Monday, March 26, 2012
African Union Communiqué On the Candidacy of Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala for the Post of World Bank President
26 Mar 2012 14:31 Africa/Lagos
African Union Commission (AUC) Communiqué on the Candidacy of Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala for the post of World Bank President
ADDIS ABABA, March 26, 2012/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- The African Union Commission (AUC) attaches great importance to the on-going selection exercise for the next President of the World Bank and is happy to note the commitment to an open, transparent and merit-based process.
The World Bank is the premier global institution that provides support to Developing Countries, and is a major player in addressing wide-ranging global development issues. It is therefore an institution of great importance to Africa, and has been a principal partner in assisting the continent's socio-economic transformation, consistent with its core mission.
The crux of development issues in the world today really resides in Africa, and therefore, the success of the World Bank in achieving its mandate will be judged, to a large extent, by its accomplishments on the continent. It will also be judged by the degree to which it is able to complement its lending and technical assistance and advisory activities with facilitation support for knowledge sharing among developing countries, through effective South-South exchanges to tackle issues of common interest. Finally, the AUC believes that an effective World Bank must continue to play a proactive role, jointly with other partners, in tackling global economic growth and financial stability issues in a volatile and uncertain world, as well as provide leadership in the domain of global public goods, such as environment and climate change. For this purpose, the World Bank needs to have at its helm someone with deep knowledge, broad experience and expertise in a wide range of development issues. It also needs someone who has proven capable, over the years, of working effectively both at the local, national and international levels, and in connecting the different parts to foster synergy and complementarity.
The AUC is pleased to note that Africa has such a nominee in the person of Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who possesses undisputed credentials in terms of her technical and managerial expertise, as well as a strong track record as a development professional, both inside and outside the World Bank. Dr. Okonjo-Iweala has spent more than two decades in the World Bank, rising through the ranks to the top management level as Managing Director. At the same time, she brings on board a rich experience of managing a very complex economy. As Minister of Finance for Nigeria – Africa's most populous country, she has demonstrated capacity to successfully drive reforms, having dealt effectively with a variety of issues. In her recent expanded role as Coordinating Minister for the Economy, she has also been adept in managing cross-sectoral issues, ranging from agriculture to health, education and infrastructure. On another level, Dr. Okonjo-Iwealahas honed her diplomatic skills as Nigeria's Minister of Foreign Affairs during the course of her career.
She has worked extensively on Africa, but she combines this with experience of handling Emerging Economy/Middle-Income country issues across the globe, having had deep involvement with World Bank's work program and other initiatives in East Asia, South Asia, Central Asia, Middle East and North Africa. She has also led numerous initiatives of the World Bank, including the Global Food Price Crisis Response Program, the Global Agricultural and Food Security Program, the South-South Knowledge Exchange Program, and the Stolen Assets Recovery (STAR) Initiative. Dr. Okonjo-Iwealais also globally known for her work on gender issues, focusing on economic empowerment of girls and women, for which she has won global recognition. She has earned tremendous respect and credibility working with major shareholders of the World Bank in different capacities, who acknowledge her deep passion for development and strong drive for results. As Chair of IDA 16 Replenishment under World Bank's President Zoellick, she led negotiations that culminated in the contribution of $49.3 Billion by donor countries to assist the poorest countries.
The challenge of addressing development in today's complex world requires a multi-sectoral expertise. It requires a demonstrated ability to draw on knowledge, expertise and experience in a wide range of areas, and to manage the interplay of these. Dr. Okonjo-Iweala's impeccable credentials, including depth and breadth of knowledge, rich and varied experience, make her eminently qualified and the best candidate for the post of World Bank President. She epitomizes the kind of visionary leadership, courage and innovation needed for the Bank today. She will hit the ground running in leading the Bank. The AUC, on behalf of African countries, is pleased to endorse Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala's candidacy in the strongest possible terms.
AUC's support reinforces the decision of African Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development, who, at their meeting today in Addis Ababa, endorsed her as Africa's sole candidate for the Presidency of the World Bank.
Addis Ababa 26 March 2012
Source: African Union Commission (AUC)
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White Collar Crime - Nigeria
Chief James Ibori, former governor of Delta State.
Nigeria - contributed by Sofunde Osakwe Ogundipe & Belgore
UK fraud conviction highlights Nigeria's deficient enforcement measures
An English court's recent conviction of James Ibori, former governor of Delta State, on charges of fraud and money laundering is just one of several instances in which fraud committed in Africa has resulted in convictions outside Africa. The case adds justification to the perception that the Nigerian authorities – for whatever reason – are content to leave fraud and corruption prosecution to other jurisdictions.
Author: Babajide Oladipo Ogundipe
Read more http://www.internationallawoffice.com/?i=2720383&l=7GC1360
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Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala in Final Nominees for President of World Bank
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala in Final Nominees for President of World Bank
26 Mar 2012 06:37 Africa/Lagos
Closing of Nominations for President of World Bank
WASHINGTON, March 26, 2012/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- The Board of Executive Directors of the World Bank confirmed today that, as announced on February 17, the period for submitting nominations for the position of the next President of the World Bank closed on Friday, March 23. The Board is pleased to announce that the following three nominees will be considered for the position:
Jim Yong Kim, a US national and President of Dartmouth College, New Hampshire
José Antonio Ocampo, a Colombian national and Professor at Columbia University, New York
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a Nigerian national and Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Minister of Finance, Nigeria
In accordance with the procedures previously announced, the Executive Directors will conduct formal interviews of the three candidates in Washington, D.C., during the following weeks, with the expectation of selecting the new President by consensus by the 2012 Spring Meetings.
Source: The World Bank
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Saturday, March 24, 2012
Katarina Hedren On Becoming A Blogger @ 2nd iREP Ducofest
Katarina Hedren
What is the synergy of Blogging and film-making?
Katarina Hedren will tell you this Saturday at the Terra Kulture venue of the second iREPRESENT International Documentary Film Festival (iREP DOCU-FEST).
Ms. Hedren is a Swedish Ethiopian activist writer and filmmaker based in South Africa and as a key promoter of the Documentary Network Africa (DNA) she is participating in the on going second iREP International Documentary Film Festival at the Terra Kulture and Freedom Park in Lagos, Nigeria.
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Over 84 Million Views of Kony 2012 Documentary on YouTube
Jason Russell's YouTube video documentary on Joseph Kony of Uganda's Lord's
Resistane Army has attracted over 84 million views so far within 10
days. But Nigerian writer Teju Cole has more to say on Twitter. Read
what provoked Teju on http://www.inquisitr.com/203192/kony-2012-inspires-supporters-and-enrages-the-critics/
To see real time reports on LRA activity in the D.R.Congo, Central African Republic and South Sudan visit: http://www.lracrisistracker.com/
To learn more about Invisible Children's recovery efforts in the post-conflict regions of northern Uganda AND our work with communities currently affected in D.R.Congo, Central African Republic and South Sudan visit: http://www.invisiblechildren.com/programs.html
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Friday, March 23, 2012
Second iREP International Documentary Film Festival Opens in Lagos
The second iREPRESENT International Documentary Film Festival (iREP DOCU-FEST) opened to a full house Thursday morning at the Terra Kulture on Victoria Island, Lagos. The Executive Director of iREP, Femi Odugbemi gave the welcome address on the goals of the festival; followed by the iREP Hall of Fame Awards given to accomplished Nigerian documentary filmmakers, Ambassador Yussuf Maman, Cyril Okonkwo, Sandra Obiago and Francis Oladele who was absent and Tunde Kelani received the award on his behalf.
The opening film of the second iRepresent International Documentary Film Festival, An African Election is a film by Jarreth Merz. The 2008 presidential elections in Ghana, West Africa, serve as a backdrop for this feature documentary, which looks behind the scenes of a complex, political machinery of a third world country trying to catch up with the first world. Merz embarks on a once in a lifetime political journey.
Prof. Jean Paul Collyen
The keynote address on African Cinema and the Frontiers of Documentary by Prof. Jean Paul Collyen captivated the audience of both local and international filmmakers, movie buffs, special guests and others. The famous anthropologist and documentary filmmaker and Director of the institute of African Arts in Paris appreciated the sociological perspectives of Nollywood narratives and commended the phenomenal ingenuity of the producers who have been able to make movies without any government support and with their hard earned money in contrast to the big budget studio productions of Hollywood and Bollywood. Prominent Nigerian filmmakers like Tunde Kelani, Ms. Sandra Mbanefo Obiago and Teco Benson and a special guest, Katarina Hedren from South Africa discussed the keynote address and the controversial poster: Is Nollywood Documentary? Which is the sub theme of Democracy and Culture - The Documentary Film Intervention, the theme within the framework of Africa in self-conversation.
About 30 films will be screened in the four-day duration of the festival with special workshops and conferences on camera works, scriptwriting, etc.
The co-founders, Makin Soyinka, Jahman Anikulapo and Femi Odugbemi appreciated their partnership with Goethe Institut and AG DokumentarFilm (German Association of Independent Producers). Also present were representatives of the Association of Independent Producers from Cameroon (APIC).
The organizers said there will be a Producers Forum observed by the Documentary Network Africa (DNA) represented by one of its coordinators, Katarina Hedren from South Africa. iREP is DNA’s representatives in Nigeria and much of West Africa. The Producers Forum is coordinated by Barbel Mauch, a vastly experienced producer, who in October 2001 founded the Babel Mauch Film with intention to co-produce films at an international level. The company also offers consulting agency services for production, distribution and for film festivals, especially from Germany, France and Africa. Bärbel has an extensive network of contacts thanks to her considerable experience in production, distribution and as publicist with Iskra in Paris as well as many film festivals and with her own company. For over 20 years now, she has worked for Französische Fimtage Tübingen, where she organises the African Section, and since 2005 has been a member of the selection committee. Since 2006, she has been a consultant at Berlinale Talent Campus and expert for talents from Africa and the Middle East.
Between 2008 and 2009, she coordinated the SHOOT! Workshops on documentary film production for the Nigerian Film Corporation in Jos, Nigeria; and in 2009 coordinated workshops for the festival Lagunimages in Cotonou/Benin.
From 2009 to 2011, she was chairwoman at the African-German co-production meeting during the festival Ecrans Noirs, Cameroon, organized by AG Dok and APIC in collaboration with Goethe-Institut Yaoundé. She also served 2009 Expert at the Nigeroon/Cameria workshop in Bamenda, Cameroon, organized by the Goethe-Institut.
Jens Wenkel is a Berlin-based filmmaker and medical doctor. As a doctor and researcher, he worked for Doctors Without Borders in different countries of Africa for three years. Recently, he finished a documentary film about urban every day life in the megacity of Lagos, which was premiered at the IDFA in Amsterdam. Together with Matthias Luthardt he organized a documentary workshop entitled Spirit and Spirituality under the umbrella of the Goethe-Institut Lagos. Wenkel has done so much research and cinematic work in Lagos.
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Monday, March 19, 2012
Concerned Africa Scholars Urge U.S. Government To Support African Nations
19 Mar 2012 06:42 Africa/Lagos
Africa specialists address risks of KONY2012 campaign and military solutions
WASHINGTON, March 19, 2012/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- The Board and Executive of the national Association of Concerned Africa Scholars (ACAS) today called on the U.S. government to give more attention to supporting the African Union of 54 nations in negotiating for peace in the militia‐torn areas of East and Central Africa.
“We have listened to many African people from the war‐torn areas of Congo, South Sudan, Uganda, and Central African Republic,” said David Wiley*, spokesperson for ACAS, “and they are calling for negotiations and peaceful reintegration of the militias into their communities. Many are saying they do not want a widening of the war with national armies who often commit atrocities backed by U.S. troops or advisors that could continue the conflict for decades.”
The Africanist scholars said they are encouraged that so many Americans are concerned about Africa and want to help with the disorder of the militias there. However, the ACAS says:
“… after consulting with scholars of Uganda and Central Africa and with other experts in the region, we are deeply concerned that the recent campaign in the United States to pursue and arrest Joseph Kony, leader of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), could have dangerous unintended consequences. Expanding U.S. military operations with the Ugandan army to capture Kony could increase the militarization of the region and lead to deaths of civilians who are caught in the crossfire or become targets of retaliatory attacks by the LRA, as has occurred in the past.”
“Indeed,” Wiley noted, the Ugandan army itself has been guilty of atrocities and abuse of civilians both in Uganda, probably killing more people over the years than the LRA, and now in the Central African Republic while chasing Kony again.”
The Ugandan director of the Makerere University Institute of Social Research, Dr. Mahmoud Mamdani, commented this week.
“The 70 million plus who have watched the Invisible Children video need to realize that the LRA – both the leaders and the children pressed into their service – are not an alien force but sons and daughters of the soil. The solution is not to eliminate them physically, but to find ways of integrating them into (Ugandan) society.”
Instead of military action, ACAS is calling on President Obama and the Congress to support and take the lead of the African Union (AU) and its new Special Representative for Counter‐ Terrorism. ACAS also urges Obama “to take a strong stand against the use of child soldiers by fully complying with the U.S. Child Soldier Prevention Act of 2009 by prohibiting military assistance to the Democratic Republic of the Congo and other governments until they meet specific benchmarks,” as urged by Amnesty International.
“Much of Africa,” Wiley noted, “is awash with AK‐47s and other cheap small arms, light weapons, and mines, the munitions of terrorist militias.” So ACAS also is calling on the Administration,
“…to actively seek an effective United Nations Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) to end irresponsible trade in weapons, munitions, and other military and policing equipment that often inflict misery and carnage on people, especially in Africa. “
“Donations by Americans are very much needed for the pressing needs of these former child soldiers, the raped, and the displaced,” Wiley commented, pointing out that the “excellent programs” of the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and the UN Children's Fund
(UNICEF) are not fully funded for their work with the people displaced by the militias in the four countries.
* Wiley is Professor of Sociology at Michigan State University, is a former president of the African Studies Association, and has conducted research on Africa for 50 years.
Source: Association of Concerned Africa Scholars (ACAS)
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Rebranding Nigeria? Look in the Mirror of Your Life
Photo Credit: Patitos Post.
There is no ware, no matter how damaged that the potter cannot repair.
But the owner of the ware must be honest enough to admit the damages than tell lies.
For how can we re-brand Nigeria if we cannot re-brand our ways of life?
What is the use of saying you are a Christian when you behave like a pagan?
Must you cheat or lie and steal or kill to make ends meet?
And of course, you are what you do, no matter how many lies and photographs you post on Facebook and Google Plus and other places online.
You will only be fooling yourself.
As you go to Church, mosque or even shrine today, you will only receive as much as you give.
Whatever you sow, you shall reap, for no matter the seasons and the reasons, we are judged by our own deeds.
Re-branding Nigeria begins with the person you are gazing at in your mirror.
The truth will always find us out.
Re-branding Nigeria begins with the person you are gazing at in the mirror.
God bless Nigeria and save us from the lunatic fringe among us. Amen.
~ By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima
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Friday, March 16, 2012
The Largest Titanic Visitor Experience in the World
Titanic Belfast, the largest Titanic visitor experience in the world, will open its doors in April.
Titanic Belfast Launch Festival
Nearly 100 years after Titanic left Belfast, we are delighted to invite you to experience and explore Titanic Belfast, the world’s largest Titanic visitor attraction.
Event: Official opening of Titanic Belfast
date: Saturday, 31st March, 2012
location: Titanic Belfast
Immerse yourself in the amazing story of Belfast in the 1900s, take a spin in the Shipyard Ride, experience life on board and learn about Titanic’s maiden voyage, her tragic sinking, the many stories of human endeavour, and the technology and science that finally found her, and helped to solve some of the many mysteries surrounding that fateful night in 1912.
Titanic Belfast is a ‘must do’ interactive visitor experience engaging all the senses. To celebrate our official opening on Saturday 31 March we’ll be launching a jam packed fortnight of celebratory events on February 29th with our partners Titanic Foundation, Belfast City Council and Northern Ireland Tourist Board....keep an eye on the press for further details.
Exclusively, we're delighted to give you a sneak preview and the chance to buy advance tickets for some of the key highlight events.
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