Podcasts about kebbi

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  • 69EPISODES
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Best podcasts about kebbi

Latest podcast episodes about kebbi

Kasuwanci
Yadda manoman zoɓo a Najeriya suka  fuskanci kalubale a harkar

Kasuwanci

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2025 12:34


Shirin kasuwa akai miki dole na wannan makon ya mayar da hankali ne kan halin da ake ciki game da noman zoɓo a jihar Jigawa da ke arewacin Najeriya, da kuma yadda ake fita da shi zuwa ƙasashen ƙetare. Duk da cewa ana noman zoɓo a Jihohi irin su Zamfara da Katsina da Kano da Kebbi da Borno da Yobe, bayanai na cewa kusan kaso 70 cikin 100 na zobon da ake fita da shi ƙasashen waje a jihar Jigawa ake nomawa, sai dai a shekaru biyu da suka gabata manoman na zoɓo sun ɗan  fuskanci kalubale a harkar. Ku latsa alamar sauti don sauraron cikakken shirin tare da Ahmed Abba..........

Taɓa Ka Lashe | Deutsche Welle
Taba Ka Lashe: 16.04.2025

Taɓa Ka Lashe | Deutsche Welle

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2025 9:41


Shirin ya duba yankin Zuru na jihar Kebbi da ke Najeriya kan al'adar aure na Gwalmou mai tsawon tarihi

Jayfm Podcast
LETS TALK - 04/03/2025

Jayfm Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 53:03


Christian Association of Nigeria has issued an ultimatum to the governments of Bauchi, Katsina, Kano, and Kebbi states, demanding the reversal of their directives mandating a five-week closure of schools for the Ramadan fast.CAN described the move as discriminatory and a violation of the rights of non-Muslim students, warning that it would pursue legal action if the orders were not rescinded.To what extent is this action and how will it benefit the affected states?Richard Badung and Yemi Kosoko will be hosting Rev. Father Polycarp Lubo (CAN CHAIRMAN, PLATEAU STATE) and ALI GARBA

Lafiya Jari ce
An samu ɓullar cutar sankarau a wasu jihohin arewacin Najeriya

Lafiya Jari ce

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 10:04


Shirin 'Lafiya Jari Ce'  na wannan makon ya mayar da hankali ne akan cutar sankarau, wanda ke yin ƙamari a cikin yanayi na zafi da ake ciki, musamma a ƙasashenmu na nahiyar Afrika. Tuni aka samu ɓullar cutar sankarau a sassa daban-daban na Najeriya inda ta kashe gomman mutane a jihohin Kebbi da Sokoto, wadda aka bayyana ta da annoba. Masana a ɓangarorin lafiya da kuma yanayi, na ci gaba da gargaɗi kan yiwuwar ɓullar tarin cutuka sakamakon tsananin zafin da ake fuskanta a wasu daga cikin jihohin Najeriya, a wani yanayi da ake ci gaba da azumin watan Ramadana,, wannan shi ne maudu'in da shirin lafiya jari ce na wannan mako zai mayar da hankali akai sai ku biyomu.

Daybreak Africa  - Voice of America
Daybreak Africa: Nigerian confirms meningitis outbreak, scores dead - March 12, 2025

Daybreak Africa - Voice of America

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2025 24:52


On Daybreak Africa: The spread of meningitis in the Northern state of Kebbi began late January with over two hundred suspected cases recorded. Plus, South Sudan women make gains in the field of information technology. Malawi lions given birth control to prevent a population boom. South African President Ramaphosa wants to continue trading with the US through AGOA – the African Growth and Opportunity Act. Europe hosts talk on the details of rearming. For these and more, tune in to Daybreak Africa!

Nigeria Daily
How Will School Closure Before End Of Term Affect Pupils?

Nigeria Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 29:10


In Katsina, Kebbi, Kano, and Bauchi states, the decision of governments to close schools ahead of the holy month of Ramadan has generated a lot of debate.With an education system already struggling, many are asking questions about how the decision will affect children's academic progress.In today's episode of Nigeria Daily, we will dissect the issue to find out what implication, if any, the decision will have on all stakeholders.

Nigeria Daily
How Kaduna Electricity Shutdown Will Impact Millions

Nigeria Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2025 23:05


Four Nigerian states—Kaduna, Zamfara, Sokoto, and Kebbi—face a potential total blackout as the National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE), Kaduna State Council, plans to shut down Kaduna Electric from March 1st, 2025. This raised concerns about its impact on businesses, and daily activities.In this episode of Nigeria Daily, we explore the reasons behind this move, its effects on ordinary Nigerians, and whether a resolution is possible before the shutdown begins.

Africa Daily
What will the first rollout of a malaria vaccine mean for Nigeria?

Africa Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 23:14


Malaria, a preventable mosquito-borne disease, kills 600,000 people annually in Africa, most of them are children under five. Nigeria accounts for 30% of these deaths globally. This week, the country started administering the R21 malaria vaccine to children aged 5 to 11 months, beginning in Bayelsa and Kebbi states, which have high infection rates. Developed by Oxford University and manufactured in India, the vaccine has 75% efficacy. With 1 million doses donated by Gavi, the campaign is expected to expand nationwide by 2025. In today's episode Alan Kasujja speaks to the BBC's Health reporter Makuochi Okafor who was in Bayelsa this week and Professor Halidou Tinto, who helped to test the vaccine in Burkina Faso. Presenter: Alan Kasujja. Guests: Makouchi Okafor, Halidou Tinto

Jayfm Podcast
LETS TALK - 12/11/2024

Jayfm Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2024 54:58


Despite efforts made by the Nigerian armed forces to end insurgency, even with the successes recorded by the military in combating insurgency there seems to be a new group of terrorist in Sokoto and Kebbi states of the country. How can insecurity be dealt with with interference of the Nigerian military? Richard Badung will be discussing the matter as 15 persons were buried last week from the attack experienced by the Terrorist group.Guest: H. E Luka Panpe 

Bakonmu a Yau
Tattaunawa da Abdullahi Idris Zuru kan harin Lakurawa a jihar Kebbi

Bakonmu a Yau

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 3:31


Sabuwar ƙungiyar ta'addanci ta Lakurawa da ta bayyana a makwannin baya-bayan nan cikin jihohin arewa maso yammacin Najeriya ta hallaka aƙalla mutane 15 a harin da ta kai garin Mera na jihar Kebbi baya ga kora tarin dabbobin jama'a.Bayanai sun ce an yi artabu tasakanin yan ta'addan da mutanen gari gabanin tserewarsu. Dangane da wannan Bashir Ibrahim Idris ya tattauna da kakakin gwamnatin jihar kebbi Abdullahi Idris Zuru wanda ya bayyana cewa tuni gwamnati ta ɗauki matakan baiwa jama'a kariya baya ga aikewa da twaga don bin sahun ƴan ta'addan.Ku latsa alamar sauti don sauraron cikakkiyar hirar.

ku mera abdullahi zuru kebbi najeriya bashir ibrahim idris
Nigeria Daily
How 'Lakurawa' Prevent Us From Praying In The Mosque – Sokoto Residents

Nigeria Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 20:50


The deadline imposed by a new group that calls itself Mujahidin on residents of some areas of Sokoto State to harvest their crops ends today, Friday.The new group, also known as 'Lakurawa', wields influence over five local government areas. The Local govt areas affected are Tangaza, Gada, Illela, Silame, and Binji. Who are the ‘Lakurawa', what do they stand for, and where are they from?Join us on this episode of Nigeria Daily to find out.

Bakonmu a Yau
Farfesa Bello Bada kan bullar sabuwar kungiyar ta'addanci a Najeriya

Bakonmu a Yau

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 3:20


Rundunar tsaron Najeriya ta tabbatar da samun wata sabuwar kungiyar 'yan ta'adda da ake kira Lakurawa a Jihohin Sokoto da Kebbi wadanda aka ce sun fito ne daga kasashen mali da Libya da kuma Jamhuriyar Nijar. Rahotanni sun ce 'yayan wanan kungiya na sanya haraji da kafa dokoki a yankunan da suke.Dangane da wannan sabon al'amari, Bashir Ibrahim Idris ya tattauna da Farfesa Bello Bada na Jami'ar Usman Dan Fodio dake Sokoto.Shiga alamar sauti, domin sauraron cikakkiyar tattaunawar.

libya bello bada shiga sokoto bullar kebbi najeriya jamhuriyar nijar bashir ibrahim idris
Feeney Talks With Friends
Episode #117: Feeney Talks with Rob Parenti

Feeney Talks With Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 68:36


#BeAGoodFriend and check out episode #117 of #FeeneyTalksWithFriends featuring Rob Parenti. It was great to talk with my good #friend, Rob! Rob is a special education teacher and a director of Friends of Feeney. We talked about: The 3rd Annual Friends of Feeney Golf Tournament (minute 1) Being a Special Education Teacher in an Intensive Behavior Program (minute 2) Kebbi the Educational Robot from MOVIA Robotics (minute 3) Rob's educational career path (minute 17) 3 Keys (sponsored by West Hartford Lock) to being a Special Ed. Teacher minute 19) “Hopes and Dreams” written piece from a fifth grader (minute 20) How Rob met his wife, Margo (minute 22) Rob speaks Klingon (minute 23) Upcoming events (minute 25) Margo is running the Half Marathon at Hartford Marathon (minute 27) “Friends of Nicholas” annual event at the Hartford Yard Goats (minute 30) Rob is a Grief Recovery Coach (minute 33) The Bristol Blues fundraiser (minute 40) The “Bristol vs. West Hartford” Game (minute 42) Recommendations (minute 53) Rob's favorite restaurant and 4 dinner guests (minute 57) Our #friends at Kaoud Rugs (minute 1.00) Rob's favorite teacher (minute 1.03) #BeAGoodFriend yard sign at Rich's house in Bethany (minute 1.05) Closing remarks (minute 1.07) Podcast Sponsors: Donut Crazy - www.donutcrazy.com The Fix IV - www.thefixivtherapy.com West Hartford Lock - www.westhartfordlock.com Keating Agency Insurance - www.keatingagency.com Goff Law Group - www.gofflawgroup.net Parkville Management - www.parkvillemanagement.com Luna Pizza - www.lunapizzawh.com/lunas-menu PeoplesBank - www.bankatpeoples.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/friendsoffeeney/support

Bakonmu a Yau
Wane hali ake ciki game da shigar da kayan abinci masu rahusa Najeriya

Bakonmu a Yau

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 3:23


Kusan watanni 2 da bada umarnin shigar da abinci Najeriya ba tare da kudin fito ko haraji ba domin karya farashinsa da kuma wadata jama'a, amma har yanzu samar da abincin ya gagara. Rahotanni sun ce 'yan kasuwa sun kasa samun kudaden kasashen ketare domin sayo abincin daga kasashen duniya. Sanata Garba Musa Mai Doki, dan majalisar dattawa daga jihar Kebbi ya ce ya zama dole gwamnati ta shigo da abincin da kanta domin wadata jama'a da kuma rage musu radadin halin da suke ciki.Ga yadda tattaunawarsu ta gudana da Bashir Ibrahim Idris lokacin da ya ziyarci ofishinmu a Lagos.

game ga lagos wane kayan masu ciki kebbi najeriya bashir ibrahim idris
Bakonmu a Yau
Tattaunawa Sanata Garba Musa Mai Doki kan matsalolin ƴan bindiga a Kebbi

Bakonmu a Yau

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2024 3:29


Mazauna yankin arewa maso yammacin Najeriya na ci gaba da bayyana irin ƙuncin rayuwar da suka samu kansu a sakamakon yadda ƴan nbindiga suka kassara yankunan na su ta hanyar hare-hare da garkuwa da mutane wanda ya tilastawa al'ummomin wasu garuruwan barin matsugunansu baki daya.  A ƙarshen makon da ya gabata ne Sanata Garba Musa Mai Doki da ke wakiltar jihar Kebbi ya ziyarci ofishinmu inda suka tattauna da Bashir Ibrahim Idris dangane da halin da suke ciki, ga kuma yadda tattaunawarsu ta gudana.Ku latsa alamar sauti don sauraron cikakken shirin.

ku doki garba kebbi najeriya bashir ibrahim idris
Taɓa Ka Lashe | Deutsche Welle
Taba Ka Lashe: 10.07.2024

Taɓa Ka Lashe | Deutsche Welle

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2024 9:45


Wani wuri a Zuru da ke jahar Kebbi ana kiransa da suna (Girmace), a wannan wuri ne da mutane ke rayuwa tare da Kadoji.

Podcast Internacional - Agência Radioweb
Oito pessoas morrem e vários estão desaparecidos após naufrágio na Nigéria

Podcast Internacional - Agência Radioweb

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2024 0:54


Pelo menos oito pessoas morreram e várias estão desaparecidas após uma balsa de madeira que transportava 100 pessoas virar no noroeste da Nigéria. As informações são de serviços de emergência locais nesta terça-feira (16). O acidente aconteceu no estado do Níger, quando moradores da aldeia de Dugga viajavam para um mercado no estado vizinho de Kebbi para vender grãos e cana-de-açúcar.

Tattaunawa da Ra'ayin masu saurare
Sojojin Najeriya na ci gaba da ssamun nasara kan 'yan ta'adda

Tattaunawa da Ra'ayin masu saurare

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2023 15:03


A cikin ‘yan kwanankin nan, sau da dama rundunar sojin Najeriya na sanar da cewa dakarunta sun hallaka dimbin ‘yan bindiga da suka addabi jama'a musamman a yankin arewa masu yammacin kasar.  A baya-bayan nan ma rundunar ta sanar da hallaka wasu ‘yan bindigar masu tarin yawa da suka yi kaurin suna wajen kai hare-hare da yin garkuwa da mutane a jihohin Zamfara da Kebbi. Abin tambayar shine, anya ko akwai wani sauyi da mazauna wadannan yankuna suka gani a zahiri da ke tabbatar da wannan nasara kan ‘yan bindiga? Shiga alamar sauti, domin sauraron cikakken shirin.

OsazuwaAkonedo
INEC Declares Sanwo-Olu Winner, Kebbi Guber Poll Inconclusive

OsazuwaAkonedo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2023 6:10


This episode is also available as a blog post: https://osazuwaakonedo.news/inec-declares-sanwo-olu-winner-kebbi-guber-poll-inconclusive/20/03/2023/ Support this podcast with a small monthly donation to help sustain future episodes. Please use the links below: Support Via PayPal https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=TLHBRAF6GVQT6 Support via card https://swiftpay.accessbankplc.com/OsazuwaAkonedo/send-money Support via Webmoney https://funding.wmtransfer.com/e1c3f11e-a616-4f6a-98d7-4d666a48d035/donate?c-start-error=K36158TP&sum=10 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/osazuwaakonedo/message

Taɓa Ka Lashe | Deutsche Welle

Gidan tarihi na Kanta Museum dake garin Argugu a jihar Kebbi da ke Najeriya na kara samun karbuwa da tagomashi.

taba kebbi najeriya
Taɓa Ka Lashe | Deutsche Welle
Taba Ka Lashe: 24.01.2023

Taɓa Ka Lashe | Deutsche Welle

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2023 9:43


Ko kun san al'adar mutanen Zuru da ke jihar Kebbin Najeriya? Shirin Taba Ka Lashe ya yi nazari.

The Unofficial Tedeschi Trucks Podcast
100. Kebbi Williams Talks His Musical Journey and Tedeschi Trucks Band

The Unofficial Tedeschi Trucks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2023 45:45


To help me celebrate episode number 100, Tedeschi Trucks Band's own, original member, saxophonist Kebbi Williams is my very special guest. Taken from his non-profit Music In The Park bio, "Kebbi is considered to be one of today's leading improvisers on tenor saxophone. The Grammy award winning multi-instrumentalist, composer, producer, arranger, teacher and innovator, defies categorization and experiments with all music genres." We talk childhood, high school, college, his work with many music greats -- and ultimately his journey into Tedeschi Trucks Band and his journey with the band. https://instagram.com/kebbiwilliams, https://instagram.com/musicinthepark_atl, Tedeschi Trucks Podcast on YouTube, http://instagram.com/tedeschitruckspodcast, http://instagram.com/adamchoit, http://twitter.com/adamchoit, http://tedeschitrucksband.com

Bakonmu a Yau
Dakta Peter Ajohnson game da kai dauki ga Arewa maso Yammacin Najeriya

Bakonmu a Yau

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2022 3:33


Kungiyar Agaji ta Medicins Sans Frontier ta bukaci kungiyoyin agaji da su kai dauki ga mutanen yankin Arewa maso Yammacin Najeriya dake fama da dimbin matsaloli sakamakon tashe tashen hankulan da ake samu a yankin.   Darakatar kungiyar a Najeriya, Dr Simba Tirima, tace tun daga farkon wannan shekarar, jami'an su sun ga tarin kananan yaran dake fama da matsalar karancin abinci mai gina jiki wadanda ta danganta da tashe tashen hankula da sauyin yanayi da kuma tsadar abinci, yayin da suka taimakawa kusan dubu 100 a Cibiyoyin su 34, tare da kwantar da kusan dubu 17 a asibiti a Jihohin Kano da Zamfara da Katsina da Sokoto da kuma Kebbi. Dangane da wannan matsala, Bashir Ibrahim Idris ya tattauna da Dakta Peter Ajohnson, jami'i a kungiyar. Latsa alamar sauti domin sauraron cikakkiyar tattaunawar.

game maso sokoto katsina zamfara arewa kebbi najeriya bashir ibrahim idris
Daily News Cast
NIGERIA : Why I Am Running For President – Osinbajo

Daily News Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2022 6:59


Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Monday declared his intention to run for the presidential seat in the 2023 election, under the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).Below is his full declaration speech:WHY I AM RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT, BY OSINBAJO*My experiences, insights, opportunities must be used for Nigeria and Nigerians, VP addsIn the past seven years, I have served as Vice President under a true Nigerian patriot, a servant of the nation in war and peace, and a man of integrity, President Muhammadu Buhari.We have, together, worked through some of the most difficult times in the history of our Nation, but we have remained focused on securing the country, providing infrastructure and growing our economy.As stipulated by the Nigerian Constitution, our tenure will end next year.In this period of seven years, I have served the government in several capacities, and have, at the direction of Mr. President, represented our country in sensitive high level international engagements. I have been to practically all local governments in Nigeria. I have been in markets, factories, schools, and farms. I have been in agricultural, mining and oil producing communities; in the Delta, in Kebbi, Enugu, Borno; Rivers, Plateau and Ondo; & in all other States of the federation, listening to the diverse experiences and yearnings of our people.I have visited our gallant troops in the North East and our brothers and sisters in the IDP camps. I have felt the pain and anguish of victims in violent conflicts, terrorist attacks, flooding, fire and other disasters.I have been in the homes of many ordinary Nigerians in various parts of the country. I have sat with our techprenuers in Lagos, Edo, and Kaduna, with our Nollywood and Kannywood actors; with our musicians, from Lagos, Onitsha, and Kano. And I have spoken to small and large businesses.I stood where they stood and sat where they sat. I know their hopes, aspirations and fears; and I believe that in those hopes and aspirations are the seeds for the great Nigeria that we all desire.I believe that the very reason why the Almighty God gave me these experiences, these insights, and these opportunities, is that they must be put to the use of our country and it's great peoples.Which is why I am today, with utmost humility, formally declaring my intention to run for the Office of the President, Federal Republic of Nigeria, on the platform of our great party, the All Progressives Congress.If by the grace of God and the will of the people, I am given the opportunity, then I believe that first, we must complete what we have started;*radically transforming our security and intelligence architecture,*completing the reform of our justice system focusing on adequate remuneration and welfare of judicial personnel,*ensuring justice for all and the observance of rule of law,*rapidly advancing our infrastructure development, especially power, roads, railways and broadband connectivity,*providing an excellent environment for businesses to thrive,*taking the agriculture revolution to the next level especially mechanization and developing the farm to table value chain*making sure that the government, its agencies and regulators serve the business community,*creating a tech economy that will provide jobs for millions;*enhancing our Social Investment Programme to a full scale social welfare scheme,*completing the promise of lifting 100 million Nigerians out of poverty within this decade,*completing the task of ensuring that all Nigerians, male and female, attend school,*reforming our educational system for relevance to the challenges of this century,*completing the task of universal health coverage for all,and*strengthening the capacity of States and Local Governments to deliver on their respective mandates.Above all, front and centre of our efforts will be the provision of jobs and opportunities for our young people.I now most solemnly and respectfully seek the support of fellow Nigerians everywhere in this land, and the diaspora, young and old, male and female, in the great and exciting journey that we have ahead of us.We will, working together, establish by the grace of God, the Nigeria of our dreams in a few short years. We will build on the foundation laid by our predecessors. We will need to move, with much speed, intentionality, and perseverance, towards the vision of a prosperous, stable, and secure nation.I am convinced beyond doubt that we have the creativity, the courage, the talent, and the resources to be the foremost black nation on earth. Let us now birth the expectations of greatness conceived generations before us.Let us build a Nigeria where the man from Nnewi sees the man in Gusau as his brother, where the woman in Warri sees the woman in Jalingo as her sister, where the love of our nation burns alike in the hearts of boys and girlsfrom Gboko to Yenogoa. Where everywhere, in this land, is home for everyone, where our diversities, tribes and faiths unite, rather than divide us.Let our tribes become one tribe; the Nigerian tribe, where all are treated fairly, justly and with respect. Where all are given equal access to the abundant opportunities that God has bestowed on this nation. It's time.God bless and keep our Republic and its great people.Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SANVice President, Federal Republic of NigeriaMonday April 11, 2022

Mu Zagaya Duniya
Bitar labarun mako: Yadda 'yan bindiga suka kashe mutane fiye da 60 a Kebbi

Mu Zagaya Duniya

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2022 20:15


Daga cikin batutuwan da shirin Mu Zagaya Duniya na wannan mako, za a ji yadda ‘yan bindiga suka kashe mutane 60 a Kebbi, a Jamhuriyar Nijar kuma mayakan Boko Haram ne suka kashe mutane fiye 20 a yankin Diffa. Shirin ya kuma leka yankin gabashin Turai inda ake cigaba da fafata yaki tsakanin sojojin Rasha da na kasar Ukraine.

Africa Today
South Africa asked to mediate in Ukraine war - Ramaphosa

Africa Today

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2022 22:15


President Cyril Ramaphosa has said that South Africa has been approached to play a mediation role in the conflict between Russia and Ukraine. Nigerian customs officials say they have intercepted 1,390 sacks of donkey meat in the north-western state of Kebbi near the border with Niger. At least 750 civilians were killed in the northern Afar and Amhara regions in the second half of last year, Ethiopia's human rights body says.

FUTA Radio Podcasts
Trending Issues 090322: Fuel Scarcity, Subsidy and Inflation; Ebonyi Court Judgement; Kebbi Massacre......

FUTA Radio Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 46:35


FUTA Radio Podcasts
Trending Issues 220222: Mass Migration; Update on Govt Strategy on Fuel Scarcity; Abducted Girls in Kebbi

FUTA Radio Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2022 44:33


Bakonmu a Yau
Nastura Sheriff: Kan matsalar tsaron arewa maso yammacin Najeriya

Bakonmu a Yau

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 3:48


Gamayyar kungiyoyin 'yan arewacin Najeriya ta kammala babban taronta a Sokoto da zummar lalubo hanyar magance matsalar tsaro da ke addabar jihohin Sokoto da Zamfara da Katsina da kuma wasu yankuna na jihar Kebbi.  Taron ya samu halartar mutanen da hare-haren 'yan bindigar ke shafe da kuma masu ruwa da tsaki a harkokin tsaro.   Faruk Mohammad Yabo ya zanta da Nastura Ashir Sheriff, shugaban Kwamitin Amintattu na kungiyar. Ku latsa alamar sauti domin sauraren cikakkiyar hirarsu

The Empowerment Zone
Advice for Atlanta Mayor-elect Andre Dickens

The Empowerment Zone

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2021 31:49


Kebbi Williams: Let's make Atlanta a premier city for the arts —  There are so many cities known for their music and the arts, and Grammy award winning saxophonist Kebbi Williams is on a mission to make Atlanta one of the top. Listen as Ramona talks to Kebbi about his advice for his childhood friend, Mayor-elect of Atlanta Andre Dickens, on how to lead the City of Atlanta in becoming a nucleus for arts empowerment. Kebbi Williams is an internationally acclaimed musician and founder of Music in the Park in Atlanta and Gallery 992. Originally from Atlanta, Kebbi continues to make the city his home. To learn more about Kebbi Williams, Music in the Park, and Gallery 992, visit http://musicintheparkatl.org.

Nigeria Daily
Should the Government of the Day Resign?

Nigeria Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2021 14:38


Nigeria in the past few days has witnessed a lot of insecurity issues. Dozens of People have been abducted and killed  for daring to travel by road. Terrorists have taken over villages in the north, which is now having a devastating effect on residents.There have been  several calls on the government of the day to humbly resign since it is obvious that it has run out of ideas on how to subdue the terrorists that have taken over significant parts of Sokoto, Katsina, Kebbi, Niger, Zamfara states and the busiest Kaduna-Abuja expressway on one side, and recently, the daring moves attacks by Boko Haram/ISWAP which has continued unabated.Should the government of the day resign?In this episode of Nigeria Daily, we discuss what a democratic should do if it is unable to perform optimally.

idearVlog
Vende tu cara por 200.000 dólares | CM 76

idearVlog

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 14:18


El resúmen semanal de noticias de idearVlog.00:00 Inicio00:58 Metaverso y Zuckerberg03:08 Se caen servers de Tesla03:50 RRSS de 7 a 9 años04:45 Adele sin Shuffle06:00 Vuelve Winamp06:30 Se vendio TILE07:27 DogPhone????09:12 Vende tu cara por 200k09:55 Starbucks sin cajeros10:33 Yara barco autónomo11:00 Rolls Royce avion electrico11:37 Dronut Drone12:10 Kebbi el robot13:07 Robot para detectar cancerY no te olvides de VER y disfrutar de todo esto en el canal!! Te dejo el link de IDEARVLOG

Leadership News & Talk
Sports Orbit: EP 85 - Okowa Remains AFN President

Leadership News & Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2021 28:33


In this edition, we'll look at the leadership crisis rocking the Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN) as the general secretary of the Federation, Prince Adisa Beyioku insists Tonobock Okowa remains the AFN president even as Federal High Court in Lagos dismissed a suit filed by Mr. Solomon A. Alao, a member of the Okowa-led AFN Board seeking to invalidate the Elective Congress of AFN faction held in Kebbi, for lack of jurisdiction.

OsazuwaAkonedo
Kebbi State Governor Atiku Bagudu Holds Commissioners Responsible For Delay Payment Of Workers' Salary

OsazuwaAkonedo

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2021 2:52


This episode is also available as a blog post: https://osazuwaakonedo.live/kebbi-state-governor-atiku-bagudu-holds-commissioners-responsible-for-delay-payment-of-workers-salary/31/10/2021/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/osazuwaakonedo/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/osazuwaakonedo/support

Mixtape Menage
Mixtape Menage - Kebbi Williams

Mixtape Menage

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2021 32:23


This episode we have famed saxophonist Kebbi Williams with us. Join us as we talk about discovering music and how different music has affected us over the years. Enjoy! https://www.instagram.com/kebbiwilliams/ mixtapemenage.com https://www.instagram.com/mixtapemenage/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mixtapemenage/message

Coaching StartUp Secrets
Sadika Kebbi | It is all about the people - Karim Amri CSS: 016

Coaching StartUp Secrets

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 33:40


Today I have the pleasure to have here with me a storyteller, a coach, and a trainer, Sadika Kebbi.Sadika Kebbi is a corporate trainer and workshop designer with many years of experience providing customized training courses for hundreds of managers, employees, in addition to youth. Sadika Kebbi has been in the corporate training field since 2010 and is known for her dynamic, inspirational, and storytelling speaking style. Taking her speaking talents into the world of work and the world of the youth especially with INJAZ, the well-reputed NGO, Sadika brings a variety of training topics to the corporate world.  With experience in creating programs, Sadika delivered career and growth workshops which include leadership, Coaching & Mentoring, Team Building, Design Thinking, Presentation Skills, Storytelling, Public Speaking, Emotional Intelligence, business English, Creative Writing & English Skills.  Lately, Sadika founded her NGO known as “Kun 2ensan” or Being Human which one of its purposes is to breach gaps among people from all walks of life through storytelling. Sadika strongly believes that once hearts meet, speak and bond, issues such as poverty, education, empowerment, health, and many more stand a better chance at being solved.Sadika is also a John C. Maxwell licensed coach, speaker, trainer, and teacher.  John C. Maxwell is voted number one leadership and management expert in the world. She is also a Toastmaster and has been voted in 2015 as one of the top ten speakers in the Arab World except for Saudi Arabia. In 2015, she also delivered a motivational speech at George Washington University for graduating students.Sadiki's strength comes through her unique ability to use her combined experience in teaching, speaking, and corporate training to understand the knowledge and skills her participants need to increase their performance and their productivity. Today, to be honest, it's a special episode for so many reasons. Our guest today, I met her I think 2017 or 2018, in one big leadership event in Orlando, and we connected and each and every time since 2017, I think I discovered a new, a new skill, a new good thing that it's happening with her.   So and I was sharing with her like just before start recording a new one what to explore today to get the maximum benefit of our meeting.  Anyway, we'll see how to how to make it. Join our Facebook Group:  Goal Getters Nation--------------------------------------------------// O V E R V I E W   1- The more you travel, the more you see and learn new things that you can't recognize.2- What comes first is your audience.3- You need to know your audience before you go on stage and address them.4- The more you're going to coach, the more you're going to feel comfortable.5- You get your certification as a trainer, coach, speaker, and teacher.6- It's all about the people. When you care about the people, and when you help them grow, they will never ever leave you.7- When you invest in the people, they cannot leave you they won't leave you.8- Now today. I am starting my coaching business. And I came to you to give me some advice. Where to start? Maybe what course to get?  • The first thing I would tell you is to be yourself. never compare yourself to anybody.• Dig deep, because people have forgotten how to label their feelings.  Resources from this episode:• Follow Sadika Kebbio Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/skbeinghuman/?hl=eno Twitter: https://twitter.com/skatbeinghuman?lang=eno Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kebbisadika/o LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sadika-kebbi-a424a51a/ o Join our Facebook Group:  Goal Getters Nation

Business Drive
Chief Justice of Nigeria Summons Heads Of Courts Over Conflicting Orders

Business Drive

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2021 1:00


The Chief Justice of Nigeria and Chairman of the National Judicial Council, Justice Tanko Muhammad has summoned the Chief Judges of Rivers, Kebbi, Cross River, Anambra, Jigawa and Imo State to an emergency meeting.The CJN summoned the head of the concerned courts to the emergency meeting to brief him on the incessant granting of the conflicting orders on suits instituted by different political parties before the various courts.The Spokesperson of the NJC, Soji Oye confirmed that the letter indeed emanated from the office of the CJN but declined to say on what specific day the meeting has been scheduled for. He however said that the meeting will hold sometime this week.

Africa Podcast Network
Chief Justice of Nigeria Summons Heads Of Courts Over Conflicting Orders

Africa Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2021 1:00


The Chief Justice of Nigeria and Chairman of the National Judicial Council, Justice Tanko Muhammad has summoned the Chief Judges of Rivers, Kebbi, Cross River, Anambra, Jigawa and Imo State to an emergency meeting.The CJN summoned the head of the concerned courts to the emergency meeting to brief him on the incessant granting of the conflicting orders on suits instituted by different political parties before the various courts.The Spokesperson of the NJC, Soji Oye confirmed that the letter indeed emanated from the office of the CJN but declined to say on what specific day the meeting has been scheduled for. He however said that the meeting will hold sometime this week.

Africa Business News
Chief Justice of Nigeria Summons Heads Of Courts Over Conflicting Orders

Africa Business News

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2021 1:00


The Chief Justice of Nigeria and Chairman of the National Judicial Council, Justice Tanko Muhammad has summoned the Chief Judges of Rivers, Kebbi, Cross River, Anambra, Jigawa and Imo State to an emergency meeting.The CJN summoned the head of the concerned courts to the emergency meeting to brief him on the incessant granting of the conflicting orders on suits instituted by different political parties before the various courts.The Spokesperson of the NJC, Soji Oye confirmed that the letter indeed emanated from the office of the CJN but declined to say on what specific day the meeting has been scheduled for. He however said that the meeting will hold sometime this week.

Coaching StartUp Secrets
Sadika Kebbi | Does it work to be a Coach, Speaker, Trainer, and a Writer at the same time? - Karim Amri CSS: 006

Coaching StartUp Secrets

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2021 14:48


Today I have the pleasure to have here with me a storyteller a coach and a trainer, Sadika Kebbi.Sadika Kebbi is a corporate trainer and workshop designer with many years of experience providing customized training courses for hundreds of managers, employees, in addition to youth. Sadika Kebbi has been in the corporate training field since 2010, and is known for her dynamic, inspirational and storytelling speaking style. Taking her speaking talents into the world of work and the world of the youth especially with INJAZ, the well-reputed NGO, Sadika brings a variety of training topics to the corporate world.With experience in creating programs, Sadika delivered career and growth workshops which include leadership, Coaching & Mentoring, Team Building, Design Thinking, Presentation skills, Storytelling, Public Speaking, Emotional Intelligence, business English, Creative Writing & English Skills.Lately Sadika founded her NGO known as “Kun 2ensan” or Being Human which one of its purposes is to breach gaps among people from all walks of life though storytelling. Sadika strongly believes that once hearts meet, speak and bond, issues such as poverty, education, empowerment, health and many more stand a better chance at being solved.Sadika is also a John C. Maxwell licensed coach, speaker, trainer and teacher.John C. Maxwell is voted number one leadership and management expert in the world. She is also a Toastmaster and has been voted in 2015 as one of the top ten speakers in the Arab World except for Saudi Arabia. In 2015, she also delivered a motivational speech at George Washington University for graduating students.Sadiki's strength comes through her unique ability to use her combined experience in teaching, speaking and corporate training to understand the knowledge and skills her participants need to increase their performance and their productivity.Today, to be honest, it's a special episode for so many reasons. Our guest today, I met her I think 2017 or 2018, in one big leadership event in Orlando, and we connected and each and every time since 2017, I think I discovered a new, a new skill, a new a new good thing that it's happening with her.So and I was sharing with her like just before start recording a new one what to explore today to get the maximum benefit of our meeting.Anyway, we'll see how to how to make it.Join Our Goal Getters Nation FB Group:Facebook Groups // O V E R V I E WHow do you see the importance of being available in different areas, whether to just add value or to do work like whether I will say that whether pro bono for free or like working on these different areas and aspects, how important it is for a coach to build his coaching business?I believe you need more life experience at this called Life Coach life coachingyou need some years, add on, to your coaching in order to be able to really understanda coach has to be empatheticyou have to be able to put yourself in other people's shoesDealing with different niches, is it going to affect your business?it's an added value to you as a coach and your experience becomes widerThere is no big difference between how you implement your coaching styleit is about the added valueit is about connectionJoin Our Goal Getters Nation FB Group:Facebook Groups Resources from this episode:The Hidden Face of Scheherazade: Stories from Behind the Veil:https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08BQXML5B/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_DBWX7REA9WM63HD8AAC8Transformation Lebanon :Transformation LebanonBe Human (NGO):Being human-كن انسانA post shared by @kon2ensan Follow Sadika KebbiInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/skbeinghuman/?hl=enTwitter:skatbeinghumanFacebook:Sadika Kebbi, Story Teller & Public SpeakerLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sadika-kebbi-a424a51a Join Our Goal Getters Nation FB Group:Facebook Groups 

Business Drive
Nigerian Lawmakers Blames Poor Security Arrangement For Kebbi School Abduction

Business Drive

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2021 1:26


The Senator Representing Kebbi North, Yahaya Abdullahi, has blamed what he describes as a poor security arrangement in the country for the Kebbi School abduction.Abdullahi says the number of security personnel, specifical policemen across the country, is grossly insufficient to fight the level of insecurity the country grapples with.He says in the entire nation, there are only 350,000 policemen and a good solution would be to allow more community policing.He believes that banditry in the country has become a recurring decimal and we should not look at it as something that is just happening today.

Bakonmu a Yau
Bakonmu a Yau - Kebbi: Ana cigaba da aikin zakulo gawarwakin wadanda suka nutse a kogi

Bakonmu a Yau

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2021 3:46


Rahotanni daga Jihar Kebbi a Najeriya na cewa ana ci gaba da aikin neman gawarwakin mutane da suka nutse a ruwa a lokacin da jirgin ruwa da suke ciki  ya nutse dauke da mutane kusan 200. Yayin zantawa da Garba Aliyu Zaria Manajan Hukumar Kula da sufurin jiragen ruwa ta Kasa a yankin Jihar Kebbi Yusuf Birma Shalbwala ya ce sun samu nasarar tsamo gawa 76 ne ya zuwa Juma’ar nan.

Daily News Brief by TRT World
Thursday, May 27

Daily News Brief by TRT World

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2021 2:04


*) Employee shoots, kills 8 at California rail yard An employee opened fire at a California rail yard, killing eight people before taking his own life, authorities have said. The shooting took place in two buildings that are part of a light rail facility for the Valley Transportation Authority. A man wounded in the attack was in critical condition at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, a spokesperson said. *) Mali’s transitional president resigns while in detention Mali's interim president and prime minister have both resigned two days after they were arrested by the military. President Bah Ndaw and Prime Minister Moctar Ouane were taken to a military base outside the capital after a Cabinet reshuffle. The intervention led by Colonel Assimi Goita has jeopardised Mali's transition back to democracy after a coup in August overthrew former President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita. *) Anti-election rallies in Syria as Assad seeks mandate Thousands have hit the streets of Syria's Idlib in a boisterous rally against Wednesday's presidential elections. Voting in Syrian regime-held areas of the war-torn country is set to give leader Bashar al Assad a fourth seven-year term and has been dismissed as a sham by Turkey, the Syrian opposition and Western countries. Crowds in Idlib chanted against Assad, reviving slogans used in the early days of the uprising against him. *) More than 150 feared dead in Nigeria boat accident More than 150 people are feared drowned in northwest Nigeria after an overloaded boat sank in the Niger River. The boat was travelling between central Niger state and Wara in northwest Kebbi state when it sank, National Inland Waterways Authority local manager Yusuf Birma told reporters. President Muhammadu Buhari said the accident was "devastating" and offered his condolences to families. And finally ... *) Amazon to buy MGM, studio behind James Bond and 'Shark Tank' Online shopping giant Amazon is buying MGM with the hopes of filling its video streaming service with more stuff to watch. Amazon is paying $8.45 billion for MGM, making it the company's second-largest acquisition after buying grocer Whole Foods for nearly $14 billion in 2017. The deal is the latest in the media industry that's aimed at boosting streaming services to compete against Netflix and Disney+.

Shirye-shiryen matasa | Deutsche Welle
Himma dai Matasa: 05.05.2021

Shirye-shiryen matasa | Deutsche Welle

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2021 9:54


Malam Bahaushe kan ce "himma ba ta ga rago." Matasa a nahiyar Afirka sun tashi tsaye domin karbar wannan magana ta Malam Bahaushe da hannun biyu, inda suke tashi domin kama sana'o'in da za su dogara da kansu.

kaduna borno kebbi najeriya matasa afirka
Community Access
Assistive Technology Services, Adaptive Gaming & Kebbi the Robot Guest: Adam Kosakowski

Community Access

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2021 22:03


Assistive Technology Services, Adaptive Gaming & Kebbi the Robot Guest: Adam Kosakowski

Muhallinka Rayuwarka
Muhallinka Rayuwarka - Yadda sare itatuwa ke karfafa barazanar kwararowar Hamada a birane

Muhallinka Rayuwarka

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2021 20:18


A yau shirin zai mayar da hankali kan barazanar kwararowar Hamada a sassan arewacin Najeriya, inda aka tabbatar da cewar yanzu haka jihohi 11 ne ke fuskantar wannan matsala, wadda ake bukatar daukar matakan gaggawa don kawo karshenta. Masana a fannin inganta muhalli dai na ganin cewar matsalar ta kwararowar Hamada kusan dan adam ne ke haddasa ta da kansa, sakamakon wasu abubuwa da yake aikatawa da suka sabawa tsarin kare muhalli. A Najeriyar dai, jihohi irin su Sokoto da Kebbi da Zamfara da Katsina da kuma Kano na cikin jihohin dake kan gaba wajen fuskantar barazanar ta kwararowar Hamada, inda masana suka ce babbar barazana ce ga muhalli da wadatar abinci da kuma lafiya.  

Bakonmu a Yau
Bakonmu a Yau - Sakataren kungiyar Miyetti Allah Baba Usman Ngelzerma kan korar makiyaya daga Ondo

Bakonmu a Yau

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2021 3:27


Gwamnonin jihohin yammacin Najeriya tare da na Jigawa da Kebbi da kuma shugabannin Fulani a Yankin da na kasa baki daya da kuma manyan jami’an tsaro sun gudanar da wani taro a Jihar Ondo domin tattauna matsalolin da suka biyo bayan baiwa Fulani umurnin ficewa daga Jihar. Bayan Kammala taron Bashir Ibrahim Idris ya tattauna da sakataren kungiyar Fulani makiyaya ta Miyetti Allah Baba Usman Ngelzerma, kuma ga abinda ya shaida mana.

International Business Growth Radio Network
1. DESCRIBE YOUR BUSINESS - SADIKA KEBBI

International Business Growth Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2020 15:00


International Business Growth Radio Network
1. WHY PREPARE A BUSINESS PLAN - SADIKA KEBBI

International Business Growth Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2020 14:59


International Business Growth Radio Network
1. HOW TO ATTRACT WINNERS - SADIKA KEBBI

International Business Growth Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2020 14:59


International Business Growth Radio Network
1. HOW TO BUILD REWARD AND ACCOUNTABILITY SYSTEMS THAT DRIVE PERFORMANCE - SADIKA KEBBI

International Business Growth Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2020 14:54


International Business Growth Radio Network
1. HOW TO STRUCTURE FREQUENT FACE TO FACE MEETINGS BETWEEN EMPLOYEES AND DIRECT SUPERVISION TO DISCUSS PERFORMANCE - SADIKA KEBBI

International Business Growth Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2020 14:51


International Business Growth Radio Network
1.HOW TO BUILD TEAMWORK IN WORK GROUPS. - SADIKA KEBBI

International Business Growth Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2020 14:54


The Unofficial Tedeschi Trucks Podcast
31. I Talk All About Kebbi Williams and His Music

The Unofficial Tedeschi Trucks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2020 37:13


Georgia's own and founder of Music In The Park Atlanta, Tedeschi Trucks Band saxophone player, Kebbi Williams has worked with many talented artists throughout his career. And in this episode, I dive a bit into his journey as an artist. Using audio clips from a previous interview he did and information straight from Kebbi himself, combined with some music audio clips, this was a lot of fun to put together. http://musicintheparkatl.org/, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R_hBmZF2_0g (Conversations with Santiago Paramo and Kebbi Williams), http://instagram.com/tedeschitruckspodcast, http://instagram.com/adamchoit, http://tedeschitrucksband.com

International Business Growth Radio Network
1.BE ON THE SAME PAGE—CREATE BALANCE BETWEEN AUTHORITY AND RESPONSIBILITY. - SADIKA KEBBI

International Business Growth Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2020 14:59


International Business Growth Radio Network
1.BE ON THE SAME PAGE—BRING THEM TOGETHER TO ACHIEVE YOUR COMPANY'S VISION. - SADIKA KEBBI

International Business Growth Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2020 15:00


Shirye-shiryen matasa | Deutsche Welle
Himma dai Matasa: 28.10.2020

Shirye-shiryen matasa | Deutsche Welle

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2020 9:51


Shirin ya leka jihohin Adamawa da Kano da kuma Kebbi a Tarayyar Najeriya, inda ya zakulo matasan da suka tashi tsaye suka kama san'o'in dogaro da kai.

kano shirin hdm kebbi adamawa matasa tarayyar najeriya
International Business Growth Radio Network
1.EQUIPPING OTHERS TO ACT TOGETHER - SADIKA KEBBI

International Business Growth Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2020 14:58


Unforgettable Presentations
Ep. 60 How to Handle a Controversial Subject with Sadika Kebbi

Unforgettable Presentations

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 52:50


How do you deliver a potentially controversial presentation with grace and dignity, yet be effective without being offensive, and ultimately become UNFORGETTABLE? Mark and Darren get answers from Lebanese storyteller and academic Sadika Kebbi, as she expounds on the power of a personal story and reveals her unique techniques for making her presentations UNFORGETTABLE!

Africalink | Deutsche Welle
AfricaLink on Air - 07 October 2020

Africalink | Deutsche Welle

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2020 29:56


Guinea's President Alpha Conde accuses Sierra Leone's deputy president Juldeh Jalloh of meddling+++Kenya's Safaricom to push for mobile money transfers worldwide ++Nigeria: Floods destroy two million tons of rice in Kebbi state

Invité Afrique
Invité Afrique - Inondations au Sahel: «L'adaptation au changement climatique est un chantier prioritaire»

Invité Afrique

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2020 4:45


Depuis le début de la saison des pluies dans la bande sahélienne, les inondations et les crues provoquent de nombreux dégats humains et matériels. Et depuis une semaine, les intempéries se sont intensifiées obligeant de nombreuses populations à quitter leurs foyers. De Dakar à Niamey en passant par Khartoum et le Borno nigérian, les gouvernements tentent de limiter les pertes, souvent avec difficultés. Julie Bélanger, directrice du bureau des Nations unies pour la Coordination des affaires humanitaires (Ocha) en Afrique de l'Ouest et du centre, répond aux questions de Victor Mauriat. Les dernières semaines ont été traversées par des inondations, par de fortes pluies et de crues sur l’ensemble de l’Afrique de l’Ouest et du Centre. Quel est le bilan humain après ces nombreuses semaines de perturbations ? Julie Bélanger : Nos chiffres au 8 septembre 2020, on a à peu près 760 000 personnes qui sont touchées par des inondations, dans six pays pour lesquels on dispose de chiffres consolidés. Quels sont les pays les plus touchés ? Les pays les plus touchés pour le moment, on parle du Nigeria qui est principalement touché ; ensuite, on a effectivement le Tchad et le Sénégal, et le Niger. Quand on parle « des plus touchés », c’est-à-dire que sur les 760 000 personnes qui ont été impactées, dans ces pays-là on est sous quel ordre de grandeur ? Juste pour vous donner une petite mesure, au 7 septembre au Niger par exemple, on avait indiqué déjà que 329 000 personnes [chiffres du gouvernement] et plus avaient été affectées ; et au Nigeria, on a déjà 26 000 personnes affectées juste dans l’État de Borno. Et on a aussi des inondations dans les États de Jigawa, Kano, Kebbi et Sokoto qui sont au nord du Nigeria. Donc, deux pays principalement touchés pour le moment. Justement, beaucoup d’habitants, de Dakar à Niamey, déclarent n’avoir jamais vu cela de leur vie, dans les différents reportages qu’on a pu entendre sur RFI. Est-ce que c’est réellement une situation à l’ampleur exceptionnelle de votre point de vue ? Ce n’est pas une situation nouvelle. Mais effectivement, c’est une année qui nous semble assez exceptionnelle en termes d’impact pluviométrique. La saison des pluies n’est pas encore terminée. On fera le bilan à la fin, mais si au cours des prochaines semaines, les pluies, les inondations devaient s’atténuer dans certaines régions touchées, surtout au Sahel, elles toucheront probablement davantage les zones en Afrique centrale. Donc, on a déjà un impact global en 2020 qui est particulièrement grave. Et le nombre de personnes touchées pourrait dépasser celui de 2019, effectivement. Quelles sont les réponses qui sont mises en place par, à la fois les Nations unies qui sont en coordination par les gouvernements, et avec quelles difficultés rencontrées pour la mise en place de ces solutions ? Les réponses, elles sont multiples. Mais évidemment avec un manque de ressources, avec l’accès qui est plus difficile en temps de pandémie, une réponse qui engage plus particulièrement aussi les capacités nationales, y compris celles des gouvernements de façon primordiale, et cela par le biais des protections civiles, des agences de gestion des catastrophes, etc., et de la société civile évidemment, les Croix-Rouge nationales, les ONG, les organisations communautaires. On a eu beaucoup de témoignages de personnes qui étaient en colère contre les gouvernements car ils estimaient que l’anticipation n’était pas suffisante. Est-ce qu’on peut dire que l’anticipation des gouvernements et peut-être même des organisations supranationales ont été suffisantes par rapport à la catastrophe qui les a frappés ? Je pense que des efforts assez accrus de préparation aux urgences et d’anticipation ont été entamés. Bien sûr, tout cela sur fond de manque de ressources souvent, mais peut-être aussi de manque de priorisation au niveau d’investissements dans la préparation nationale aux urgences. Il faut investir davantage dans le renforcement de la préparation, ça c’est certain. Depuis la Conférence de Sendai [conférence des Nations unies dont le thème était la prévention en 2015], la réponse aux catastrophes est davantage intégrée dans les politiques nationales, mais ça reste vraiment un parent pauvre du spectrum de l’aide, principalement dans la région de l’Afrique de l’Ouest et Centrale où on préfère encore trop souvent de répondre à une catastrophe que d’investir dans l’ensemble de la chaine de gestion des risques. Et quelles sont les initiatives dont vous parlez au début de votre réponse ? Nous, au niveau des humanitaires, notre défi, c’est évidemment d’être préparés à répondre aux urgences. On a le Fonds central pour les réponses aux urgences [Fonds central d'intervention pour les urgences humanitaires (Cerf), créé en 2006, aide humanitaire le plus rapidement possible aux personnes touchées par les catastrophes naturelles et les conflits armés] qui, depuis plusieurs années, investit énormément en Afrique pour les réponses, principalement aux inondations. Par exemple, on est passé de 1.5 million de dollars en 2017 à 29 millions de dollars en 2019. Donc, de plus en plus d’efforts sont faits pour vraiment répondre et être prêts à toutes les éventualités. Mais, l’adaptation au changement de climat est certainement aussi un chantier prioritaire.

The Beirut Banyan
Ep.205 (Video): Covering the Moment with Julie Kebbi

The Beirut Banyan

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2020 66:22


4:03 Tipping Point 18:12 Paralysis 31:50 Accountability 42:05 Get them Out 47:48 Reporting on the Ground Click to watch: https://youtu.be/HDdoKkgyf_U We're with Julie Kebbi for Episode 205 of The Beirut Banyan. We reflect on the Beirut blasts last week and whether this is the tipping point for systemic change in Lebanon. We also discuss state paralysis and protestor frustrations, and the durability of corrupt political figures. Julie shares her thoughts on widespread desperation for accountability and justice, the long-term role of civil society and the inability to force more political figures to resign. Our conversation wraps up with the challenges facing reporters on the ground covering the multiple crises facing Lebanon. Julie Kebbi works at L'Orient-Le Jour's international news desk. The article referenced in the episode is accessible below: https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1229221 Click below to donation links for NGOs involved in the aftermath of Tuesday's Beirut blasts. Lebanese Red Cross: https://www.supportlrc.app/donate/ Impact Lebanon / Just Giving: https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/lebanon-relief?utm_term=re7R78DA2/ Ahla Fawda: https://www.just-help.org/c/AhlaFawda/ Beit El Baraka: https://beitelbaraka.net/donation/pay/ Lebanese Food Bank https://lebanesefoodbank.org/donate/ Live Love Lebanon: https://www.givingloop.org/livelove/ Caritas Lebanon: http://www.caritas.org.lb/get_involved/donate/ Lebanon Needs: https://www.lebanonneeds.org/donate/ Embrace Lebanon: https://embracelebanon.org/donors-and-partners/ Center for Arab American Philanthropy: http://www.centeraap.org/funds/view-our-funds/seeds-of-opportunity-fund/support-lebanon-in-its-time-of-need-through-the-lebanon-relief-campaign/?fbclid=IwAR34BkKa5gI3QYq-4y_1Wy6aIoOTg3KTgEsBH4_sxF1u7dHMhS7mCpOAoec Help support The Beirut Banyan by contributing via PayPal: https://www.paypal.me/walkbeirut Or donating through our Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/thebeirutbanyan Watch these episodes via our YouTube channel: www.youtube.com/c/thebeirutbanyan Subscribe to our podcast from your preferred platform. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram & Twitter: @thebeirutbanyan And check out our website: www.beirutbanyan.com Music by Marc Codsi. Graphics by Sara Tarhini.

Shirin Safe 0500 UTC - Voice of America
DOMIN IYALI:Haska fitila kan daure yaro tare da dabbobi a Kebbi kashi na daya-10:00" - Agusta 13, 2020

Shirin Safe 0500 UTC - Voice of America

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2020 10:16


Ideas Untrapped
Responsible Reforms

Ideas Untrapped

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2020 47:10


I spoke to the chief economist of PwC in Nigeria Andrew Nevin. We had a conversation on taxes, central banking, and economic reforms in general. Andrew also explained his preferred measure of economic progress as opposed to GDP, and whether we should be more like China or India. I thank Andrew for agreeing to share his views with us.You can always listen or download right here on Substack or do the same on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, TuneIn, and Pocket Casts. There is also a transcript below. You can rate us on any of these platforms, this helps others find the show.TRANSCRIPTTobi: Hi everyone. I am on today with Andrew Nevin, the Chief Economist of PricewaterhouseCoopers in Nigeria. It’s great to have you, Andrew.Andrew: Great to be here, Tobi. Thank you so much.Tobi: I will like to start about taxes. Oil prices have collapsed, and along with government revenue, so naturally, the government is looking towards taxes as a way to buffer the government’s revenue source. What I just want to ask is, how realistic is that plan, especially in the current economic climate? Andrew: Well, I think that we all understand by now that Nigeria collects a small amount in tax compared to other countries. I think the number is about 6 percent of GDP, very small. So for the last few years, there's been this narrative from the government: we need to bring people into the tax net, people need to pay more taxes, more tax compliance, that I think we've all seen. And now of course with the collapse of oil revenue there's essentially no tax revenue coming from oil for the next few months, at least, and maybe longer. So, of course, the government is in a very difficult fiscal position. So naturally, they're going to say "we now need to increase our efforts to bring people into the tax net to increase the tax revenue". There are two problems with that. The first problem and we've highlighted this over the last four-five years is: it's very difficult to increase taxes when people feel like they're not getting services. So if we think about the social compact in Nigeria, certainly over a decade that I've lived in Lagos, the social compact is simple: the government doesn't really tax you very much but it also doesn't provide services. So people provide their own security, their own electricity, their own healthcare, their own education, their own infrastructure, and that has been the social compact. It’s not ideal, but that's the way it’s worked. Now the government comes along and says, well, we want to bring you into the tax net, we want to increase taxes, the rates, the number of taxes, and people say: hold on a minute, this social compact doesn't work unless I'm getting some services. So that's one challenge. The second challenge that we’ve talked about over the years and is really now quite a huge pressure is, [it’s] very hard to raise more taxes while the economy is not growing. Over the years from the 2015 recession we still had very low growth, 1-2 percent, a little over 2 percent in 2019. So [economic] growth has been below population [growth], which means that incomes have been going down, which means it's hard to take more money out of people. So both of those things remain challenges, we now have this confluence of events where effectively half of the revenue or more than half of the revenue going into the federation accounts collapsed and yet it’s very difficult to take taxes from other places. Tobi: It’s interesting you talked about growth because I was looking at data from the IMF a few days ago and per capita income in Nigeria has basically stagnated in the last four to five years. So basically people are not growing their income and it's very difficult to raise taxes. But there is another argument that I would like you to explore with me, which is that, is it also about capability for government? I mean, there is no national database and that is not cheap. How significant a barrier is that to expanding the tax base?You asked on a general level, on a general level, if we don’t get investment up, we won’t be able to bring people out of poverty. - ANAndrew: Well, I think that there has been a lot of progress on that, certainly in Lagos where I live. The electronic record of the LIRS [Lagos Inland Revenue Service], the ability to bring people into the tax net, the [indistinct words] that they have, those things have got[ten] stronger and stronger over the last few years and they've made progress on that. But I think that what you raised, Tobi, is a really...is a general point. I think there is a lot of capabilities, certainly the Federal Government, the Lagos government which I know best, and other States. But I think sometimes the problem is the capability is spread too thin. We have so many MDAs at the Federal level, so you have a pool of very talented civil servants and people [who] come from the private sector...to cite a couple - Dr Jumoke, Yewande Sadiku at the NIPC, Engineer Chidi over at the concession group...I mean you have some very high-quality people, high-quality staff, but we'll get so many MDAs, sort of create complexity and then there are pockets where the Federal Government or the State Government don't necessarily have enough capability. I think also at the state level, it's a real challenge. Many states as we know have very small IGR [Internal Generated Revenue], they haven't yet sort of got their records or their system in place to raise internal generated revenue from the businesses that do exist in the states, but the states are trying on that... but I think you highlight a really...yes, a very critical issue.Tobi: Still on income growth, what do you think has to change for per capita income to start growing in Nigeria? There are a few hypotheses that we are going to explore as we talk along but just your general view, what would it take, what has to change?Andrew: Well, I think the perspective we’ve had over four or five years is pretty simple. People talk about this program, and agriculture, it’s small business, and concessionary financing, all of these little pieces...but when you ask in general what the issue is? We need to grow. We’ve said for years that the country needs to have GDP growth of 6 to 8 percent a year to reduce poverty and alleviate unemployment. Why? Because we have population growth that is probably almost 3 percent a year, so if we're growing at 6 to 8 percent, per capita income will be 3 to 5 percent growth per year. So that starts to be meaningful over a few years. But more than just GDP growth it needs to be inclusive. I think the period from 2010 to 2014, there were lots of GDP growth but it was not shared evenly or not shared appropriately throughout the country. So we need to grow 6 to 8 percent. Now, how does that happen? At the very basic, almost mathematical or physics level, to grow requires investment. So how much investment? When we look around at the economics of this in some other countries, the investment needs to be close to 30 percent of GDP which in Naira terms, say, in 2018-2019 come in with, maybe, a 150 trillion Naira...so 30 percent is 45 trillion Naira of what economists call gross capital formation. We are only getting a little more than half of that, maybe 25 trillion roughly. We cannot grow 6 to 8 percent when there is not enough investment. So then that leads to a very simple question, why is there not enough investment?I lived for ten years in China. I went to China the first time in 1983 which was the beginning of their economic transformation and they have lifted 500-600 million people out of poverty, they’ve grown 8 to 11 percent, 8 to 12 percent, 6 to 10 percent for forty years almost now, and how do they do it? Well, you have to invest. So we have to invest in Nigeria. Then the question is, given that Nigeria is probably the number one economic story on the planet right now for potential, why are people not investing in Nigeria? Why are Nigerians not investing enough? Why is the diaspora, who have resources and know the country not investing enough? And then if those two groups invest, then foreign investors, direct investors will also invest but they are not investing. So that's the question we’ve posed to the Federal Government. You asked on a general level, on a general level, if we don’t get investment up, we won’t be able to bring people out of poverty. But why are people not investing? If we want to explain it very simply, what we say is: right now, it’s too complex and too costly in Nigeria to do business. Despite the incredible efforts of Dr Jumoke [Oduwole], a national heroine over at PEBEC, it’s still too hard. Too many agencies, too many costs, too much complexity, so people choose not to invest. I was talking yesterday to the CEO of a major Nigerian company, very successful company, and he was talking about one of the global giants that I won’t name here but who is evaluating between South Africa and Nigeria for coming into the country and they made the decision... they’ll eventually come to Nigeria, but they made the decision, for the moment, to go to South Africa. He said it was very simple, they just found it too complex dealing with too many agencies, too many taxes, not just the level of taxes but the complexity of taxes. So until the Federal Government and the State Governments are serious about wanting to make it an attractive...and I said this, sorry, let me also add, Tobi... I say this not as just the Chief Economist. My main role at PwC is I oversee our financial services practice, so I am out-serving clients, I run a business - PwC. I also have two technology companies that I have helped found in Nigeria, so, you know, I'm doing this I'm not just speaking about it and I can tell you - it is not easy in Nigeria. So we have this incredible opportunity, we have incredible entrepreneurs both Nigerians in Nigeria and in the diaspora and yet it’s not been tapped quite yet.It may be distressed, but I prefer democracy and Nigeria's democracy is a work in progress but it's a democracy. - ANTobi: That's interesting. You mentioned China, so let's explore that. Everybody would love to copy the East Asian model, right? But in Nigeria, it seems, at least to me, that we are still doing import substitution industrialisation rather than exports and oriented manufacturing that lifted Asia out of poverty. Now, I'm asking at a conceptual level, what has to change in policy circle for us to see the distinction between those two models?Andrew: Well, I think to begin with, I said I’ve lived ten years in China and I think there are some positive things we can take from it but the truth is, China is not a democracy. It's an autocratic, one-party state and I'm not sure it's a great model. Maybe, in the end, that would win out economically. It may be distressed, but I prefer democracy and Nigeria's democracy is a work in progress but it's a democracy. I think that we've advocated over the last one or two years that the right...and of course people come all the time, I go to conferences and people say Rwanda, Singapore as models for Nigeria, we said very clearly, we think: look, if you're going to take one country as the model for Nigeria, that we have the most lessons to learn from, it's actually India. And why? India is a large, diverse country. It has religious differences, it has cultural differences, it has geographic differences, it has very different topography and no one can argue that Nigeria is more complex than India. They are both complex. India, like Nigeria, is a messy democracy, a work in progress. But despite that, they have made a lot of economic progress in the last twenty years, really unlocking things starting in the beginning of the ‘90s. Then when you go to the economic model, what unlocked it for India was not exporting goods (physical goods), it was exporting services... particularly around IT. Many countries have a diaspora but the thing about the Nigerian diaspora is, they are at the top end of the income ladder. - ANSo one of the things that we are starting to say is, like, should we be focused so much on exporting physical goods because if you think about where we're at, a couple of things are going on. One, of course, is, to export a physical good, it just requires a real improvement in the infrastructure that we have - port infrastructure, road infrastructure to bring down the cost to be competitive. Secondly, where are we going to export to? If you think about what's happening in the world, the population in Europe is shrinking population, the population in North America is basically flat, are we going to be able to export into a shrinking market into Europe? There are already people that export physical goods into Europe, can we displace them? I'm not sure that we can that easily. Can we export to India? Well, they already have their own manufacturing. Can we export to China? Well, they’re sending their manufacturing here. So I'm starting to think that we should kind of leapfrog and actually go back to the lessons from India and export Nigerian brains without exporting the people. If we go back for a minute to the way the economy works here, the biggest source of FX is actually diaspora. So Nigeria, unlike many countries...I mean, many countries have a diaspora but the thing about the Nigerian diaspora is, they are at the top end of the income ladder. They are the best-educated group in the United States, they earn above the average American which is an amazing accomplishment for a new immigrant group. We are exporting Nigerian brains and then a lot of the money falls back. Now, we then ask the question, can Nigeria export people but without people leaving Nigeria? So that they are working in Nigeria but they are earning foreign exchange, they’re being paid at the global level or a little bit below because that's what people bid from the demand side, and it’s starting to happen. I want to highlight on this show one incredible woman, incredible Nigerian heroine, and [her] company. This is a company called Outsource Global which is based in Kaduna and Abuja and it outsources to global companies for different kinds of support - call centres, but also…the other support is not necessarily voice to voice but task, legal task in some cases. It has over a 1000 seats on there and it’s founded by this amazing woman Amal Hassan, and it's growing in the Covid-19 because people need more remote work. So think about what's happening here, we now are exporting Nigerian brains, very high value-added, they are not physically leaving Nigeria and this is starting to happen. If you look at some of the global companies like Microsoft, for example, they are putting more and more of their development into Nigeria. So what is that? Again, that's an export of Nigerian people, of Nigerian brains. So I'm starting to think that rather than advocating for trying to follow the East Asian model (that model is gone historically), we should follow more the Indian model, companies like Webpro, Infosys that has turned into giants now. They employed millions of people in India. Tek Experts is another one in Nigeria that is exporting Nigerian brains. To me, that's a higher value-added path at the moment.Tobi: My follow-up to that would be: that requires a relatively high level of human capital and the distribution is unequal and the ability to take advantage of that opportunity will be unequal as well. Maybe it will be different for Lagos, Kaduna, as opposed to Kebbi or...so now my question is do we really have to adopt a distributed, varied development strategy at the sub-national level?Andrew: Let me just go back to the point you made about exporting people being high end... absolutely. Remember, you want to export very high value-added things, that doesn't mean it's the whole economic strategy, so in terms of domestic sectors, we said for four years now the number one sector is real estate. Why? Because, first of, there's a housing deficit. I don't want to give the number because the number that's being repeated, very large number is not very accurate, we don't have that many homeless people in Nigeria but a lot of people live in substandard housing and there is a housing deficit. We need more housing not for the high end but for the middle-income people, lower middle-income people, and that drives employment domestically. So we are not exporting housing but we're doing housing, that is the biggest sector for us. The reason to our employment is every time you build, you need local building materials, you need carpenters, electricians, plumbers, labourers, caterers come on site. And once the place is sold, the family that moves in, they want to furnish it, [and] over time that drives other industries so that's one domestic industry. Agro-processing, we are very keen on as well, we've written a lot on it. But, again, it may not be for export. Some of it could be for export - cashews, maybe eventually palm oil will export but, of course, we have such big domestic uses of... just the domestic use of that is huge. So I don't want to say that exporting brains is the whole economic strategy [be]cause you're right, but it's so high value-added that if we had, I don't know...if we had a hundred thousand educated Nigerians exporting their brains but sitting in Nigeria will have a massive impact on the economy because they're earning good salaries. Now, they're spending the salary, they're buying homes and that's important to labourers, you get the normal, sort of, knock-on effect. So we need [the] export strategy and we also need, kind of, the domestic strategy. Now your question about sub-national, yes, we've said for a long time that one of the major issues in Nigeria is the imbalance of economic development. We have Lagos 30-40 percent of the formal economy in Nigeria and yet many people who are in Lagos that come to work but they don't want to be in Lagos. All of us who live in Lagos are aware of the challenges with the traffic, with the infrastructure. And if you talk to some of the senior political people in Lagos, they will say the biggest problem we have in Lagos is every time we address something, we get more people coming in. So we need development across the country, we need it in Cross River, we need it in Sokoto, we need it in Niger, we need it in the North-East as well. But I think that what's happened over the last two years is it’s not just us saying it, I think everyone recognises it. Domestically people are doing this and you start to see the emergence of some really incredible governors who have taken responsibility for their states. To name a few that I am familiar with...His Excellency Governor el-Rufai in Kaduna working very hard to move the state forward. Governor Makinde in Oyo State. Governor Obaseki, I mean, obviously there are some critical challenges in Edo State but he is very focused on the right things. So I think that's a great movement forward and the Federal Government recognises this too. So, again, we talk about PEBEC and Dr Jumoke, we talk about the National Investment Promotion Council with Yewande. Those groups are now working at the subnational level, I think that's a major step forward for the country and we're going to start to see the fruits of it. I think most governors recognise they themselves have to be out and getting this investment I talked about earlier and are making real efforts. So I think we should be encouraged by that but it's got to accelerate, we have to take the pressure off Lagos, we have to give young people, in particular, a reason to want to stay in their state, or not necessarily move to Lagos [but] to move to some other commercial center where they can find opportunities.Tobi: Deindustrialisation: how plausible is it an hypothesis for slow growth in Nigeria? I mean, services is growing really fast and in terms of value-added it has a higher share of the economy, and agriculture has also a large share but industry has shrunk over the last few decades. So how plausible is deindustrialization as an hypothesis for slow growth?Andrew: Well, I think that we all understand the challenges that industry...talk to MAN (the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria), for example, all the members there understand just how difficult it is to operate and of course you have power issues, you have infrastructure issues et cetera. But before commenting on that, one thing that is important to remember is sometimes the statistics are difficult to interpret. So if you look at the division in the country between services, agriculture, manufacturing get certain numbers... but if we have a tomato paste processing plant, does that get classified as agriculture or manufacturing? So I'm not so worried about, kind of, the statistics [be]cause it is very arbitrary which is what's happening on the ground. But in terms of the manufacturing side of things or the agro-processing which I think is a big component of it that should grow, (and) of course, it already happens...we have companies that do agro-processing. We have Flour Mills, UAC, Dangote...they do a lot of these. But of course it's been difficult. As I said before people have to build their own infrastructure, their own power situation et cetera. So MAN said, we’ve said, others have said...it's so obvious that [the] precondition to moving forward for more value-added manufacturing in any sector is obviously power. We've struggled with it with the privatization that happened 2013, but it seems sensible “oh, privatization, hopefully that will lead to a better power situation” but the truth is it's got[ten] worse and I think now the whole country, everyone recognises that. But I'm quite hopeful on the power situation. Again, first of, there has been [an] admission by everyone, every government, every private citizen that we’re in a power emergency. Two, you’ve got one of the leading figures/leaders in this country stepping up to lead the new super committee that is looking at power and I expect they’re going to come out with some...sorry, let me also say that I'm very very happy that Governor el-Rufai has recovered from the Covid-19 virus, it makes you realise how everyone at every level of society is vulnerable. Thank God that he recovered. But Governor el-Rufai I expect that committee comes out with its recommendations to do some radical things on that, recognising, obviously, we need a cost-reflective tariff, we need a way the bottom of the pyramid can get access to some power. We also need some, probably, decentralization because there are so many technologies for power, and so many decisions to be made it's difficult to make them all at the center. But I do think that would unlock a lot of these issues over the next few years, so I'm very hopeful on the power situation. Tobi: On the power issue, if you have to come up with, say, three things that would really need to happen for that sector to see the needed to change, what would be on your list?Andrew: I'll give you one thing. So we did put out a paper that suggested actually that we should focus the power that we have, uninterruptible power, to manufacturing [and] charge them more for it if they're willing to pay for that, but that's one idea. But the big idea that we put out for three or four years is simply decentralisation. If you look around the world...so I'm Canadian, I think most people who follow me know that. We often on Twitter have discussions about immigration to Canada from Nigeria, but in Canada, power is a provincial issue. So you have Nova Scotia which is a province of about a million people and I think it has (I'm just guessing) probably between 200 and 400 thousand customers between residential, commercial, and industrial and it's a provincial matter. As far as I know, I don't even think there is a national regulator of electricity in Canada. The provinces sort out their own electricity, there's lots of different models - some privatisation, some state/public-sector lead pieces of it and it works fine and then, of course, the provinces sell power between themselves, they sell power to the United States. The power from Niagara Falls which is a large (I am sure people have seen pictures of it, also not far from where I grew up) which [has a] massive hydroelectric dam there, sells its power to New York State and the Federal Government doesn't get involved. So if you wanted to put one big idea out there, it's decentralization. Today, the decentralisation is even more critical because there are so many technologies to produce power on a smaller scale than we had before. If you go back to when I grew up in the sixties, you had this image of big power plants, big thermal plant, big hydroelectric plants, big nuclear plants...now power can be produced in situ where you are at a smaller scale. If you take gas power for example, the scale economics aren’t that strong so if you have gas, you could produce power locally for local needs. So, in answer to your question 3 big ideas, let me put one big idea which is let’s decentralized the power decisions. And I think if you told States "get on with your power situation", they would find local solutions to their own situation to make sure that they had power, that their manufacturers had power, that the bottom of the pyramid had access to some power, maybe subsidized rates, but those decisions can only be sorted out locally.Tobi: Interesting. Decentralisation seems like the solution to a lot of problems in Nigeria.Andrew: Well, people say to me, why do you stay in Nigeria? You’ve lived all over the world, you can be anywhere. I say this is the future. I mean, as we know, the population projections having us come third largest most populous nation, hopefully in my lifetime we’ll see that. It's the biggest economic opportunity, people are incredibly entrepreneurial in tough conditions. So how do you unleash that energy? It's just easier to let people get on with it at the local level. I'm not the only one or PwC is not the only one saying it, except there is now widespread recognition that things have to happen at the sub-national level. I mean, of course, one powerful idea you want to see in any country is, a state has a great governor, I mean Governor Makinde focused on health care, focused on education, focused on continuing the projects of his predecessor rather than abandoning [and] wasting those resources. If the Governor in the next State is not doing it, people are going to say "Oyo is moving forward" and they are going to hopefully elect someone. But that goes back to what we discussed earlier, it's an imperfect democracy but all we need to do is push forward.Tobi: I would want to talk about the Central Bank, how Central Banking is being done in Nigeria. Now, take the power situation, the Central Bank Governor has been on a tour the last couple of years that, oh, this sector, textile, whatever, so they say power is the problem and this is what we are doing to finance power provision. My question is should that really be the remit of the Central Bank?Andrew: I think I will just go back in history a little, a short-term history. What brought me to Nigeria was the financial crisis in, well, the developed world in 2008. I moved to Nigeria in 2009 and my first client in Nigeria was the Central Bank of Nigeria when Governor Sanusi who, of course, became the Emir of Kano (and now is no longer the Emir of Kano) was running it. And he in 2013...I was at the bankers’ committee strategic retreat in Calabar in Cross River and that was his last bankers’ committee retreat. So CNBC came to the meeting and they asked him this... and we all watched while he was interviewed...it was sort of live interview with us in the room, bank CEOs, and people like me, advisory people, sitting in the back and the sides and they asked him exactly that question seven years ago (cause he started intervention programs and, in fact, some of the work that we did with him earlier was what encouraged his interest in agriculture because we pointed out that agriculture was 35 or 38 percent of the economy but had none of the lendings, so that got him thinking about that). So he said, look I get you, you can look around at different Central Banks around the world and they don't do things [like] what we're doing here. And he said but the reason I’m doing it is if we don't do it, who else is going to do it? [The] Central Bank has always been the Federal Government’s MDA that has the most capability, very talented people, high-quality organisation, so they've sort of stepped into the breach. That said, given your question, I guess we've sort of said...look, we're asking too much of the Central Bank in Nigeria.  Sometimes I go on television, and the monetary policy committee will be meeting and the next day or the next week they will be asked: should they cut rates, raise rates 13 percent, 12 and a half, 13 and a half? And I say, look, I don't even think that question is that important because the issues that we have in Nigeria the Central Bank can't solve that way. We have, I won't even call it fiscal issues, we have structural issues that can only be solved by the executive and the legislature at the federal level, at the state level working together, for example, on the real estate... to unlock the real estate sector. So we ask too much of the Central Bank, I wish it wouldn't get so much attention. If you look at developed economies, if I take Canada, for example, I don't think most people can name the Central Bank Governor. He does his part on that, adjust interest rates to some monetary policy intervention. Basically the economy works because it's structurally sound and I can give you an analogy. The Central Bank Governor of any Central Bank in the world is a racecar driver and if you give him a car from the 1920s, it's only going to go as fast as the car from the 1920s goes. If you give him a car from the 1950s, it's only to go as fast as a car from the 1950s. And if you give him a car from 2020, Ferrari (F1 Ferrari), it's going to go that fast. So the issue [is] that people should not be putting so much pressure on the Central Bank in Nigeria to fix our economic and social challenges. It's going to be fixed elsewhere.Tobi: Forgive me, Andrew, this leads me to a sort of question about institutions generally. Yeah, Sanusi started this and maybe, just maybe, he had the sense to know where the limits are, the extent of the capability of the Central Bank to actually solve what you have also said are structural problems that should be fixed at [a] political and fiscal level in Nigeria. Now, we've had some situation in the last couple of years where the Central Bank itself has been the source of domestic economic distortions, in terms of prices and exchange rate. I was reading a paper a few days ago by the former World Bank Chief Economist where he clearly said that there is some evidence, as much as we know what evidence are in economics, that there is some evidence that Central Banks in developing countries would generate a lot less distortions if they adopt some kind of rule-based intervention in the market as opposed to discretions. What I want to ask you is this: is it time for some kind of rule-based regime at the Central Bank? Some kind of legislative oversight over what the Central Bank is allowed to do so we don't have a situation where central banking will only function according to the disposition of the personnel in charge.If we wanted to have a more rules-based approach to monetary policy, absolutely, that would benefit the country, but it also requires the other pieces of the national leadership to do their parts so this will be part of a comprehensive whole. - ANAndrew: I think I would agree with that but the way I phrase this is, we need to take pressure off the Central Bank. I mean, the legislative and the executive arms need to say, okay, we get it, there's a limit to what the Central Bank can do. Obviously Central Banks need to be involved with questions around the currency, interest rates, stability of the financial sector, let's simplify the role here and you can do that and we will create rules that send positive signals to people involved in the economy and investors to do that. That would be great, but then the legislative and the executive arms then need to take on the task of doing what needs to be done to fix the economy structurally. In a way, what's happening is the Central Bank is intervening in tomatoes, intervening in SMEs, intervening in cultural things, in the power sector because the other arms of government have not stepped up to their responsibilities. So, absolutely. But it will have to be part of the whole package. It wasn't like the Central Bank was entering into terrain that was being already done, they enter in because there was a vacuum. If we wanted to have a more rules-based approach to monetary policy, absolutely, that would benefit the country, but it also requires the other pieces of the national leadership to do their parts so this will be part of a comprehensive whole. Tobi: Okay. Another question I want to ask you on that is, I spoke to Nonso on this show a couple of weeks ago. You know Nonso Obikili and one point he raised is that over the last ten years or so, there's been not too many economists at the Central Bank. Bankers have, sort of, exerted a lot more influence on the Central Bank. What I want to ask you is should we separate banking regulation from monetary policy? Would that be a useful way to go, like they did in the UK, for example?Andrew: It's a good question. Canada where I [am from]... everyone knows I'm Canadian...those functions are separated. The Central Bank of Canada is effectively just doing monetary policy. Regulation of the banks themselves, and we have five big banks, some other banks and, of course, the larger financial sector is regulated by any other group, works perfectly fine for us. So I think it's certainly an option. One of the things people may not realise, just for historical reasons, if I remember right two-thirds of the banks are supervised by the Central Bank and one-third supervised by the NIDC. Just for historical reasons they use the same standards, as an example. So we already have supervision done by [a] non-CBN group there, so I think both models can work but I think it's probably, you're right, easier in a leadership sense if the Central Bank can just focus on the core issues of monetary policy, exchange rate policy, interest rates and some other group does the supervision. But I think that issue in the context of our overall problem is probably a secondary issue for the moment.Tobi: Let's go out of that orbit a bit. The creative industry, Nollywood, music and all, how much of a growth potential does it have? Netflix is now in Nigeria and there's a lot of excitement.Andrew: It's massive. We've done some work in the creative industries, how to get funds to them. Even though there are lots of barriers, you'll still see the incredible success of the music industry and now the Nollywood industry around the world, and of course it's massive domestically. But to make it grow more we need to have a little more structure in the industry, particularly people that are creative, that create these incredible products need to be able to get the fruits of their labour. I mean issues around piracy and distribution. But I think enough people have recognised this now, as I said we've done some work...there are people, groups with money outside of Nigeria who now recognise and want to invest in this industry. And again, as we're saying earlier, Outsource Global, Tek Experts, Microsoft...they are exporting Nigerian brains and earning FX for the country increasingly. Nollywood and the music industry as well are earning FX for the country, big exports. And of course, it's not just Nollywood, it's also fashion, for example, it is a big part of African fashion, people around the world are listening. Last night after dinner we listened to Nigerian music, it's just... that's what we do now. It's fantastic, and I think it is also a fun industry. One of the things that Nigeria does better than any other place that I have ever really lived is events. I mean it's just incredible when you sort of see some of it...and of course, it's tied together and night clubs, parties, all of that is tied together with the entertainment industry is a great part of Nigeria.So I think it should get a lot of attention. Now, one of the things that is critical to it, of course is, again, financing. What's happened over the last few years is the banks have become a little more specialised in what they support. Five years ago you never heard of this but now there are some banks, I won't name them here, that are focused on the entertainment industry. The way it works in banking or financial industry is, you really need sector expertise. So if you look at, say, for example, Sterling Bank they have a public strategy, health, education, agriculture, renewables and transport. They really go deep in those sectors. FCMB has come out very clearly says it's going to be agriculture-focused and then some other banks as I said now focused on Nollywood and the music industry. To the extent they've got [the] expertise, they have better ways of channelling money into it. So I think we'll see it develop rapidly and that should be encouraged. Again, it's a service industry but it has great potential to generate value for Nigeria.Tobi: Let's talk about the tech sector. You are an investor and also an entrepreneur in that sector, what is the current state? I'm asking this because, of course, this is going to be a bit controversial... I have a few friends who think that the way things are currently is still a bit overrated...Andrew: The tech sector. The tech is overrated?Tobi: Yeah.Andrew: I think the thing about the tech sector you have to remember is... I meet so many young entrepreneurs, I always make time, someone reaches out on LinkedIn, I'll read the business plan...and, you know, the energy level of the entrepreneurs is just fantastic and just the sheer courage to try something. But the truth is into these, sort of, startup tech things, most of them are going to fail. Sometimes the young entrepreneur is absolutely convinced of his or her success which is fantastic, you need that energy. But the point is you might have fifty fail, but if you have three that succeed in a big way that makes a difference to Nigeria, that is what we want. I don't want us to focus on the failures, what I want us to focus on is how do you create something that works in the Nigerian condition? If we take two areas or three areas, so we take edtech, healthtech, and cleantech/energy. So, health and education - we have said it's basically impossible for Nigeria to duplicate the models that were built 150 years ago in these areas in developed countries. So if you think of medicine, you have physical doctor, physical nurse, you have one doctor for every 500 people on that. We can't mathematically ever get that many doctors in the right location, so there has to be some technological/healthtech kind of breakthrough to deliver. And I know lots of people working on it, we should encourage that and there will emerge out of that some successful ones that find the right models to put things together. In a way, Nigeria has spent its money and in many cases not getting anything for it. - ANSimilarly in education, particularly with Covid-19, people have started to realise they can learn remotely, they can interact with people remotely. Now, how do we solve it for education for Nigeria? But, again, the local conditions are so critical. I've seen some people trying to bring solutions from developed markets, but we don't have the power, we don't have the bandwidth and then your solution fails. What I want to encourage our young entrepreneurs is to try to find things that work under the Nigerian conditions and can piece together these challenges and solve it. Cleantech, as I mentioned, [is] exactly the same thing. Even if we build out the grid, we'd still have, I think estimated for Africa, if the grid was built out economically we would still have 400-500 million people who are not connected to the grid in Africa in 10 years. So the only way to deliver power to them is in situ, like, where they live the only way to do that is obviously through solar. Because if you have to deliver them some kind of fuel, one that pollutes but too, it's just the same problem as the grid, it doesn't really solve the issue. Again, what are the solar solutions that are coming through? Lagos is actually the centre of solar technology around the world, small-scale solar right now. We have so many companies trying so many different things. Some will fail and many will fail, some will work. What I will say about the tech industry is, yeah, there's a lot of hype, one of the areas that I'm not so convinced about is AI (artificial intelligence) you're always hearing about it, what does it really mean? But out of that hype, there's going to be people that build organisations and companies that solve real problems for Nigerians.Tobi: How significant is the talent gap in that sector? Jumia has their engineering staff in Portugal, I know a popular fintech that has their [it’s] engineering staff in Turkey, and is that a function of our low investment in education?Andrew: Well, I think as we know, when Nigerians are given the opportunity, they are incredible learners. We said before, the diaspora has gone and done great things in many countries when they get the education. But in answer to the question, Tobi, yeah, the country is underinvested. People are not getting enough education, resources are diverted to the wrong things, so we started to say the only thing that public money should be spent on are education, health and to some extent some infrastructure, particularly roads. Toll roads are quite inefficient so it makes more sense for the public to finance the roads, but not the port, not the airport, not Ajaokuta Steel, not refineries. In a way, Nigeria has spent its money and in many cases not getting anything for it...it has wasted its money the wrong way. The way we put it is, the only thing that [the] government should be investing in is the Nigerian people. Invest in Nigerian people, [the] economy is going to improve. [If] what you just described doesn't happen, we get programmers in IT people who are domestic, we get some of that exported through these kinds of companies I talked about, some of it go to the diaspora and we get a flow back. But, yeah, we need to invest in people, it's that simple. So if there is one message that we as PwC would like to give the country is if public sector resources are invested in people, the country will thrive.Tobi: Let's close out with coronavirus, the pandemic. The conversation in Africa and, of course, Nigeria has been about how affordable are the economic cost of this, weighed against the public health measures that are being taken - the lockdown, and everything...what some are calling a Keynesian supply shock that has caused even a larger plunge in demand and margins are down for a lot of companies. What I want to ask you is this, if you are in the room with the presidential committee or task force that is responding to this, what are the things that we need to do to have the right balance between the economic cost and the public health measures right now?Andrew: Well, Tobi, I'm not sure I'm wise enough to know the answer to that. I think we all grasp just how difficult the situation is and I really...as you said, the health unknowns, the economic challenges. Six or seven weeks ago, we said the two things that countries need to focus on are: one, getting resources to the bottom of the pyramid and, two, keeping the food supply chain intact. Why is that? Because we understood a lot, you know, in the beginning of this...what would happen is if you have a lockdown, all the people who are in the informal economy or even the formal economy that are effectively earning daily income, daily wages, they are going to lose her job. We've had tens of millions of people in Nigeria lose their source of livelihood in a very short space of time. Everyone needs to eat, so getting them resources is the most important thing and, of course, it doesn't work if the food supply chain isn't intact. The issue with the food supply chain is you actually need some movement [because] where food is grown is not the same place as where it's processed which is not the same place where it's consumed. I think the government has done a good job of focusing on those two fundamental issues, it's imperfect, we don't really have a great system for getting resources to the bottom of the pyramid on that, but I think that between the government, civil society, private sector...people have recognised this issue and they've really been doing the best they can. And, of course, individuals - every individual that's doing well in Nigeria is connected to people who rely on their daily wages and to the extent that they can, many I know are supporting people who have lost their livelihoods. So in the short-term, that's what the country needs to focus on and I think that the Federal Government has done a good job. That said, it's just so complex...it complex from a science, health perspective, we don't know everything about Covid-19, the transmission, asymptomatic people, how many people have it... it's challenging from a testing viewpoint in a place like Nigeria. Testing is being ramped up but still, we haven't tested in a lot of the population. So I don't know the trade-off, I think the Federal Government agency/taskforce is doing the best job they can but we're also seeing cracks with the coordination with the state level Governors, they are under pressure. We all see what's happening in Kano, what the Governor is saying about relaxation during Ramadan (Kano lockdown), yet, there are 100 new cases, over 90 in Kano. How many real cases are... I'm not second-guessing the government, I think they've done all they can in a very difficult situation and I think we're in for, at least, a few months of real challenges in Nigeria. And I want everyone listening to stay safe, keep as many people safe as you can, it is not easy.Tobi: Finally, Andrew, it's kind of a tradition on the show...what's the one idea that you would like to see everyone either in Nigeria or globally adopt?Andrew: We, and I, personally, have started to advocate in Nigeria that we don't measure GDP, that we measure the progress of Nigeria by the progress on the Sustainable Development Goals. The relationship between GDP and human welfare is not that strong and as I said in the 2010 to the 2014 period GDP grew a lot, but the benefits were disproportionately distributed. SDGs are very clear - no hunger, no poverty, good education, clean water access to healthcare... those are things that actually really matter to the welfare of Nigerians. So the one big idea we have is rather than every day we stand up and talk about GDP growth 2.1 percent, 1.6 [percent], 5 percent, whatever the number is, I would like to have a scorecard across the country in every state [of] how is the state doing on their SDGs and have a way of gathering. So people like me can stand up and say" Kwara State is doing fantastic on these dimensions that really matter to people, Cross River is doing great, this other state is doing not so well, Lagos is making progress". I want the language, let's call it the "lens" to shift from a GDP lens to  Sustainable Development Goal lens in Nigeria. That's my one big idea for the day.Tobi: That's interesting. Thank you very much, Andrew, it's been fantastic talking to you.Andrew: Thank you, Tobi. This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at www.ideasuntrapped.com/subscribe

Taɓa Ka Lashe | Deutsche Welle
Taba Ka Lashe 02.10.2019

Taɓa Ka Lashe | Deutsche Welle

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2019 9:39


Sharuddan neman aure a masauratar Bahindi ta Bugudu a jihar Kebbi da ke arewacin Najeriya

taba kebbi najeriya
Inside Out w/ Turner and Seth
Checking In: Kebbi Williams

Inside Out w/ Turner and Seth

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2019 38:13


Kebbi Williams joined Seth and Rob in the Diamond Street Studios a few weeks before the 9th Annual Music In The Park festival. Kebbi talks about how he "accidentally" started Music In The Park, and about how it has expanded over the years (MITP has even partnered with Atlanta Food Banks for food giveaway programs). Kebbi also fills us in on this year's festival, which takes place October 18 + 19 at Gordon White Park in Atlanta. Kebbi explains how he first discovered music while being punished by his parents, and he shares some insight on his bands Wolfpack (who are playing MITP) and Whose Hat Is This? He also talks about how his relationship with Branford Marsalis has evolved, and of course shares a few stories from his work with the extremely successful Tedeschi Trucks Band. Kebbi and Quinn Mason also perform two songs as a "telepathic" duo. Remember to Text musicinthepark to 243725 for your chance to win tickets to several different shows (TTB, DMB, etc...). See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Shirye-shiryen matasa | Deutsche Welle
Najeriya: Mai HND na sana'ar sayar da kifi

Shirye-shiryen matasa | Deutsche Welle

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2019 2:40


Wata matashiya jihar Kebbi ta watsar da girman kai ta rungumi sana'ar saye-da sayar da kifi bayan da ta kammala karatun ta na HND, ta ce sana'ar tata na samun tagomashi.

The BE Series: Untold Stories of Leadership Transformation
E19 BE a George — Sadika Kebbi Interview

The BE Series: Untold Stories of Leadership Transformation

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2019 42:22


Sadika Kebbi has a passion for tearing down walls between people groups. As a child and throughout her time in Lebanon she experienced unthinkable violence that shaped her perspective of the world. Through storytelling, she talks about unmasking the human heart and serving others. What is T's Takeaway? “When you hold God in your heart, the human he creates reveals itself by serving other and then, and only then — your enemy becomes human.” www.TinaBlack.com