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Amidst Surge in COVID-19 Cases, Nigerian Governments Move to Reopen NYSC Camps, Schools

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The decision of the Federal Government of Nigeria to reopen schools and the National Youth Service Corp. (NYSC) is facing heavy backlash due to the increasing cases of COVID-19. The second wave of the pandemic which came with more transmission force than the first has stirred concern that if the schools are allowed to open, the spread will be blown out of control and easily overwhelm Nigeria’s fragile healthcare system.

Schools are scheduled to reopen in Lagos State, the epicenter of the pandemic in Nigeria, and Ogun State on Jan. 18 while NYSC orientation camps will reopen on the Jan. 19 against the advice of medical professionals and recommendation made by the Economic Sustainability Committee led by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. The committee had in June recommended that the three-week orientation program for the National Youth Service Corps be suspended for two years, while the service itself could continue.

“The immediate focus in the education sector is to address the disruption caused by the pandemic and ensure social distancing measures at all levels of education.

“In a similar context, consideration will be given to suspending the National Youth Service Corps orientation camp exercises for at least 24 months while allowing deployment to places of primary assignment. This will ensure that there is no backing in the national service placement pipeline,” the committee recommended.

In a blatant rejection of this recommendation, the federal government is moving ahead with the plan to reopen the camps which were forced to close in November after shortly being reopened, due to resurgence of coronavirus cases.

On Friday Jan. 15, Nigeria had 1,867 new cases; the highest since the pandemic began, putting the total number of cases recorded in Nigeria at 107,345, with 1,413 deaths. The increase spikes concern among health workers who fear that the decision to reopen the NYSC camps and schools will lead to further escalation of infections, a situation Nigeria’s healthcare system lacks the capacity to contain.

“The whole world knows that increased human interactions lead to an increase in COVID-19 infections. Even in the UK and USA, schools have been re-opened and shut at different times but the key thing is to reduce human interaction as much as possible.

“The truth is that re-opening of NYSC camps is avoidable. Corps members could have been given virtual orientation lectures and posted to their places of primary assignment. That was what the Vice-president’s committee recommended. There is no way these camps will not record infections,” a Nigerian health worker said.

Government’s attempt to reopen schools earlier has resulted in infections. There was a report of a secondary school where many students and staff tested positive for the virus in november, which this begs the question; why is the federal government keen on reopening both the schools and NYSC orientation camps.

Punch reported a source in the Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports Development saying that the government succumbed to pressure due to economic considerations. The source said that some persons have been awarded NYSC contracts which need the camps to reopen for them to be executed; otherwise there will be huge losses.

“About 90 percent of the budget of the Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports Development goes to the NYSC. You can check it. There is no way the government will suspend the orientation programme for two years. The orientation camp is a key component of the NYSC contracts.

“It was just like when the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs insisted on continuing with the school feeding programme even when schools were shut during lockdown,” the source said.

Apparently not a decision he can change, the Director General of Nigerian Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, responding to the development, said the government could not stop all activities in attempt to quell the pandemic. He said the authorities can only find a way to mitigate the risks as much as possible, adding that measures have been put in place to ensure safety in the NYSC camps.

The director of the NYSC, Brig Gen. Shuaibu Ibrahim, said the orientation camps will continue with the safety protocols established in November which ensures social distancing.

The NYSC Camp Safe Reopening Project Lead, Dr Oyeladun Okunromade disclosed extra measures being taken to ensure safety in the camps. She said there will be no religious gatherings in the camps and corps members will be tested for COVID-19 upon arrival at the orientation camps, and those who test positive will be isolated at approved NCDC health facilities. She explained that a maximum of 200 corps members would resume daily.

Despite these promised safety measures, medical professionals who spoke with Punch said the idea of reopening schools and the youth service orientation camps now will only breed disaster.

“Even the schools they want to open, I am so scared. Just about two or three days ago, we heard about LASUCOM hostel where three students tested positive, they have to close down the medical school, yet we are talking about NYSC camps that would have thousands of young people.

“Why is the government doing this? Indeed, by now, what we should be talking about is total lockdown,” Ogun State Chairman of Nigeria Medical Association, Dr. Oladipo Ogunlaja told Punch.

The federal government had on Friday ruled out the possibility of another lockdown, given the economic considerations of the country. However, the recent upsurge in COVID-19 cases is worrisome and equally poses a danger that bears more economic consequence.

With the government’s plan for vaccines acquisition yet to materialize, federal government’s plan to move on with the decision to reopen NYSC camps and schools, even when affluent countries with access to vaccines are keeping schools closed has been condemned.

Four Persons to Consult with before Making Business or Investment Decisions

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One of the biggest challenges faced by many is determining where to invest their money or which businesses to go into. This is common when the person in question has many options but lacks enough funds to sponsor them all. At a time like this, what such a person needs is meeting with the right persons, who will give him insight on which of the options to go for or, in some cases, better ones that he might need to consider. Of course, in this case, talking to the wrong people could lead to the loss of funds. Hence, the investor should be mindful of whom he receives advice from.

Four Persons to Consult before Taking a Business/Investment Decision

A Lawyer: Some businesses require legal procedures and knowledge. Some might need lawyers to help you to set up. Before you invest in that business, consider talking to a lawyer to understand what and what is involved, legally. You might also wish to find out the legality of the business in your country or state. If you go ahead without seeking legal advice and end up infringing or investing in another person’s business that has infringed or is about to commit one, you may wish you had done the needful beforehand. So, find a competent lawyer that will help you to avoid those mistakes.

An Entrepreneur: Whether you are about to start a business or invest in an already running one, you need some pieces of advice from a neutral entrepreneur that is into that same business. The essence of this is that the entrepreneur will tell you the ups and downs of the business. He can forecast the profitability of the business within the period of investment and help you decide whether you should go in for it or stall for some time. Remember to go for an entrepreneur that will not treat you as a competitor. Of course, you won’t think of speaking to the person you are about to invest your money with.

Lawyers are important

A Banker: There is something about bankers many people haven’t noticed: they have information on the types of entrepreneurs that are favoured by the economy. If you are looking for a business idea, go to a banker friend and he will tell you the customers that pay in millions of naira daily from their sales. Apart from that, some of the bank marketers visit customers in their offices and take time to survey how their businesses are run. Many bankers are walking business consultants that have a lot of information on business types in the country, how they thrive, how to set them up, and, above all, how risky they are. So, speak to that banker you know and see what information he has on your business and investment interests.

A Law Enforcer: This is one person people overlook while investigating their business and/or investment options. You will only understand the importance of people in this field if you consider the number of business-related cases reported to police stations every day. Some businesses always take the business owners and customers to the police station (e.g. estate agents) while some don’t. Some maintain close collaborations with law enforcers as a way of checking crimes and abuses. For instance, a man that wanted to establish a car dealership shop casually announced his intention to his friend, a police officer, and realised he needs to collaborate with some enforcement agencies, including EFCC. According to this policeman, car dealers provide details of buyers to law enforcers as a way of checking internet scams and other frauds. This was about three years ago, anyway, it may no longer be obtainable today. However, a person needs to know if the business or investment of his interest is the one that will cause him ceaseless police cases or not.

Note that talking to these people does not mean you should not consult with other experts. These are actually the people you should meet by the side, informally. They will help you with the basic information you need to make a decision. However, when you decide what you wanted, reach out to consultants to continue from there.

Even Without Knowing Practical Aspect of A Trade, You Need Knowledge To Build Great Companies

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Lagos Island (source: Guardian)

This is a question posted on our digital board. I think many will find value in my response to the member.

Question: “On the issue of testing capability, must an entrepreneur know the practical aspect of a trade? does it mean a vision can not be executed until the carrier knows the skills of execution?”

My Response: You do not need to know the practical aspect of a trade before you can build a business in it. What you need to do is to have capital, a factor of production, to acquire any capability you do not have. So, that capital can hire labour (here, someone who understands that trade).

Yet, as we have seen, since the time of Adam Smith economics, knowledge has become extremely important in business. While you may not have a practical knowhow on a trade, it is important you have knowledge about that trade if you want to thrive. The wisdom in a book – The Richest Man in Babylon –  comes into play: use experts to run things but you must also have knowledge to know who is an expert!

Aliko Dangote may not understand a refinery technical systems but he has knowledge to hire people who do, using the capital under his disposal. In the Week 1 of our program, I have a detailed video, explaining these five steps.

Welcome to Tekedia Institute.

Comment on LinkedIn Feed

Comment #1: Impressive one right there!

Robert Kiyosaki made a clear distinction between entrepreneurs and professionals, and I think it makes sense; entrepreneurs are much concerned with breath, they know ‘little’ about many things. Professionals on the other hand, are more about depth, they know so much about little things.

As an entrepreneur, what you need most is the domain knowledge, understand the fundamentals of every piece that makes up the business system; domain technicalities; business analytics; sales and marketing; accounting and finance; human resources; and other necessary parts as regarding the sector of interest. Then hire the best of the best in each subset of the system, those who are better than you, to run the show.

Just know as much as needed to understand the fundamentals and be able to speak their language, and step out of their way, so they can take care of the rest.

That’s business leadership!

Comment #2: Good response. You can be a visionary, manager or expert, you just need to be great at one, not three of them. With that, you bring in the other capabilities, the final outcome is a well run conglomerate.

1.2 – Five Phases of Building Great Companies

Welcome AtYourService Technologies To Tekedia Institute

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From all of us at Tekedia Institute, we want to welcome AtYourService Technologies for months-long co-learning on business innovation, operational execution and growth. AtYourService connects organizations to the best African talents who have the right skills they need to achieve their business goals.

It focuses on matching and managing professionals for these organizations, based on their unique needs, thus helping them succeed in the short and long runs. It does all via two broad services: People Recruitment (Full-time, Freelance & Secondment) and Project Management (Outsourcing). The firm is led by Uchenna Okezie

Great companies are sending their team members to Tekedia Mini-MBA, Tekedia Advanced Diploma and Tekedia Corporate programs. I want to welcome yours! BEGIN here.

 

The Jerome Powell (US Fed Reserve Chair)’s Words on Reserve Currency, Bitcoin and Crypto [Video]

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Jerome Powell, the U.S Fed Reserve Chairman, spoke on Bitcoin and cryptocurrency, among others. Here are excerpts. The full video below.

“Since we are the world’s reserve currency, we actually think we need to get this right, and we don’t feel an urge or need to be first,” he said. “We effectively already have a first-mover advantage, because we’re the reserve currency.”

“We’ve been very focused… on potential regulatory answers for global stablecoins, in particular,” said Powell in response to a question about CBDCs, or central bank digital currencies.

“So that’s been a high-level focus, and that will continue to be a high-level focus because they could become systemically important overnight and we don’t begin to have, you know, our arms around the potential risks and how to manage those risks, and the public will expect we do and has every right to expect that… It’s a very high priority.”