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FUOYE Students vs Nigerian Police

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What just happened at the Federal University, Oye-Ekitk (FUOYE)?

It was reported that the students were peacefully protesting against the poor power supply in the school environment. According to the report, it was a peaceful protest aimed at expressing their grievances, only to be stopped by the oncoming vehicles of the governor’s wife, Her Excellency, Mrs. Bisi Fayemi, the wife of Gov. Kayode Fayemi, who was in town for an empowerment programme.

As reported, the police fired shots at the students in an attempt to clear the road for the governor’s wife but ended up killing two students.

However, the police have quickly moved to deny the claims and rubbished the news that said two students were killed. Instead, the police accused the students of taking laws into their hands by trying to vandalize the vehicles that accompanied Her Excellency, Mrs. Bisi Fayemi.

Mr. Ikechukwu, a deputy superintendent of police, even claimed that a weapon was recovered from the protesting students.

The students were accused of blocking the road, which the police officers at the scene removed the blockade and dispersed the students peacefully. But the protecting students came back in masses to challenge Her Excellency.

Who do we believe in this scenario?

The students have reported that they lost two of their students in this ugly mayhem, while the police have denied and claimed the students were trying to cause panic and disrupt the peace in the state.

I hope our President, General Muhammadu Buhari, and the president of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), will look into this matter and punish the parties involved. Considering that we are still healing from the xenophobic attack on our brothers and sisters in South Africa, students-and-police brouhaha is not something we want at this present moment.

We are tired of hearing unpleasant news in our country. The country is in a trying moment, enough of all this news about killings and shedding of blood. When are we ever going to be free from this?

We don’t want it anymore!

As A People

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Recently, Africa mourned former President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe. His death at age 95 was surprisingly celebrated by Africans in negatives and positives. It’s assumed surprising since he fought for the liberation of his people from colonialism. His dedication and humanity, if I’m allowed to say, were considerably beautiful. Unfortunately, his heart was misguided and lacked the essence of its glow. He was, to me, the President that wanted to take his people higher: “Keep your Britain, I will keep my Zimbabwe”, he once said. He was like a little child with a great intent for a common good but suddenly captured by selfish motives or oppressiveness that no one else can quantify. That’s why Heidi Holland, a Mugabe Expert, would say that Mugabe “…is the wrong messenger with the right message”. 

His life as a son, brother, friend, father, husband, granddad, citizen and a president made me brood about US, Africa, and how our lives as a people have come to be. We started this growth, liberation as we like to call it on a round table of goodwill and became a continent that hates. What do we say then about Joseph Conrad that called Africa “a dark place”. Our light shone by Pan-Africanism and the need to intensify unity and uplift our people is becoming a shadow of spite and anger to one another. Our learnings, wisdom and mindset have become misunderstood. Our governments and people justify the dealings of corruption. Who we are and What we’ve become has dropped to a state of COPYCATISM.

Tare Munzara once said on a supposed Happy African Day;

“I still worry about Africa. We are slaves to Western and Eastern Brands and we do not cherish and love our own. We are not even in charge of our economies because we depend heavily on what happens in the East or West, Worse-off we still judge each other based on skin color because those from Northern Africa and even some in East Africa believe that they are not Africans and they do not integrate with the darker Africans. For centuries we are still being victimized by other races from other continents, because they despise our dark skin and think that we are lesser than them…

Xenophobia still lingers and some have the cold heart to kill their black African brothers and sisters and yet the people who owe them reparation and economic freedom are originally from the western countries. We still are held captive by our governments, who abuse our resources only to feed their pockets at the expense our crumbling nations. Why should we continue to suffer when we can apply Pan Africanism and Rise above the Western and Eastern Countries, but sadly we do not…”.

We, us, as a people, with our diversities cherished by the eyes of the same West and East, can build Africa more than now. Our lust for power resulting to greed and unrecognized Marxist system will demean our existence to ruins.

The desire to become more than we’ve been and the lack of contentment has drawn even the very starters of Pan-Africanism into blood-power thirsty maniacs. On Tuesday, the pain from Xenophobia and retaliations prompted the need to read through the concept of pan Africanism itself. And guess what! Gaddafi of Libya was a member of the movement. President Gaddafi also dedicated his time and energy to building a once united Africa. He said, which I had to raise my eyebrow to be convinced,

“I am satisfied that Africa is going along its historic and right road…One day it will become similar to the United States of America…We are approaching the formation of the African Authority, and each time we solve African problems and also move in the direction of peace and unity. We deal with problems step by step…”

Despite being an authoritative leader (commonly known to be a dictator), his last testament from his will blew my mind;

“Let the free people of the world know that we could have bargained over and sold out our cause in return for a personal secure and stable life. We received many offers to this effect but we chose to be at the vanguard of the confrontation as a badge of duty and honour.”

So, as a people, how would it be that we throw our privilege to be the United States of Africa.

That we have been sternly taught to live for ourselves and imbibe a racist heritage shouldn’t mean we walk in such manner. And yes, this is a persuasion. The brutal attacks on Tuesday from South Africa and Nigeria drew me to embrace more than empathy, I felt, like most Africans, betrayed and scorned by my own people.

Reading the role Nigeria played in the liberation of South Africa from the Apartheid system, I became afraid for the memories of South Africans. I wept for the state of their minds. Like Mandela said, if not misinterpreted;

“All of us know how stubbornly racism can cling to the mind and how deeply it can infect the human soul. Where it is sustained by the racial ordering of the material world, as is the case in our country, that stubbornness can multiply a hundred-fold.”

I don’t know what happened to the majority of Africans that they became Xenophobic. Out of frustration from this misunderstanding, Nigerians relentlessly blurted out their pain. I wept that night not just for the dead but the living South Africans. They are, like Sizwe Banzi, living a mysterious life. Their lives, their entire being and all there is has been invaded by the struggle of the system. Pathetically, they have become a people revenging from pain kept for generations.

It will forever remain an indelible blight on human history that the apartheid crime ever occurred. Future generations will surely ask: What error was made that this system established itself in the wake of the adoption of a universal declaration of human rights? It will forever remain an accusation and a challenge to all men and women of conscience that it took as long as it has before all of us stood up to say ‘enough is enough.’…Mandela

My pain for this state of Africa still remains till we become the United States of Africa. Our leaders that fought at the beginning, Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, Muhammed Gaddafi of Libya, and many more, the expected leaders whose accolades ought to continue whither on our lips because they started the race well and lost their rhythm.

MY LETTER TO OUR LEADERS

Dear Leaders,

As a faithful citizen of Africa with intent for growth, I commend you for your role in leadership. I know leadership requires courage, sacrifice, discipline and determination and I have committed my days to help the realization of a greater good.

Nevertheless, I beseech you not to be weary of this great good you have hope for. In due time, without concentrating on a misguided goal as our past leaders, you will reap a beautiful harvest.

We, as a people, desire to imitate your life and its outcome. I yearn for the peace that your leadership will possess. We love your diligence and relentlessness. You are blessed and graced to become equipped for this journey of leadership. For all that your hearts are blessed with selflessness and emotions to build, you will excel and emerge with good success,

God bless You all.

God bless Africa.

God bless Nigeria.

Hence, as Africans, siblings and family, let’s remain as a people. Let’s pray for South Africans and the effect of pain grudgingly kept for years. Let’s hope for their redemption and love to a degree of mercy for all men.

I leave you with a Life Defined.

There is still too much discord, hatred, division, conflict and violence in our world here at the beginning of the 21st century. A fundamental concern for others in our individual and community lives would go a long way in making the world the better place we so passionately dreamt of. … It is so easy to break down and destroy. The heroes are those who make peace and build. …-MANDELA

“Africa is one continent, one people, and one nation”- NKRUMAH 

Chil AI Lab is Fighting Cervical Cancer in Africa with Technology

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According to the World Health Organization, HPV causes approximately 68,000 cases of cervical cancer in Africa. HPV is one of the common cancer cases that affects women globally with 528,000 new cases and 266,000 deaths among women annually with most cases from the developing countries like Uganda where it is responsible for 40 percent of cancer related deaths among women.

Chil AI Lab was founded to fix this paralysis because its founder Shamim Nabuuma Kaliisa, a Ugandan doctor, lost her mother to cervical cancer while she was a medical student aged 13. The company provides affordable AI powered reproductive cancer prevention and treatment solutions for all classes of women irrespective of wherever they live.

Its self testing kit communicates in real time with its Chill Cancer Free App named Keti, an electronic oncology consultant which provides information on tests conducted providing convenience, reliability and is non-invasive and non-hormonal proven.

This innovation is timely and is needed across all parts of the African continent to help save women from one of the major cases of mortality among them. The innovation has earned the founder numerous awards which includes African Young Entrepreneurs Award 2018, African Women Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum Social Entrepreneurs Award 2018 and the Takeda Young Entrepreneur Award 2018.

Toursom Is Leveraging Tech to Promote Nigerian Tourism

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Bright Odionye loves travelling and making each moment count on his trips which are budget friendly. An experience when saddled with planning a 5 day trip which wasn’t professionally handled by a tour guide led him to establish Toursom to help tourists plan their vacation across Nigeria at affordable rates.

The Travel and Tourism industry contributed 29 percent in world service exports as of June 2019 with $1.7 trillion as total export earnings from international tourism, creating 1 in 5 jobs within the past 5 years. According to the UNWTO and WTO. International tourist arrivals grew by 4 percent in Africa with Mauritius, Kenya, Egypt and South Africa as preferred destinations on the continent.

Nigeria is Africa and one of the world’s best kept tourism destinations. With fabled sites like Benin Moats and Sukur Hills which are UNESCO World Heritage Monuments, Oranmiyan Staff at Ile-Ife which answers requests within 21 days, Sungbo’s Eredo at Ijebu Ode, Ogbaukwu Cave in Owerre Ezukala  in Anambra, Obudu and Mambilla Plateau which are the coolest points in Nigeria amongst other amazing wonders, Nigeria has opportunities. However, due to lack of political will from the Federal and State Governments in fixing infrastructure to boost tourism, as an important solution to job creation for millions of unemployed Nigerians, the opportunities remain latent.

Due to the harsh economic situation in Nigeria, most Nigerians do not engage in leisure or tourism related activities to relax compared to their counterparts in developed countries. Also absence of accurate data by tourism promotion agencies of the government on tourism destinations has made an industry which ought to be generating millions of dollars in export earnings noncompetitive.

Toursom wants to promote a recreation and travel culture amongst Nigerians  by organizing weekend getaways, short vacations for groups and a micro savings culture which will help people to save towards their vacation. By leveraging technology, it wants to offer the best customer experience ahead of the competition by providing personalized services to suit its different clientele and hopes to be Africa’s leading vacation platform within 5 years from commencement.

How You Can Save Your Company

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“Third World problems require Third World approaches towards providing a solution”

That statement up there will help you as an entrepreneur to stay away from years of fruitlessness. This piece I’m going to analyze deeply will open your eyes to the skeleton of business and give you key insights on why you should either quit or start your company.

Firstly, this piece is directed at Africans and anyone who wants to do business in Africa. If you’re an aspiring entrepreneur or you’re already running a startup, then we need to take it from the scratch. This will be detailed.

  1. What is Africa?: Before you go into business, you need to make proper and detailed research because running a business is not the same as writing a final year project. Often times, I meet with acclaimed entrepreneurs and they haven’t understood what and how their ideas relate with Africa. You just have an idea and the next thing, you’re developing a solution for it.

I spent a year on research before creating a MVP (minimum viable product). This is not to boast and it could be way lesser for you, rather it is to cement the fact that you need to do your assignment on research and not build based on assumptions. I would not begin to explain on how you can weigh your idea if it’s reasonable from scratch but this is also another angle to do so.

So what is Africa really, let’s talk. My answer; AFRICA IS A THIRD WORLD CONTINENT.

The earlier you understand this, the better it is for you. Now, let’s move a bit further to more analysis on what is peculiar about Third World countries or a Third World continent. You may not like the fact, but I’m really sorry, I’m trying to save your company right here. The reason I decided to do this piece is because everyone is jumping into tech in the name of; the future is A I, Robotics and all.

While, it is true, it is also true that the future we’re talking about is 3 decades away at the least if we don’t get facts right. If we keep hallucinating about where we are. This is just a little bit of digression before I return to the main point and I’m going on these corners so you’d understand pure business.

Never at any point compare Africa to the western world. We are way behind them and I’m not being pessimistic, I am trying to save your company. I am not trying to make us look inferior, I am presenting the reality of our current state.

Let’s throw the dice and play the game. 

What can you say is peculiar about Third World countries?

Poverty!! Lack of development as well!!

What I’m trying to do is to give the breakdown for you. Now, let’s break this down a little bit further. I will take Nigeria as the case study seeing I reside in Nigeria. Nigeria is said to have over 180 million citizens, according to the national bureau of statistics. Let’s hold that to be very true.

We have over 60 percent of this population to be youths and the rest adults and youngsters. Quick digression again, can you remind me what your business idea is about? Oh good. I will use an example.

Going into edtech. We are in what we call the edtech boom. The system of education is so bad that it is one of the major causes of unemployment in Africa. Education in Nigeria has not incorporated technology which means someone else, a private body needs to step into the game seeing the government is pretty slow about this. Good idea right?

So we have a problem. The problem is we have about 80 million youths who are in Nigeria and over 14 million are unemployed. There’s a huge gap between the world of work and the youths so let’s provide a bridge right. Now here’s where the problem comes in. Stay with me. An entrepreneur who has done proper research will come up with accurate statistics.

Let’s analyze it;

  • There’s huge unemployment in Nigeria because of the wide gap between the world of work and youths.
  • Internet penetration is high in Nigeria with over 20 million active monthly Facebook users in Nigeria, over 14 million on YouTube, over 14 million on Instagram, over 7 million on Twitter. This “means” people are using the internet well.
  • Smartphone penetration is pretty high in Africa and by 2020 from statistics, African youths will be able to afford a smartphone and have access to the internet as well.
  • There are so many skills to learn in this century that can be learnt online.
  • Learning in universities is pretty expensive and cannot be easily affordable by all.

I have presented a problem right here and there’s a solution to these problems. An online platform for learning will be the perfect solution. It offers some concrete solutions

  • Convenience
  • Affordability
  • Ease of access to relevant courses
  • Flexibility in learning and easily updatable

From this pitch deck, we have a good business plan and we can start a business hoping we’d have millions of the youths who are online using the platform. Now, that’s where the problem is. You have provided a solution to the problem but it is entirely different from building a business around it. I will give insights to this later.

From this pitch deck, we can say the market size is about “10 million users”. However, it is not true if you look at your business plan from the angle of What is Africa? The real market size is less than 1 million people. Way less!!

The real problem is that while we say that the market is ripe, the people are not.

Understanding this as well will help you put your company in proper perspectives. Remember I am still explaining what Africa is, I have not begun analysing how to build a real business from a problem you’re solving. Solving a problem doesn’t make you a successful entrepreneur. Building a business around the problem you’re solving does and only a few know this.

Let’s quickly talk about E-commerce in Nigeria once again. We have seen major companies close down in the E-commerce line. The reason is not far-fetched, while we can bellow all around that the market is ripe, are the people itself ripe?

We are not. How many people trust online transactions? Our parents? Me? Don’t just talk about me because I have been disappointed three years ago and it was due to late delivery of a product I ordered for my bestie on her birthday which was delivered two weeks after the set date. Well, that was three years ago and I’ve never trusted the platform to the point of ordering from it. Forget about the company’s name. Let’s talk business, I’m not done.

Who do we blame? The company? Well, yes, true. However, I believe you’ve not forgotten that we have not forgotten that we are talking from the angle of Who is Africa. Africa is a Third World continent and go check, poverty ravages these countries that their road networks are really bad. Now that they have built an e-commerce platform as a solution, the real problem still lies in the fact that the customer base will reduce because of logistics issues due to the fact that this is Nigeria.

Did you look at it from this angle? You have solved the problem but we need to keep this solution running as a business, you need to reach 10 million customers monthly to meet your target so as to please investors but based on these setbacks because it is Nigeria, you can only reach 2 million customers, how do you get to 10 million customers?

If you cannot get to 10 million customers, how do you make the revenue of 10 million customers even while it’s just 2 million customers you have access to? Now, this is business but do you know?

I have so many issues to address which is why I need you to watch out for this space and you can reach out to me if you want to talk real business and need help (business deals only, not mentorship or free advice please).

I am not laying all these points to discourage you from starting a company, it is to open your eyes that there is more to running a business than solving a problem or using high tech. I’d still address why some tech start-ups are wasting their time running in Africa or how they can navigate with patience and still scale but let’s go to the next point.

What Characterizes Third World Countries?

If you’ve not accepted that we’re a Third World continent, then please stop reading. Go start your company anyways. For those who are still with me, let’s talk about what characterizes Third World countries and which businesses thrive.

Back to Nigeria as a case study, we have a huge population of the poor and middle class than the wealthy. I have no statistics for the numbers, forgive me but there’s a wide gap. If we have the middle class so much, what products or services do you think will sell?

Needs!! That’s all

  • Food
  • Clothes
  • Beverages
  • Children stuff
  • Transportation
  • Health

For these points mentioned, there’s the place it applies to the middle class and another for the high class.

When it comes to food, Nigerians will firstly go for need. Fine, let me say the majority of Nigerians which happens to be the larger number. We get food because we want to stay alive. This means that garri sales, rice sales, beans, yam, etc will never stop as long as Nigerians remain Nigerians.

We (the majority) do not care about pizza or cold stone. We care but we cannot afford it so it becomes a want. The need market is the largest market in Nigeria, and Africa. Go check.

If you open a store that you have Gelato for sale, you’d have customers but I bet you, you can never build a billion dollar company from it in Africa. I have not taken Gelato before and I hope one of you buy me one, but I feel it will be pretty expensive. The middle class can still afford pizza, cold stone. I think they make up the majority of the consumers.

What characterizes the African market? Have you made your research in line with your company? Don’t just build out of optimism, build out of data and facts. It’s good to build for the future, but if you don’t understand business, you might not be able to lead your “potential customers” from the past to the future. They’d forever remain in the past. You need to either bring the future to them or lead them to the future.

So when building a business, the safest businesses to build are Third World businesses. Businesses based on “Now Problems” and not future problems. You cannot be Elon Musk and survive in Africa.

I have been able to explain why you need to understand who Africa is and what characterizes Africa. I’d write another piece on how we can integrate tech appropriately into businesses in Africa.