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Federal Government To Send 200 Youth To Israel and Morocco On Crop Production And Animal Husbandry

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The National Agricultural lands development authority (NALDA) has disclosed its plans to send 200 young Nigerians for capacity building on crop production and animal husbandry in Israel and Morocco.

Such a motive is part of the continuation of the National young farmer’s scheme (NYFS), a program that President Muhammadu Buhari flagged off some months ago. The programs are said to have assisted Nigeria in terms of food availability during the emergence of the covid-19 pandemic, if not the country would have gone to other nations to beg for food.

The National agricultural lands Development Authority (NALDA) disclosed that the aim is to make agriculture more attractive to youths in the country, as the training will equip them on modern agriculture and agribusiness, which will lead to massive food production for Nigerians and more exportation of food.

They further disclosed that Israel and Morocco were chosen because they have expertise in greenhouse farming and animal husbandry. Youths will be drawn from the 36 States of the federation, and when they return to the country, they will begin to teach others what they have learned from the program

This is a very commendable initiative from the Buhari-led administration, as this will indeed help build a young generation of farmers that will use their expertise to drive Nigeria’s agricultural sector forward. Also, this initiative will change the ideology of a lot of youths, who have the belief that Agriculture is only done by peasants.

They will get to understand that agriculture is a very lucrative business which they will earn a lot of income from, as well as get adequate food supplies for not just personal consumption but also for the nation.

Such strategic training will also stir up interest among a lot of youths, and will also be a source of employment for those who are unemployed, which will automatically decrease the rate of unemployment in the country. It will also improve the food security in the country.

Currently, Nigeria is still characterized by high reliance on food imports. Due to food shortages in rural areas in the country, malnutrition is already widespread which has often increased the mortality rate in the country.

However, it is pertinent to note that food security is not simply having sufficient quantities of various staple foodstuffs, but it also entails access to the entire citizenry to these food items at very affordable prices.

Once this initiative is effectively carried out by the government to send 200 youths to Israel and Morocco for animal and agriculture, it will ensure food security in the country and attain self-sufficiency in food production.

Nonetheless, even if such an initiative is properly executed, yielding a lot of benefits, unless the government put strict strategic measures to guarantee the security of farmers on their farmlands and other security challenges, a food-secure nation will never emerge.

Once the issue of insecurity has been properly handled, with the expertise of the trained youths and many others, there would be sufficient food not just enough for the citizens of the country, but also the country will earn more revenue from the export of these agricultural commodities.

MTN Launches Payment Service Bank and Mobile Money Services in Nigeria

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Following the evolution of Payment Service Banks, which has seen mobile telecom operators in Nigeria delve into financial services, MTN has kicked off its MTN MoMo.

The MTN MoMo, a commercial payment service bank that the telecom giant started a few years back, finally commenced operation on Thursday after series of trials and approvals from the central bank.

The Central Bank Nigeria (CBN) granted approval to MTN’s fintech in 2021. The company carried out a successful pilot service starting on the 16th of May, 2020, aligning it with the launch of MTN’s GSM operations on the 16th of May 2001 and the listing by introduction on the Nigerian Exchange Limited on the 16th of May 2019. The pilot phase took place across cities in Nigeria.

The PSB already boasts of an expansive agent network of over 166,000 active agents and a digitized partnership infrastructure, poised to provide a wide range of financial service products to millions of unbanked and underserved Nigerians.

MTN CEO, Karl Toriola, said the launch of MTN MoMo will boost financial inclusion in Nigeria.

“We are grateful to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for their support and guidance through the process.

“This is an important milestone for MTN Nigeria in our mission to support the government’s drive towards financial inclusion in Nigeria. Not just for those in urban centres and markets, but also people in the rural and remote areas of the country who remain excluded from the financial system,” he said.

MTN has entered into a partnership with Africa’s largest fintech company, Flutterwave, to broaden payment penetration in Africa. This means, MTN MoMo, having established operations in other African countries, stands a chance to compete in Africa’s burgeoning fintech ecosystem.

MoMo PSB CEO, Usoro Usoro said they will be working with other players in the payment industry to expand MoMo services nationwide.

“Providing easy to use, accessible and affordable financial services to all Nigerians is essential to executing the CBN’s financial inclusion strategy and the digital inclusion agenda of the Minister of Communications and Digital Economy. We look forward to playing our part and are excited about the opportunities to partner with relevant institutions across various sectors to co-create and expand access nationwide,” he said.

This has been a long time coming for the largest mobile telecoms company in Africa. Three banks – Hope PSB, Money Master PSB and 9PSB – got their final approvals in August 2020 and have since commenced operations

The PSB initiative was introduced by CBN in 2019 as a measure to increase financial inclusion in the country particularly in rural areas. According to the CBN, a major objective for the establishment of PSBs is to leverage mobile and digital platforms to enhance financial inclusion in rural areas, especially the underserved parts. This is expected to be achieved by increasing access to deposit products, payments and remittance services to small/micro businesses and low income households.

[You’re Invited] Business and Personal Economy Scenario Mapping During Economic Upheaval

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The indicators are everywhere: there is a high risk of massive economic upheaval. Look at the US stock market, look at inflationary elements across economies, look at global energy prices as Russia remains sanctioned, look at the political stasis in Nigeria on currency deterioration, and feel global hunger, triggering banditries, riots and breakdowns of order. People, the global economy is going through a huge redesign; PREPARE.

As a school, Tekedia Institute works hard to provide practical knowledge to our learners. We’ve introduced a new course – Personal Economy Scenario Mapping (Nigeria, Global) – to help our members plot how to overcome this impending paralysis. During Covid-19 pandemic, we did the same thing, sharing playbooks to overcome a pandemic,  and many in our community appreciated it.

For working professionals and companies, I have put some directions here. Yet, we need to discuss the matters and prepare very well.

On Saturday, May 28 at 4pm WAT, Tekedia Institute will organize a Zoom session on Business and Personal Economy Scenario Mapping During Economic Upheaval. This is an open webinar and everyone is invited.

Later, during Tekedia Mini-MBA edition 8 (begins June 6, 2022), we will share Business Continuity Policy and Playbook courseware as part of the program. If you want to get the courseware, register for Tekedia Mini-MBA edition 8 here or join any of our other programs here.

Note: Tekedia Industries, Tekedia Practice, Tekedia Startup Masterclass, etc members, you will see the courseware in your class Board once we run it in Mini-MBA.

World’s richest nation getting poorer

Tens of millions of Americans are beginning to grapple with the implications of a plummeting stock market, writes The Wall Street Journal. The S&P 500 just registered its seventh week of losses. Countless stocks, bonds and other investment assets are “getting hammered.” As the losses mount for even casual investors, families are confronting the helpless feeling of watching investments intended for a car or house downpayment, a child’s college tuition or their own retirement slowly sinking each day. The bruising period has rendered financial industry prognosticators “as lost now as they were when the pandemic recession hit,” reports Bloomberg. And JPMorgan Chase estimates at least $5 trillion of collective wealth among Americans has been lost so far this year, a figure that could hit $9 trillion by the conclusion of 2022. (LinkedIn News)

Time for Scenario Mapping – Huge Nigeria, Global Dislocations Coming

Tekedia New Course: “Personal Economy Scenario Mapping (Nigeria, Global)”

Assaulting a police officer is a felony

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Nigeria police continues to struggle to maintain peace

“Please, help me, help me; he dey carry me go place wey I no know…”

That was the cry of a policewoman that was abducted by a motorist the other day which has been trending on social media. 

According to the motorist, the policewoman entered his vehicle for no reason and wanted to extort him for no just cause as some police officers at motor parks or checkpoints are fond of doing, so the motorist decided to teach the policewoman a lesson. He shut the car doors and zoomed off with the officer. The policewoman had to cry for help and begged for her life before she was let go. 

Netizens have been reacting to this video saying that the policewoman deserves what she got, some even threatened to replicate that with any officer that dares to enter their vehicle for any reason whatsoever to teach the law enforcement agent some lesson.

This is not the first time we are seeing videos of this nature where a law enforcement agent has been assaulted or bullied by motorists. 

While we all can attest to the fact that some law enforcement agents can be nasty, rude, and power-drunk; always looking for the slightest opportunity to bully, extort, or harass individuals but it should never be the justification for people retaliating assaults on officers of the law. People should note that when you attack or assault a law enforcement agent you have committed a serious offense known as a felony punishable with at least three years jail term in Nigeria. 

The act of the motorist locking up the policewoman inside his vehicle can be said to be an abduction. Abducting a law enforcement agent is a felony. Any kind of assault against a police officer is considered a violent felony.

Offenses of this nature are provided for in S.356 of the criminal code act and it is captioned “serious assaults” and it read thus: 

Any person who?.

1) assaults another with intent to commit a felony, or with intent to resist or prevent the lawful arrest or detention of himself or of any other person; or

(2) assaults, resists or wilfully obstructs a police officer while acting in the execution of his duty, or any person acting in aid of a police officer while so acting; or

(3) unlawfully assaults, resists, or obstructs, any person engaged in the lawful execution of any process against any property, or in making lawful distress, while so engaged; or

(4) assaults, resists, or obstructs any person engaged in such lawful execution of process, or in making lawful distress, with intent to rescue any property lawfully taken under such process or distress; or

(5) assaults any person on account of any act done by him in the execution of any duty imposed on him by law; or

(6) assaults any person in pursuance of any unlawful conspiracy respecting any manufacture, trade, business, or occupation, or respecting any person or persons concerned or employed in any manufacture, trade, business, or occupation, or the wages of any such person or person,

is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for three years. 

Citizens should never be found taking laws into their hands. If you are maltreated by a law enforcement agent, report the incident to the appropriate authority, assaulting a law enforcement agent is not the right way to go about it and it can never be justified for whatever reason. If you are caught assaulting an officer of the law you have committed a felony and you can be jailed for up to three years for the offense. 

 

Bamba, Pan-African fintech Startup, Raises $3.2 Million in A Seed Round

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Pan African fintech app, Bamba has raised $3.2 million in a seed funding round led by Venture capital firm 468 Capital. Other investors who participated in the funding round include Presight Ventures, Jigsaw VC, and angels Mato Peric, Leonard Stiegeler, Laurin Hainy, and Thomas Stafford.

Founded in 2022 by serial entrepreneur Bastian Gotter, Bamba is a mobile application focusing on simple tools for merchants to manage their customers, record stocks, receive payments, and access cash advances against their future cash flow.

Bastian Gotter is not new to the African terrain. He has been active as an entrepreneur and an investor. He co-founded iROKOtv with Jason Njoku way back in 2010 and also partnered with him in 2013 to launch SPARK, a $1 million venture that will invest in Nigeria’s most talented tech entrepreneurs Nigerian startups. He left IROKO in 2017 to pursue other interests. He has since been behind the scene but active as an investor.

Bastian Gotter, CEO of Bamba, said the fund will the company to scale its business to new markets.

“We truly believe entrepreneurship is essential to prosperity, so we make running a small business easier by building mobile-first small business software for Africa. This investment allows us to scale the platform and the team and gives us access to insights from our high calibre of investment partners,” he said.

Micro, small and medium-sized enterprises account for 90 percent of all businesses in sub-Saharan Africa and contribute more than half of all jobs.

In 2021, registered and unregistered merchants accepted over $250 billion in mobile money payments, recording rapid growth. The mixture of receiving/paying out cash or mobile money creates new complexities for merchants; however, it also creates opportunities to further digitalize business payment and record-keeping processes.

Speaking on the investment, Ludwig Ensthaler, Partner, 468 Capital said: “We are thrilled to invest and support the team and vision at Bamba. We feel that the investment opportunities in “enterprise” software focused on small businesses in Africa are significant and remain largely untapped. We believe that Bamba is well placed with a great product and a solid founder to build a category-defining company.”

This digitalization process has the potential to vastly improve access to credit, one of the most significant hurdles preventing the growth of small businesses in Africa. The IFC estimates Sub-Saharan Africa’s small business credit gap at $331 billion, and Bamba’s mobile application sits at the heart of the digitisation process, improving both the payments experience and the access to credit for micro-merchants.

Bamba’s CEO noted that the company is currently in stealth mode and will use the new capital to build out its mobile product offer, scale its engineering team and expand its user base across 12 sub-Saharan African countries with high mobile money penetration.

As 2022 moves closer to its first half, Africa has continued to see an increase in tech investment, erasing the groundbreaking investment records of 2021. Tech funding in Africa grew faster than any other region globally in 2021, reaching a total of $5.2 billion, according to private equity firm Partech.

The African Private Equity and Venture Capital Association (AVCA), which promotes private investment on the continent, wrote in a report that “African startups raised more in 2021 alone than the preceding seven years combined.”

The growth has been attributed to the success of companies like Nigeria’s Paystack, acquired in 2020 by U.S. payments firm Stripe for $200 million, and fellow fintech Flutterwave, valued at over $3 billion, which has fuelled international interest in African startups.

The data compiled by AVCA showed the financial sector accounted for 60% of the investments by value and nearly a third of deals by volume. There is no sign of letting up in 2022 as investors embrace tech businesses in Africa due to their huge potential, particularly fintech.

With the huge number of unbanked in Africa, and growing mobile internet penetration and a population expected to reach 1.5 billion people by 2025, Africa’s fintech market is expected to double its current volume of investment in the next two years.