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Tinubu formally Endorses Sanwo-Olu for Next Governor of Lagos [Full Statement]

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The full statement

GOVERNORSHIP PRIMARY STATEMENT

30th September, 2018

Tomorrow, our party and the people of Lagos will have an encounter with destiny. We shall hold our governorship primary.

With the holding of direct primaries to elect governorship candidates in Lagos and other states, the APC takes a groundbreaking step toward greater internal democracy and progressive governance for the benefit of all people.

While our party is young, it has grown fast and has travelled far in a short time. This speaks well of the character of you, the party’s rank-and-file members.

What, in other nations, has taken political parties generations to achieve, we have done in a few brief years. No other party in Nigeria dare attempt what we have already dedicated ourselves to do.

I thank and commend all APC members and all Lagosians who have lent their support to this historic and humane mission upon which our party has embarked.

We are democrats in the truest sense of the word. As such, we forever search for what is good and right for the people. With this ideal as our guide, tomorrow’s primary cannot be shaded by selfish ambition or the perceived personal grievance between this or that person. Something much greater waits in the balance. What is at stake is nothing less than the future of the people of this state and how we can best maximise our collective destiny.

By resort to direct primaries, the party places the people’s future soundly in their hands. As democracy would have it, you shall be the authors of the party’s nomination and hopefully our next state government.

I trust in the wisdom of the people and will abide it. However, as a leader of the party and as a former governor of our beloved and excellent Lagos, I would be remiss if I did not make a few observations regarding the primary.

My goal is and shall always be a better Lagos. To this objective, I have dedicated the greater part of my public life. Roughly 20 years ago, a corps of dedicated and patriotic Lagosians, put aside personal interests and rivalries, to put their minds and best ideas together for the good of the state. Out of this collaborative effort, was born a master plan for economic development that would improve the daily lives of our people.

Bestowed on me was the honour of a lifetime when I was elected to be your governor in 1999. My administration faithfully implemented that plan. The government of my immediate successor, Tunde Fashola, also honoured this enlightened plan.

Where state government remained true to that blueprint, positive things happened. During my tenure and Governor Fashola’s, Lagos state recorded improvements in all aspects of our collective existence, from public health to public sanitation, from education to social services, from the administration of justice to the cleaning of storm and sewage drains. Businesses, large and small, invested, hired millions of workers and thrived.

All Lagosians were to fully participate and justly benefit from the social dividends and improvements wrought by this plan. From the common labourer, to business leaders, to professionals and our industrious civil service. We all were to be partners in a monumental but joint enterprise. None was to be alienated. None was to be left out. And none were to be pushed aside. This is especially true for those who contributed so much to our development, whether as a business leader who has invested heavily in Lagos, the homeowner who struggles to pay his fair share of taxes or as someone employed in the hard work of keeping our streets and byways clean so that others may go about their daily tasks unimpeded.

I make no pretence that the master plan is perfect. It can always be fine-tuned. However, whenever a government departed from this plan without compelling reason, the state and its people have borne the painful consequence of the improper departure.

To ignore this blueprint for progress in order to replace it with ad-hoc schemes of a materially inferior quality contravenes the spirit of progressive governance and of our party. Such narrowness of perspective does not bring us closer to our appointed destination; it takes us farther from that destiny.

For reasons unknown to me and most Lagosians, we have experienced such deviations from enlightened governance recently.

This trend is that which most concerns me as the primary nears. We must arrest this trend before irreparable harm is committed against the people and their future. For the record, let it be known that I shall vote in this primary because I see it as one of extreme import to our state and our party. Just as I shall vote, I equally urge all party members to do so.

We must vote in a manner that returns Lagos to its better path, the one that promises a just chance for all to enjoy the fruits of our prosperity. We must always pursue our goal of a Lagos energised by creative dynamism, tolerance of others, and guided by a leadership capable of extending a collegial hand to all stakeholders, far and wide.

I am encouraged by the emergence of a candidate in this primary who has served the state in senior positions in my administration, the Fashola administration and even in the current one. While possessing a wealth of experience and exposure, he is a young man endowed with superlative vision and commitment. Most importantly, he understands the importance of the blueprint for development. He esteems it as a reliable and well-conceived vehicle for the future development of the state. He also knows the value of reaching out and working with others in order to maximize development and provide people the best leadership possible.

With people like him at the helm, the state will write the proper history for itself.

When the final word is given let it be said that we want all Lagosians to look to the future with the hope and optimism that our best days remain before us and not behind us.

We walk into this primary strong and confidently believing in the right course we are to take. We shall emerge from this primary even stronger and more confident that we have taken that course by returning Lagos and our party to their finest path.

Signed:
Aswiaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu

Financial Times London Interviews Ndubuisi Ekekwe

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This week, I had a two-part interview series with Financial Times (FT) London. They had wanted my insights on precision agriculture innovation for a special report they are working on. I do believe that the Cambrian moment is here for agricultural technology and this redesign is unbounded by geography. Any decent-talent engineer can combine many of the APIs, software systems, IOTs, etc and come up with something that can have real impacts on animal and crop farming. Yes, even the local free-range chickens across African villages can be advanced to deliver more with technology.

The real challenge though is making money doing it: working with price-sensitive customers like most African farmers requires new business models. You have to invent something from scratch because anything they have abroad will not work. Why? The natures of our farming systems are totally different for the models and processes to be adopted without drastic adaptations.

Agtech remains one of the main areas I have noted which people can explore as they look for business ideas in Nigeria. Here is the complete list of exciting business ideas in Nigeria at the moment. Read them for some insights and perspectives as you plan for a mission into gross margins.

  • Agro fintech: creating financial solutions geared for the agriculture sector with the use of technology like apps, web apps, AI, blockchain, etc. These will include agro-lending, agro-insurance, agro-trading, etc. FarmDrive, a Kenyan enterprise, connects unbanked and underserved smallholder farmers to credit, while helping financial institutions cost-effectively increase their agricultural loan portfolios

Finally, when FT runs the piece, I will share. Of course, they can put it under paywall cutting out many of us, including my humble self, as FT is a subscription-based newspaper.

Nigeria Press Likes My Message to Farmers in National Stadium

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The Nigerian press liked my message to farmers in the National Stadium Surulere on Thursday. I had keynoted a major agriculture gathering, Convergence.

I have challenged our farmers to do away with norms and dogmas and become businesspeople. It was a very powerful message that technically pushed many out of their comfort zones.

You cannot kill a goat for your ancestors to make you rich, through better harvest, as you plant your yam, even when many of them died poor doing what you are doing today. While we celebrate our heritage, it is instructive to note that fallow periods have been halved because of population. So, what worked in the past is largely irrelevant because farms are lesser fertile.

I told our farmers that it remains shameful to expect government to feed us with food supplies when we are FARMERS. Yes, we cannot afford community of farmers going hungry! It must stop in this nation.

Over the last 72 hours, all the major newspapers in Nigeria have carried that message (Guardian, Punch, ThisDay, Nation, etc) with snippets on their digital versions. And the responses have been positive as farmers reached out and appreciated the insights. Yes, my goal was to give many a new purpose to return to farms.

Farmers Urged to Embrace Technology

THISDAY Newspapers
Speaking at the event, an entrepreneur and international scholar, Professor Ndubuisi Ekekwe, said the time has come for Nigerian farmers to move …
‘Farmers must embrace technology’ – The Nation Newspaper
Farmers urged to embrace technology for better yield – Guardian (blog)

Farming is a business; it is not a cultural way of living which must be done without profit and loss. You need to innovate to drive productivity. Embrace technology and thrive for Nigeria. Time for hungry farmers must end!

Zenvus Receives Disruptive Africa Recognition

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Zenvus Award DAX 2018

It began with the mission to help farmers in my beautiful village of Ovim (Abia State). I had made it home from the awesome America, and was not satisfied that farmers in a place I lived were not making great progress. As a farm boy, I knew the implications – no yield, no school fees. I went back and returned.  Today, it is a movement. Zenvus received recognition yesterday during Disruptive Africa.

Zenvus Award DAX 2018

 

 

 

For first time, I Saw a Print Version of My Book – Africa’s Sankofa Innovation

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Free for all Mini-MBA edition 2 participants

Today, for the first time, I saw a copy of the print version of my book – Africa’s Sankofa Innovation. In DAX Innovation for Growth Workshop, someone brought it for my signature. Interestingly, I sought the owner’s permission to take a photo. That is the beauty of America and why anyone can find a space to thrive. Your job is to write a book and not to deal with printers, shippers, etc and their troubles. When I submitted that book to Amazon, my major job was completed; the remaining one going forward is to keep my bank account active.

Three ways to buy this book:

The book, titled Africa’s Sankofa Innovation, examines many important issues on the African innovation ecosystem. It has 13 chapters broken into nine sections covering Systems, Makers, Opportunities, and more. Every chapter presents key issues from African perspectives drawn from African startups, entrepreneurs, businesses and communities. See the table of contents here.

The book requires a subscription of $20 per year. It is a living book and I will be updating it regularly. The version number is “current” because its contents will be regularly refreshed to cover technology, business, entrepreneurship, and other pertinent innovation elements, on Africa.

PayPal and bank transfer are supported. Just click the Subscribe Here button and you will be taken to a checkout. But if that is complicated, for Nigerian readers, you can send N7,000 to our bank account in Nigeria (account numbers provided here). Once done, send your email and name to tekedia@fasmicro.com, my team will create an account and send you a password to access the portal.