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5th Edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA (June 7 – Sept 1 2021) BEGINS, Registration Continues

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Good People, we have started. Our team operates 24/7, seven days a week, and that is why you get responses even at 1am. Our school never closes and we are always available through the Hub to support your journey. I welcome everyone and thank you for the opportunity to co-share and co-learn together, on the mechanics of business systems, through Tekedia Mini-MBA.

Tekedia Live begins on Saturday; Zoom link in the Board. Welcome to Tekedia Institute.

Registration continues…click to register for Tekedia Mini-MBA (June 7 – Sept 1, 2021): online, self-paced, $140 (or N50,000 naira).

A Welcome Message From Our Faculty – Toyin F Sanni, GCEO Emerging Africa Capital

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Tekedia Mini-MBA edition 5 has started. This edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA is heavily biased towards business growth, and there is no better mechanism in the contemporary business scene than driving growth through the mechanics of AfCFTA (African Continental Free Trade Agreement).

That is why we welcome the world – 38 countries – with this message from our Faculty, Toyin F Sanni. It is AfCFTA A-Z with the practicality from a business leader, a market maker, and a rainmaker in the capital markets.

Get a new perspective on African markets. Grow, accelerate value creation, and advance the mission. The Academic Board on your account is LIVE. Welcome!

Registration continues here.

Presidency Issues Statement on Twitter Suspension, Calls it Temporary

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As backlash trails the decision of the Nigerian government to suspend micro-blogging app Twitter, the presidency has issued a statement justifying its reason for taking the arbitrary decision.

In a statement signed by Senior Special Assistant to the President, Media & Publicity Garba Shehu, the Federal government said the suspension, which it described as “temporary” is as a result of hate, divisiveness and fake news that the platform enables. The statement said such is capable of throwing the country into further chaos.

In response to president Buhari’s tweet on Biafra war, and his threat to deal with troublemakers in the Southeast in the civil war style, the presidency said it “was not a threat, but a statement of fact,” calling the removal of the tweet “disappointing.”

Read the full statement below.

The temporary suspension of Twitter is not just a response to the removal of the President’s post. There has been a litany of problems with the social media platform in Nigeria, where misinformation and fake news spread through it have had real world violent consequences. All the while, the company has escaped accountability.

Nevertheless, the removal of President Buhari’s tweet was disappointing. The censoring seemed based on a misunderstanding of the challenges Nigeria faces today.

The President in his address at the United Nations General Assembly, UNGA in 2019 said “the world was shocked and startled by the massacre in New Zealand by a lone gunman taking the lives of 50 worshippers.”

This and similar crimes which have been fueled by social media networks risk seeping into the fabric of an emerging digital culture.

Major tech companies must be alive to their responsibilities. They cannot be allowed to continue to facilitate the spread of religious, racist, xenophobic and false messages capable of inciting whole communities against each other, leading to loss of many lives. This could tear some countries apart.

President Buhari has therefore been warning against social media’s disruptive and divisive influences and the government’s action is not a knee-jerk reaction to Twitter’s preposterous deletion of his tweet which should have been read in full.

The tweet was not a threat, but a statement of fact.

A terrorist organisation (IPOB) poses a significant threat to the safety and security of Nigerian citizens.

When the President said that they will be treated “in a language they understand,” he merely reiterated that their force shall be met with force. It is a basic principle of security services response world over.

This is not promotion of hate, but a pledge to uphold citizens’ right to freedom from harm. The government cannot be expected to capitulate to terrorists.

IPOB is proscribed under Nigerian law. Its members murder innocent Nigerians. They kill policemen and set government property on fire. Now, they have amassed a substantial stockpile of weapons and bombs across the country.

Twitter does not seem to appreciate the national trauma of our country’s civil war. This government shall not allow a recurrence of that tragedy.

Less Than 12 Hours To Go – Tekedia Mini-MBA

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We will begin in less than 12 hours from now! It would be one of the finest academic festivals you will partake in business education. Fresh, deep and current. I welcome you to Tekedia Institute Mini-MBA. Registration continues here.

Tekedia Mini-MBA Edition 5 (June 7 – Sept 1, 2021): Self-paced, Online, 12 weeks, $140 or N50,000.

 

G7 Leaders Reach Deal to Force Big Tech to Pay More Tax

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G7 leaders have struck a “historic agreement” to force internet giants to pay more tax, including in the UK, Rishi Sunak has announced. Independent has the story.

The agreement will “make sure the right companies pay the right tax in the right places”, the chancellor pledged.

The breakthrough – the result of a major push by US president Joe Biden – follows years of largely futile attempts to end massive tax avoidance by major tech firms.

Now they will be forced to pay a corporation tax rate of at least 15 per cent, though the rate will be allowed to rise in future. Mr Biden originally proposed 21 per cent.

More importantly, 20 percent of the profits of around 100 of the biggest firms – likely to include Google, Facebook, Amazon and Microsoft – will be reallocated to the countries where sales have taken place.

The move is designed to end “offshoring”, where companies set up legal entities in low-tax countries – regardless of where their revenues are actually earned.

Mr Sunak said the agreement would tackle the problems of tax havens and tax-dodging digital companies, vowing: “We are going to level the playing field.”

Speaking after a meeting of G7 finance ministers in London, he said the new measures would make the tax system “fit for the global digital age”, adding: “That’s a huge prize for British taxpayers.”

The euphoria at the announcement is tempered by the fact that Mr Biden’s pitch of 21 per cent has been dropped. Only three developed countries – including Ireland – have corporation tax rates below 15 per cent.

Also, only the G7 countries have currently reached agreement, ahead of a meeting of the larger G20 grouping which includes the likes of China and India.

Labour criticised the 15 per cent figure, accusing the government of “actively watering down” hopes for a more ambitious pact.

“That would have brought £131m extra a week to Britain for our NHS and other public services, while also stopping our high streets being aggressively undercut,” said Rachel Reeves, the shadow chancellor.

Nevertheless, Mr Sunak hailed “a very proud moment” and praised fellow leaders’ “willingness to work together to seize this moment to reach a historic agreement that finally brings our global tax system into the 21st century”.

He defended the decision not to push for 21 per cent, telling Sky News: “First of all, the agreement reached here today says at least 15 per cent.

“And secondly, it is worth taking a step back. This is something that has been talked about for almost a decade.”

The British public wanted to know that “there is a level-playing field”, in regard to “whether people are operating in tax havens, or whether large, particularly online businesses, are able to not pay tax in the right places”, said the chancellor.

“That’s what this agreement gives us the ability to do, and it has been agreed among G7 colleagues, and once we broaden it out and implement it globally, it is a huge prize for British taxpayers.”

In response, Facebook said it welcomes the decision even though it could mean the social network pays more tax.

“Facebook has long called for reform of the global tax rules and we welcome the important progress made at the G7,” head of global affairs Nick Clegg said on Saturday. “Today’s agreement is a significant first step towards certainty for businesses and strengthening public confidence in the global tax system.

“We want the international tax reform process to succeed and recognize this could mean Facebook paying more tax, and in different places.”