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What is Wrong With Osun Startup Ecosystem?

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Like other states in the south west region of Nigeria, Osun state is blessed with mineral deposits such as clay, granite, talc, dolomite, feldspar, quartz, limestone, mica and gold that could spur its growth. The state is also blessed with water resources that could be explored for domestic and industrial purposes. Despite these, the youths who constitute a larger percent of over 4 million population are yet to get government’s attention on the enabling infrastructure capable of exploring inherent opportunities in natural resources, agriculture, technology among others.

Ayodamola Olu-Ayoola, cofounder and CEO of AppCity LLC in the state, is one of the youths who believe that successive governments failed to address challenges preventing the youths in the state to actualise their potential through entrepreneurship. In spite of the former governor, Rauf Aregbesola, infrastructure upgrade which earned him accolades across the state during his first tenure, Ayodamola believes that the upgrade had no connection with making Osogbo, the state capital, an emerging startup ecosystem.

He is one of the startup founders and professionals in the state who are not comfortable with a number of statistics on establishing and doing business. For instance, he does not know how to describe the inability of the state to have share of various support startup funds entering Nigeria in the last two years.

In one of the posts, announcing the StartupOsun 2019 Conference, he and his colleagues note that “In 2018 a total sum of $334.5Million was pumped into the Nigerian Startup Ecosystem, none of these startups are affiliated to Osun State, obviously not for the lack of ideas but for the lack of information and guidance.

2019 Second Quarter Report for Startup funding already revealed that $73.68 million, that is approximately N26, 524,800,000, was pumped into the Nigerian Startup Space, again Osun Startups not represented. Imagine what a quarterly private funding of N10 billion will do within the Osun Private Sector Space, the ripple effect on employment, quality of living and the overall economy.”

During the regime of the former governor Rauf Aregbesola, we had OYES, a social net programme for unemployed citizens. Throughout his tenure, any significant impact of the exit programmes associated with the initiative?

To be candid, I’m really hoping that the present governor, Gboyega Oyetola, will do much better than his predecessor, Rauf Aregbesola. OYES is just a social programme to keep some young people busy doing something. It did not particularly lead the youths to anywhere. If you have been keeping the environment clean for four years, what skill has that added to you. Has that improved your learning in any way? No.

So, it is a programme that was not planned to yield particular impacts other than deciding the particular number of people being given particular stipends monthly. You didn’t equip them with any skill. So, there is no room for growth.  If you have ten thousand youths doing that where do they grow to? Do you have these ten thousand youths been necessarily employed three or four other people? If we have failed in that category it means that it was just what it is. The social net programme; you just look for people to give money per month. It is more like a hunger alleviation programme not particularly youth development programme. It is not empowering, just to put it clearly. I don’t see any particular impact of that programme. I do not see. I expected much more than that from a government of a state. Your goal should be to get your young people self-sufficient enough. That is what the government is supposed to do.

Based on the infrastructure upgrade in the last 8 years, do you see Osogbo as an emerging startup ecosystem?

To be honest, if there is any infrastructure upgrade in Osogbo, they are the new buildings of the schools, I am talking about the schools that have new buildings, I’m talking about high schools, middle schools and you would be talking about road construction, the completed ones and the ongoing ones they have completed ring roads and all of that. As relating to startup ecosystem, I don’t believe that in the last six years anything was actually done.

Does Osun state government even understand there are reasons to have startups? We don’t even have a hub yet. A tech hub, we don’t have any tech school for development. We don’t have biotech, we don’t have tech, and we don’t have any particular leadership for software developers, nothing like that.

We don’t have a Google Business group, Google development group in the state. But I’m always optimistic, as you can see, the initiative to organize the StartupOsun conference. We want Osun state to emerge as the startup ecosystem but if we are to do that we would be asking for a more intentional infrastructure upgrade that is needed for a startup ecosystem to actually emerge.

Based on Ayodamola’s views, it is obvious that the current administration has a number of challenges to contain to actualise strategic objectives and goals in Osun State Agenda 2018-2020. As opined by Ayodamola, it would be disastrous to expect state revenue to be N1.2 billion per annum by 2024 and N1.8 billion by 2028. It would also be a waste of time and resources confining the youths or unemployed to social net programmes and expect over 23,000 jobs by the end of 2020, over 28,000 and 33,000 by 2024 and 2028 respectively. The big question among the youths across the state is that, is Governor Oyetola ready to implement a youth agenda as presented to him and other candidates before the 2018 governorship election?

NASA Dismisses Alleged Crime in Space

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The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), has investigated a claim of crime from space. It was an allegation that an astronaut has illegally accessed the bank account of her estranged partner from the International Space Station (ISS). It’s deemed to be the first crime ever from space.

The New York Times reported that former Airforce Intelligence, Summer Worden, filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), that NASA astronaut, Anne McClain has accessed her account from the ISS without authorization.

McClain was in a six months’ mission aboard ISS at the time, and vehemently denied any wrongdoing, telling investigators that it was consensual behavior that dated back to the time they were a couple.

McClain and Worden were married in 2014, but got divorced in 2018 when McClain accused Worden of violent behavior. Worden filed for divorce claiming that Anne McClain is only looking for an opportunity to keep custody of her child. Worden had a child from a previous relationship and it somehow happened to be a bone of contention to the gay couple.

Worden’s parents also filed another complaint through NASA’s Office of Inspector General. Claiming that McClain had improperly accessed their daughter’s account, conducting a “highly calculated and manipulative campaign” to gain custody of her son. An allegation McClain, through her lawyer, Rusty Hardin, denied. According to him: McClain was monitoring the account to ensure the well-being of Worden’s son. They had been raising him using the same account and password when they were married.

NASA didn’t comment on the matter, citing its policy on personal and personnel matters, that commands “no comments.”

“Lt Col. Anne McClain has an accomplished military career, flew combat missions in Iraq and is one of NASA’s top astronauts. She did a great job on her most recent NASA mission aboard the International Space station.

“Like with all NASA employees, NASA does not comment on personal or personnel matters.” Said NASA’s spokeswoman, Stephanie Schierholz.

McClain had gone to space a few months after her divorce from worden, in preparation for the all-female spacewalk. She spent six months on the ISS but was later replaced. NASA spokeswoman, Megan Summer said the allegation has nothing to do with McClain replacement from the spacewalk team.

Worden is still waiting for a response from the FTC who she said were still assessing the complaint to the inspector general.

However, NASA officials told the Times that they did not know of any crimes that had been committed on the ISS. And the case has been dismissed.

What is your website NSCDC? [Video]

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NSCDC stands for Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps. The website is NSCDC.GOV.NG.

https://youtu.be/u4v0jsO9vU8

Comment on LinkedIn

Haha!
When you surround yourself by low thought personnel, they end up exposing your flaws.

If I’m right to be sent on representation for an organization or a brand, you should have attained a height which involves passing examination to make progress internally, so how did he get to the top?

Anyways his Oga at the Top placed him their and am sure that Oga would be doing some Firing or Demotion if that Oga is not even under the power of a bigger Oga from Abuja.

Nigeria is really bleeding in terms of Leadership, and it a mess!

The Governor Babagana Zulum Interview

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The governor of Borno State,  Babagana Zulum, in an interview with Premium Times touched the root cause of the Boko Haram insurgency in northeastern Nigeria.

PT: What are you doing to ensure normalcy is restored and what is the takeaway from your meeting with the President?

…By and large, we must also address the root causes of the Boko Haram insurgency which is not limited to endemic poverty, pervasive illiteracy, financial and economic hardship, unemployment, environmental degradation, drug abuse among others. We must ensure our youths are employed…

Borno state has a literacy rate of 23% (sure, well ahead Yobe state which has 7.2%) indicating that leaders failed a generation of young people. Happy the governor has identified what I have called the gray lizard problem: In Nigeria, we do not just have black swan. We have gray lizard. It is a high impact risk, that is highly probable and evidently visible but totally, widely and irresponsibly ignored. The massive youth unemployment in Nigeria is a gray lizard. Governments see it daily but it is totally ignored.” Now, to secure the next generation, human capital investment must follow.

Like President Buhari whose state, Katsina state, has a literacy rate of 10%, these leaders must invest in young people over the incessant white elephant projects. Katsina does not necessarily need a transport university, Katsina does not necessarily need an army university, Katsina does not necessarily need all those big cutting-tape events; simply, Katsina, Borno and most parts of northern Nigeria need 10x better teachers and schools (primary and secondary) to redesign the future of our next generation. How can you have out of every 100 twenty-year olds, only 7 can read and write, and yet you are wasting time building physical infrastructures the other 93 cannot benefit from?

 

Financial Inclusion in Nigeria – Illiteracy, and Impediment of Inducement

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A common attribute of the financially excluded population is illiteracy; except on few occasions.

According to the Oxford dictionaries; Illiteracy means inability to read or write.

Our society has magnified this inability and made it become an impediment in interacting with the financial sector. We often unconsciously specify the interpretation of illiteracy and then classify anyone that could not read or write in only English language as a complete illiterate.

The financially excluded population in Nigeria could be classified in to categories ‘A’ and ‘B’ as seen below:

A. Those who cannot read or write in any language but could speak fluently in their local languages.

B. Those who cannot read or write in English language but could read or write in their local  languages.

A lot of the people in the category ‘B’ above had been unconsciously excluded from the financial sector in spite of having more capabilities than those in category ‘A’.

Although, very daring few of the population in both categories listed above maintained bank accounts and have active insurance policies by relying solely on a third-party for interpretation. This often made them more to become vulnerable to financial risks.

Unfortunately, I could not quote the statistics of literacy status of the financially excluded population. My assumptions were derived from experience and interactions with the space from south-west to North-West of the country.

We can achieve more success in financial inclusion drive when we pay more attention to the attributes of the target population.

Products represented in local languages should spring up to make interaction easier with the target population.  For instance, banking apps and USSD interactions could come with language options (Yoruba, Hausa and Igbo). This will give the users the opportunity to  permanently set their language preference while signing up.

This will reform the sector as people who are literate only in their local languages but financially excluded will become relevant and eager. Also, those that are already financially included with third-party’s aid will become independent as they will definitely appreciate the new interactive approach more.

Products such as transactions alerts through both SMS and Email could also be made to conform to this proposed language selection for interaction.  This will drastically reduce vulnerability since vital information regarding information security through these channels will certainly be understood by the receivers of this information.

Those in the ‘A’ category that could neither read nor write in any language but could speak their local languages fluently will found documents and interfaces represented in their local languages more reliable and addressable. This will influence their decision to be signed-on with guidance from a selected third-party. Only those who are physically handicapped should need any available third-party’s aid in this process.

A radical or selective financial inclusion drive will not guarantee customer retention even if people are forcefully (made to have bank account to enjoy a favor or opportunity) or deceitfully (made to have a bank account with a promise of incentives) included, if the system does not pay attention to comfort-ability, privacy and simplicity of processes as they concerned the target population.