking system."

New jitters about the stability of the euro sent the currency's value against the dollar to its lowest level in almost a year. The dollar rose to 108.24 yen from 109.37 yen. The euro sank to $1.1531, its lowest since July, from $1.1669.

The S&P 500 index sank 31.47 points, or 1.2 percent, to 2,689.86. The Dow Jones industrial average turned negative for the year as it lost 391.64 points, or 1.6 percent, to 24,361.45. It was down as much as 505 earlier. In Europe, Italy's benchmark stock index plunged 2.7 percent.

Smaller U.S. companies, which tend to be more domestically focused than the large multinationals in the Dow, fared much better than the rest of the market. The Russell 2000 index fell far less than the Dow average, giving up 3.28 points, or 0.2 percent, to 1,623.65.

The Nasdaq composite fell 37.26 points, or 0.5 percent, to 7,396.59. U.S. markets were closed Monday for the Memorial Day holiday. Italian President Sergio Mattarella picked Carlo Cottarelli for prime minister after the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement and right-wing League refused to withdraw an anti-euro candidate as economy minister. That ended their attempt to establish a government after inconclusive elections in March. Cottarelli is likely to lose a vote of no confidence in parliament, which would mean another round of elections.

Investors dumped Italian stocks and bonds as a result. Yields on Italian government bonds soared as their prices declined. The yield on the 10-year Italian government bond jumped to 3.10 percent from 2.69 percent, a huge move. At the beginning of May the yield was just 1.78 percent. The sharp move higher reflects weakening confidence among investors in Italy's government.

The German DAX lost 1.5 percent and Britain's FTSE 100 and the French CAC 40 both sank 1.3 percent. Some of the worst losses went to European banks: Germany's Deutsche Bank dropped 6.2 percent to $11.30 and Banco Santander of Spain lost 9.1 percent to $5.31.

"Uncertainty and the unknowns themselves affect the real economy," said Levine, of Bank of New York Mellon. "You've going to have less investment, you're going to have a decline in consumer spending, you've going to have, on the margin, less consumer activity affecting growth."

Spain was facing political turbulence of its own. That country's parliament will hold a vote of no confidence in Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy after graft convictions of businesspeople and officials tied to his conservative Popular Party. The Spanish IBEX 35 sank 2.5 percent.

U.S. government bond prices jumped as investors moved money into lower-risk assets. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.78 percent, its lowest since early April, from 2.93 percent. JPMorgan Chase dropped 4.3 percent to $105.93 and Bank of America fell 4 percent to $28.96.

U.S. crude oil fell 1.7 percent to $66.73 a barrel in New York. Oil prices have slumped in the last week following reports that OPEC countries and Russia could start pumping more oil soon. Brent crude, used to price international oils, rose 0.1 percent to $75.39 a barrel in London.

Wholesale gasoline gave up 1.7 percent to $2.14 a gallon. Heating oil shed 1.1 percent to $2.19 a gallon. Natural gas dropped 2.2 percent to $2.88 per 1,000 cubic feet. Gold fell 0.4 percent to $1,299 an ounce. Silver lost 1 percent to $16.37 an ounce. Copper gave up 0.5 percent to $3.06 a pound.

In Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 0.6 percent while the South Korean Kospi lost 0.9 percent. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index plunged 1 percent.

AP Markets Writer Marley Jay can be reached at http://twitter.com/MarleyJayAP . His work can be found at https://apnews.com/search/marley%20jay

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

European, Asian, American Airlines Earn N158bn From Nigeria In 2012

 By Chuks Ike Okoh, Peter Olowa & Teliat Sule
Business Day, Thursday, March 7, 2013






British Airways (BA), Emirates, Air France and other airlines operating international routes in the country realised about N158.1 billion from the sale of tickets in 2012, according to an analysis of tickets sold by international airlines in 2012 by BusinessDay Research and Intelligence Unit (BRIU).

This compares to the N156 billion sold in 2011, based on the data provided by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA).

Other heavyweights on international routes identified in the analysis include Lufthansa, Virgin Atlantic, Ethiopian Airlines and Delta Airlines. “British Airways is one of the best airlines in the world in terms of safety and quality of service”, Folashade Olutayo, CEO, Beyond Travels and Tours Limited, said.

The report shows that for the two consecutive years under review, British Airways remained the first choice of international travellers, when measured in terms of the volume of proceeds it realised from ticketing in both 2011 and 2012. In 2012, BA made N33.5 billion from tickets sold, compared with N31.7 billion it made in 2011.

For this reason, BA succeeded in raising its market share from 20.4 percent in 2011 to 21.2 percent in 2012.

Emirates Airlines occupied the second position in terms of market share in 2012 having realised about N22.4 billion from the sales of tickets, compared with N30.5 billion made in 2011. Though it controlled 19.6 percent of the total market share in 2011, its market share dropped to 14.2 percent in 2012.

The sharp drop in Emirates’ market share was attributed to the rising patronage Etihad and Qatar Airways got in 2012. Etihad made N2.5 billion just as Qatar Airways realised N8.2 billion in 2012.

Air France, Lufthansa and Virgin Atlantic also made N13.9 billion, N12.1 billion and N11.4 billion in 2012, as against N11.3 billion, N12.9 billion and N11.7 billion they made in 2011 respectively.

Of the 20 airlines covered by our analysis, seven recorded more sales in 2012 than they recorded in 2011. Interestingly, Turkish Airlines is beginning to challenge the traditional heavyweights on international operations because it posted the best performance, recording 107 percent increase in ticket sales between the years under review. In monetary terms, it sold N3.6 billion worth of tickets in 2012 up from N1.7 billion in 2011. Other up-coming airlines like Egypt Air, Air France, Saudi Arabian and Ethiopian Airlines performed creditably, as they increased their ticket sales by 33 percent, 23 percent, 22 percent and 22 percent respectively when compared with 2011 figures.

On the other hand, the tickets sold by eleven airlines nosedived, of which the worst hit was Iberia Airlines.

The amount of tickets it sold in 2012 fell to N629 million down from N1 billion the previous year. The Emirates, Alitalia, Kenya Airways, KLM and Royal Air Maroc were equally hit. The Emirates sales fell by 26 percent, Alitalia 19 percent, Kenya Airways 12 percent. KLM and Royal Air Maroc went down by 8 percent each.

However, for the 20 airlines analysed, the cumulative proceeds realised from ticket sales last year averaged about N13.1 billion on monthly basis and 2 percent higher than the N155.5billion recorded in 2011.

This is also true for the Federal Government which raked in N7.9 billion through 5 percent generation from the sales of tickets and that was slightly above the N7.8 billion earned in 2011.

This positive growth in ticket sales in Africa in 2012 aligned with experts opinions in Air Transport Market Analysis, a publication of the International Air Transport Association (IATA).

According to Air Transport Market Analysis, “air freight markets declined further in 2012, contracting 1.5 percent after falling 0.6 percent in 2011. A sharp slowdown in world trade growth and shifts in commodity mix, favouring sea transport placed further downward pressure on air freight demand in 2012.

Asia-Pacific airlines were most affected, seeing contraction of 5.5 percent in 2012. The exceptions were Middle Eastern and African airlines, with growth of 14.7 percent and 7.1 percent in 2012, supported by new trade lanes and developing trade links between Africa and Asia.”

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Kim Kardashian Played A Fast One On Us

All roads led to the Eko Hotel and Suites last Sunday for Dare Art-Alade’s show tagged ‘Love Like a Movie’. To be candid, I am not really a fan of Dare’s music but I just had to be there to see a much-hyped show! It was just the hype that made me journey to the venue. I just wanted to see what would make the show different from what has been the norm.
 
As with most Nigerian shows, ‘Love Like a Movie’ did not start on time. The red carpet did not end until past eight while the main show did not begin until a quarter to nine. I am sure that most people who attended the show were there just to see and maybe hear Kim. They all waited anxiously as the event unfolded.
 
Eventually, Kim showed up. It was indeed love like a movie when Kim Kardashian came on stage, spoke for a few seconds and disappeared behind the stage. That was the first and last we saw of her. Nothing was heard from Kim till the one-hour show ended. It was sad.
As expected, the topic trended on Twitter. In fact, I got different messages on my BB about people’s angst with such a brief appearance from Kim. Jeremy Weate wrote in an online article titled ‘Kim Kardashian does Lagos’ on www.guardian.co.uk thus: “And then Ms Kardashian appeared, said, ‘Hey Naija’ and vamoosed. The rumour was that she’d been paid 500,000 Benjamins for the honour of mixing with the petro-class. She arrived on Saturday evening (on Air France), and left within 24 hours (someone Instagrammed her back at MMIA). Prole class tickets were apparently N100,000 ($640), although quite a few got in gratis on the guest list.
 
“The Lagos elite blows money at puffery, while most of Nigeria suffers. It’s the same as it ever was. I recall Carlos Moore railing against the Gowon era on his trip to Nigeria a couple of years ago – how Lagosians were partying while bodies were lying unburied in the street. Gowon was famous at the time for saying that the problem in Nigeria was not money, but how to spend it.
 
Reflecting a little on the unfolding disappointment in Lagos, I couldn’t help but think that the narrow slice of KK the audience was granted reflects a cargo cult/import economy/colo-mentality that dresses its shame in dandified arrogance. Last year, Hugh Masekela played at the Motor Boat club. I was lucky to be there (I think I paid N15,000 for the privilege). People chatted noisily throughout. The great jazzman could hardly hide his disgust.”
 
For me, I think the fault is not Kim’s but that of the show organisers who perhaps did not brief her properly on what they expected her to do, although the radio jingles that preceded the show told us she would co-host the show with Dare.
 
Maybe we have to define what hosting means at this juncture. Dare was the host because he conceived the idea, planned it with his team and he lives in Nigeria. Kim was invited by Dare, that means Dare was her host, right?
 
So if Dare was her host, do we then say she also hosted Dare? It would have been right to say she co-hosted the show with Dare if they had both appeared on stage to talk to the audience or sang together or even acted a scene of the ‘Love Like a Movie’. But that was not the case. Kim just came on stage to introduce the show in a sentence and left. Dare was not on stage with her.
 
Well, we need to cry over spilt milk because Kim used American sense for us. She outsmarted us all. Like Weate concluded in the article: “As the disgruntled tweets flowed out on my timeline, I thought of Special K, comfy in her jimjams, the plane rising gradually above the Atlantic, safe from all Lagos harm, smiling to herself that she’d actually 419’d the 419ers. And I went to bed with one final thought: oil turns all who touch it completely insane.”
 
-------Funke Osae-Brown, Business Day, Friday, February 22, 2013

Wednesday, January 02, 2013

FG To Distribute 10m Cell Phones To Farmers

The Federal Government on Wednesday  said that no fewer than 10 million cell phones would be  distributed to farmers to boost agricultural production in  the country. Ibukun Odusote, the Permanent Secretary in the  Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, said this at a sensitisation programme for farmers at Igan-Ipabi in Ijebu-East Local Government Area of Ogun.

She  said the distribution of  the cell phones  was one of the steps being taken  by the ministry  to ensure food security in Nigeria.

Odusote said that the Ministry of Information Technology and other relevant stakeholders had been contacted to collaborate toward effective distribution of the phones.

“As part of the electronic-wallet which we are promoting, the handsets will be the toll with which we will communicate to farmers in the rural areas.

"Deep into the interiors, we will be able to communicate with them.

`` We are actually working with the Ministry of Communication Technology, so they are talking to the network providers.

“They will extend their networks into rural areas where normally they will say there is no economic viability .

"The Federal Government will be putting some support into this, they will go into the hinterlands and expand their network so that we can have access," Odusote explained.

She said  appropriate measures had been taken to commence the  distribution exercise before the end of the first quarter.

Odusote also  said that the beneficiaries would receive direct alert for the collection of fertiliser as well as information on  farming seasons, prices of products and scarcity period.

She added that farmers would get 50 per cent subsidy on fertiliser as well as other necessary assistance from government.

Though Odusote did not  specify  the exact amount to be expended on the project, she stated that the phones would be bought directly from the manufacturing company.

She added that some of the manufacturing companies had  also expressed readiness to partner with the ministry and invest in the sector.

Odusote also said farmers would be provided with solar-powered lamps for charging the phones, adding that the initiative  was to achieve a complete value change in the sector.

She said graduates searching for white collar jobs should tap into the opportunity, noting that this  would bring about overall development in the sector.

The Regional Director in  the ministry, Olalekan Quadri, said measures were being put in place  to ensure farmers engage in  mechanised farming.

......BUSINESS DAY ONLINE NIGERIA

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Nigeria will overcome its present challenges-Jonathan


President Goodluck Jonathan said on Thursday that Nigeria would overcome its present challenges and emerge as ``a very strong, united, stable and economically-progressive nation’’. Jonathan spoke at a farewell audience with the outgoing Austrian Ambassador to Nigeria, Dr Stefan Scholz, at the State House, Abuja.

He said that his administration was steadfastly evolving and implementing policies and measures to tackle the country’s current developmental challenges, including those related to national security and power supply.

The president said that some of the positive effects of the policies, measures and actions being implemented by the Federal Government would become increasingly apparent in the coming months.

He commended the outgoing ambassador for his efforts to improve bilateral cooperation between Nigeria and Austria.

Jonathan noted that trade and economic relations between both countries improved significantly during his tenure.

``You have done wonderfully well and we are quite pleased with what you have achieved here,” he said.

Scholz described his tenure in Nigeria as a great ``honour, privilege and opportunity’’ to get new perspectives on development.

He hailed the Federal Government’s Agenda for National Transformation and pledged that Austria would continue to give Nigeria all possible support and assistance for its implementation.
...............
BUSINESS DAY

Wednesday, August 01, 2012

NIGERIA: Thursday Papers, August 2, 2012




BUSINESS DAY: Nigeria fails to tap AFC finance to bridge infrastructure deficit

BUSINESS DAY: Preparing Nigerian Army for future challenges

BUSINESS DAY: Nigeria’s neglected solid minerals

VANCOUVER SUN: Nigerian president visits Trinidad for holiday marking slaves' freedom; Jamaica is next stop

GUARDIAN NIGERIA: Firms facilitate hip, knee replacement surgeries in Nigeria

VANGUARD NIGERIA: Subsidy scam: Court denies accused bail

VANGUARD NIGERIA: Police rescue kidnapped Chevron staff, kill 4 kidnappers in Delta

VANGUARD NIGERIA: I foresee 4 medals for Team Nigeria – Ali

PUNCH: Directors flee as Oyo uncovers N2.6bn pension scam

PUNCH: Obasanjo, Babangida’s posturing and Nigeria’s future

GUARDIAN TRINIDAD & TOBAGO: PM announces: T&T, Nigeria to collaborate on energy projects

LEADERSHIP NIGERIA: Jonathan Not President Of Niger Delta Alone — Edwin Clark

BUSINESS DAY: Financial sector stability and macroprudential regulation in Nigeria

DAILY MAVERICK: Hillary tours the African frontlines of America's war on terror

THIS DAY LIVE: US: Nigeria Not Doing Enough to Check Terrorism

THIS DAY LIVE: FG: Nigeria to Become Investors Haven

THIS DAY LIVE: Tribunal Orders TSKJ to Pay N49 Billion

DW AKADEMIE: US seeks African inroads as China lavishes investment

INDEPENDENT ONLINE: Woza Online helps SMEs market their businesses

GOOGLE/AFP: Australian trafficker's mother begs Malaysia for mercy

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Nigeria: Monday Papers, June 25, 2012




COMPILED BY AMBROSE EHIRIM

Business Day: "Nigeria is not Broke, says Jonathan"

Business Day: "Improving Nigeria’s business environment for increased investments."

Business Day: Concerns as 134m Nigerians live as tenants.

The Guardian Nigeria: PDP, ACN factions submit separate lists for Ogun council polls.

The Guardian Nigeria: Ebonyi women protest suspension of female legislator for alleged drunkenness, riding Keke NAPEP

The Guardian Nigeria: Death toll in Ghana’s explosion hits seven

BERNAMA: Euro Crisis A Threat To African Airlines

The Guardian Nigeria: NAFDAC may seek life jail for fake drugs’ dealers

The Vanguard Nigeria: Aregbesola plans to surpass Awolowo’s policy.

The Vanguard Nigeria: Security frustrates Sunday worship in Jos.

The Vanguard Nigeria: Reps ask ECOWAS to stop deportation of Nigerians from Ghana.

The Daily Sun: Attacks on Unongo, Shaahu’s homes, arson -Police.

Nigerian Tribune: Azazi/Bello ouster: Minister, presidential aides panic over imminent changes •2 cut short foreign trips; lobby for defence ministry begins.

Nigerian Tribune: Woman inserts 66 wraps of drugs in private part.

Nigerian Tribune: US designation of Boko Haram leaders: Nigeria’s sovereignty compromised.

The Punch: 700,000 Lagos houses to get new numbers.

The Punch: States evacuate ABU students, Army sends reinforcement.

The Punch: Keep off S’West, OPC warns Boko Haram.

The Punch: Far North, South lobby for defence portfolio.

Monday, May 28, 2012

NIGERIA: Tuesday Papers, May 29, 2012




BBC: Nigeria's President Jonathan 'must act over fuel scam'

BUSINESS DAY: Nigeria surpasses 5 million Visa cards milestone

BUSINESS DAY: FG partners foreign firm To Train 5,000 Nigerians on ICT, says minister

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: Democracy Day... Democracy Day... Democracy Day... Democracy Day...

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: Edo gov: Politicians plan to import arms - Police

NIGERIAN TRIBUNE: US security experts meet today on Boko Haram

THE MOMENT: Democracy Day: Balarabe, Ngige, others score Jonathan low

THE MOMENT: Gunmen behead four policemen, village head, 29 others in C/River

THE MOMENT: Northern elite own three-quarters of Nigeria's oil blocks

VANGUARD: N32.8bn pension scam: Accused beg court to quash charge

VANGUARD: NAFDAC uncovers illegal drug factory in Onitsha

VANGUARD: Tension in Adamawa as Igbo protest killings

VANGUARD: Army court-martials 2 colonels, 12 others for alleged misconduct

PM NEWS: Shot Nigerian Council boss flown to India

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

22 Japanese Firms Visit Nigeria For Investment Opportunities


Twenty-two Japanese firms are presently in the country on an investment opportunities seeking mission. This was disclosed, on Tuesday, by Nigerian Ambassador to Japan, Godwin Agbo, when he led a Japanese trade mission to the Minister of State for Trade and Investment, Dr Samuel Ortom. He said the visit was in response the federal government's foreign investment drive which was meant to stimulate economic growth and job creation.

READ FULL STORY

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Nd'Igbo Do Not Need Leaders; They Need Opportunities


By Chris Aniedobe, Business Day

Many have billed the lack of a transcendent Igbo political leader as the Igbo albatross. Those who say that do not understand the Igbos. The Igbos are economically efficient, individualistic, non-ideological, rational, resourceful, and always have been and always will be politically risk averse. The average Igbo man feels that he has the skill, dexterity, perseverance, and luck to dare his own failure or his own success, sometimes in spite of the incipient odds of failure. That is why the Igbos are dispersed throughout Nigeria and the world with each person daring his own failure or success. But that which makes us successful as individuals fails us as a group because group dynamics is not always the sum of the parts that make it up.

Ndigbo are yet to evolve a group leadership model that will work for us. Until we attain such a model, we will not be successful in party politics because politics is a game of platforms. We see political parties as platforms for individual opportunities and not platforms for collective tribal political actions. This attitude has so far characterized our attitude towards politics particularly since 1999.

Although Ndigbo may come together during times of crisis, it probably is best at this point to acknowledge that Igbos do not need leaders, and do not believe in leaders in so far as those leaders do not create economic opportunities for them. That transcendent Igbo political leader may still come about but only in the context of a firm belief that tangible economic opportunities may come from his leadership.

Unfortunately, in the minds of a people that tend not to anchor their fate on their leaders, the failure of our political leaders have tended to reaffirm the belief in the Igbo mindset that so called leaders are really of no tangible consequence in their lives. Many of our so called leaders have shamefacedly exploited their offices for opportunities. Until then, a distributed leadership model, where the average Igbo man is in fact given a material leadership role in a highly coordinated system of known risks and guaranteed rewards may be the best leadership model for Ndigbo at this point in time.

While our political theorists deal with the issue of appropriate leadership models for Ndigbo, it stands as a purely elementary proposition that we do better as wealth creators than as politicians and rather than pursuing illusory political goals, we should expend our efforts at utilizing our superior economic skills for rapid regional economic resurgence of our Region.

But Let Us Just Stop Being Naïve about Nigerian Politics, Power Concedes Nothing without a Demand. It Never Did and it Never Will

The talk of Igbo Presidency 2015 is a distraction by people who have not taken a close qualitative look at Igbo assets. Those who believe that Ndigbo should be President in 2015 on moral grounds alone are offering up cheap political blackmail that rings hollow. To paraphrase Frederick Douglass, if NdiIgbo are not prepared to vigorously struggle for it, there is no point talking about it. Those who profess to favor Nigerian presidency of Igbo extraction and yet depreciate the need for deep agitation on a common political platform are people who want crops without plowing up the ground. They must commit to the struggle all the way with the zeal of the Zikist boys who were prepared for either freedom or death.

Until the will is there to stamp our foot on the ground and be willing to lay down our lives for it, talking about Nigerian Presidency of Igbo extraction in the face of the considerable structural limitations that constrain us is a distraction. The political diffidence of Ndigbo is self-evident. Others have found out what Ndigbo will quietly submit to and know the exact measure of political injustice which can be imposed on Ndigbo and it will continue until they are resisted with carefully orchestrated struggle. Right now the will is not there. Ndigbo are happily foraging for opportunities in a platform independent manner and are engaged in anything but platform oriented struggle. There is nothing wrong with that. There is however, everything wrong with thinking that the Presidency will be conceded to us purely on moral grounds.

Not that Ndigbo do not need political power; it is that we cannot attain political power without a road map and that road map must take into account the structural defects of the Nigerian entity in so far as it has constrained Ndigbo, its largest ethnic group, to less than one sixth of the Federation. That road map must be drawn on the fabrics of true federation and true federalism. The execution of the road map will involve both words and blows; words in the sense that we must be willing to mount consistent and sustained assault on the anomalies in the practice of the Nigerian Constitution that preclude Ndigbo from attaining full rights and benefits of citizenship in their States of domicile; blows in the sense that Ndigbo must be prepared to assert their legal rights of Nigerian citizenship in any manner legal or necessarily legal to ensure that their fundamental rights remain inviolate. In fact, in any well conducted election, Ndigbo have the numbers to vote in an outcome determinative power in States outside Igbo land. This is a bargaining chip that other ethnic groups do not have but it is also a chip that must be well-guarded.

Monday, June 06, 2011

Finland cautions on Chinese market dominance in Nigeria


By Ameto Akpe, Abuja/Business Day

Mikko Kosonen, president, Finland Innovation Fund – SITRA, has cautioned Nigeria on the extensive presence and dominance of the Chinese in the country, saying “dominance of the Chinese needs to be dealt with in a smart way.”

Notably, the EU late last year warned Nigeria on China’s increasing interests in the country, when Belen Uyarra head, political and economic unit of the EU delegation in Nigeria at a media chat in Abuja, noted that the “Nigerian businesses should be the ones worried about the Chinese because they are both looking at the same niche.”

Speaking at the Nigeria-Finnish Business Forum in Abuja, Kosonen noted that it was important Nigerians learnt quickly from this foreign presence and acquire the skill to manage these projects and handle the technologies independently.

The Nigeria-Finnish Business Forum is designed to deepen awareness on the business and investment opportunities between both countries within the context of the existing comparative and competitive advantages, and the development histories of both nations.

Kosonen noted further that Nigeria needed to invest in research and education if it hoped to become competitive and attain its developmental aspirations, adding that “there is no short cut to success.”

Meanwhile, also speaking at the same forum, Arete-Zoe Amana, executive director of the Nigeria-Finnish Business Group, said in order to enhance the competitive index of the nation, Nigeria must leverage on its bilateral and multilateral relations through a more strategic approach to trade and investment promotion.

Amana stated that this was in line with President Goodluck Jonathan’s inaugural speech where he emphasised the need for the formation of technical financial partnerships with global businesses and organisations.

She said: “Recognising the pivotal role in economic development, government needs to pay more than lip service to the objective of enhancing FDIs inflow by strengthening NIPC’s institutional capacity through adequate funding of it operations so that it can achieve its raison d’être and remain the regional beacon of excellence.

The Nigerian Finnish Business Group, which is the business networking platform of the Nigerian-Finnish Business Association, is poised to provide unparalleled membership services to enable members achieve their strategic objective in a professional and purposeful manner employing global best practices in its operations.

“We will continue to collaborate actively and then with the embassy of Finland and forge beneficial alliance with relevant local and international ministries, department and agencies to enable us serve our stakeholder public,” Amana said.

KNOCK, KNOCK

By issuing subpoenas to five Times journalists, the Trump administration reveals its first response to unwanted national security coverage: ...