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Update on developments in Anambra state-photos - Politics (482) - Nairaland

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Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by ignatiusez: 7:04am On Aug 09, 2020
I've said it before and it bears repeating now, the biggest singular tragedy facing Ndigbo is the tragedy of leadership.

What you are seeing here is the GREATER ONITSHA WATER SCHEME bolehole site in G.R.A, Onitsha, Anambra state. This is a World Bank assisted project aimed at providing RUNNING WATER to Onitsha and its environs. As in, you come home and open your tap and water will start running just the way it is in those places we refer to as saner clime.

In 2013, the then govt of Peter Obi paid the sum of 1.8 Billion naira to a South African company, Peterson Candy International to resuscitate the Water Scheme
The then state Commissioner for public utilities, one Chief Emeka Nwankwu equally announced that they've secured a letter of credit for $700 million for the GREATER ONITSHA WATER SCHEME.

The sad thing is, as I type, most parts of the GREATER ONITSHA WATER SCHEME boreholes site have since been sold off to private individuals. The sales started last year. The implication is that the city of Onitsha may have lost a golden opportunity of having running water in over 3 decades. At first, I thought the destruction of some of the boreholes supposedly by those who bought lands there was going on without the knowledge of the state govt, never mind that the Onitsha governor's lodge where the state governor has been staying for over 3 months now shares a fence with the site. So I reached out to the state chairman of physical planning board, Barrister Chike Chukwuweike who refused to respond to my question. In responding to my WhatsApp message, the state Commissioner for public utilities, Mr Emeka Ezenwanne denied the sale of the Water Scheme site but didn't give further explanation even as heavy duty equipment keep destroying some of the boreholes. And I would have believed the Commissioner except I know some of the people who bought land there just as I know some who acted as land agents.

What this means is that all the 1.8 Billion paid by the previous govt is now gone. All the financial support already given and yet to be given by the world bank for the scheme gone. Just because we have leaders who think of nothing but selling everything just to have enough money to spend as they wish.

Check the whole of Igbo-land and tell me just one city you can beat your chest and say yes, this is it! Go to Enugu, to get water, you have to speak long grammar with water tanker drivers with all their 'shakara'. In Onitsha, you will see someone carrying 50 litters of water to climb 5 storey building in Awada. And a governor is busy selling off a World Bank assisted water scheme site.

N'ezie, "Ịfe ólú melu Igbo dị ofu mana ife Igbo melu ọnwe fa di asaa".

“They” inflicted one injury on Ndigbo while the latter inflicted seven injuries on themselves

A shame, isn't it??
*Charles* *Ogbu*

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by AmericanQuarter: 8:13am On Aug 09, 2020
PROUDIGBO:
Fot those wondering how Allen Onyema started off in business. This interview chronicles his humble beginnings right up to his floating the airline Air Peace which today has become the leading domestic airline in Nigeria!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=omBECkNK_JA

He has done so well. They tried to use propaganda to run him down but they failed

10 Likes 1 Share

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by Rocksvibes234: 2:13pm On Aug 09, 2020
Gov Obiano receives Members of Caretaker Committee for Anambra Football Association, newly inaugurated

...He also made promise to construct International Stadium of FIFA standard in the State within the next eleven (11) months.

...announces new Anambra Football Teams

Governor Willie Obiano while receiving members of the newly inaugurated Caretaker Committe for Anambra Football Association at the Governor's Lodge, Onitsha gave assurance that the Awka Stadium will be completed in 11 Months.

The Governor assured the new Caretaker Committee of his support to develop sports especially football in Anambra emphasizing his believe that the new Awka Stadium will further deepen development of football talents in the State.

While commending the NFF and the State Sports Development Commission, the Governor announced the establishment of male and female Anambra Football Teams called 'Anambra Bombers and Anambra Babes'; and challenged the Committee members to invest their best to reposition football in Anambra State.

In his speech, the State Chairman of the Anambra Sports Development Commission, Chief Oli recalled that turn around of sports in Anambra has been unprecedented in the past two years, saying that the association has had a long journey, but with the support of the Governor, a sigh of relief has been heaved, expressing optimism that they will start the rebuilding of football in Anambra State.

Responding, the Caretaker Committee Chairman of Anambra Football Association, Dr Emeka Okeke thanked the Governor for recieving them, pointing out that they have already launched the Anambra Football Campaign, to canvass grassroot support for football advancement in the State, assuring that they will provide updated reports on a weekly basis of their activities.

#AnambraFootball
#AnambraBombers
#AnambraBabes

2 Likes

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by okpalaAnambra: 6:46am On Aug 10, 2020
Rocksvibes234:
Gov Obiano receives Members of Caretaker Committee for Anambra Football Association, newly inaugurated

...He also made promise to construct International Stadium of FIFA standard in the State within the next eleven (11) months.

...announces new Anambra Football Teams

Governor Willie Obiano while receiving members of the newly inaugurated Caretaker Committe for Anambra Football Association at the Governor's Lodge, Onitsha gave assurance that the Awka Stadium will be completed in 11 Months.

The Governor assured the new Caretaker Committee of his support to develop sports especially football in Anambra emphasizing his believe that the new Awka Stadium will further deepen development of football talents in the State.

While commending the NFF and the State Sports Development Commission, the Governor announced the establishment of male and female Anambra Football Teams called 'Anambra Bombers and Anambra Babes'; and challenged the Committee members to invest their best to reposition football in Anambra State.

In his speech, the State Chairman of the Anambra Sports Development Commission, Chief Oli recalled that turn around of sports in Anambra has been unprecedented in the past two years, saying that the association has had a long journey, but with the support of the Governor, a sigh of relief has been heaved, expressing optimism that they will start the rebuilding of football in Anambra State.

Responding, the Caretaker Committee Chairman of Anambra Football Association, Dr Emeka Okeke thanked the Governor for recieving them, pointing out that they have already launched the Anambra Football Campaign, to canvass grassroot support for football advancement in the State, assuring that they will provide updated reports on a weekly basis of their activities.

#AnambraFootball
#AnambraBombers
#AnambraBabes
Omambala.. The only igala state in South East.. The Committee will only end up eating up the money.. Crooks everywhere

1 Like

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by PROUDIGBO(m): 3:29am On Aug 11, 2020
When we say Anambra State has one of the best road networks in the country, this video can buttress this assertion. I love not just the lush vegetation, but how clean and well maintained everywhere looks.....almost for the entire trip!

Courtesy Dasylvia Onu: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfEADHwl0WBRYBOwyhjJZvg


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6XmYz5Oorug

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by Dedetwo(m): 8:11am On Aug 11, 2020
ignatiusez:
I've said it before and it bears repeating now, the biggest singular tragedy facing Ndigbo is the tragedy of leadership.

What you are seeing here is the GREATER ONITSHA WATER SCHEME bolehole site in G.R.A, Onitsha, Anambra state. This is a World Bank assisted project aimed at providing RUNNING WATER to Onitsha and its environs. As in, you come home and open your tap and water will start running just the way it is in those places we refer to as saner clime.

In 2013, the then govt of Peter Obi paid the sum of 1.8 Billion naira to a South African company, Peterson Candy International to resuscitate the Water Scheme
The then state Commissioner for public utilities, one Chief Emeka Nwankwu equally announced that they've secured a letter of credit for $700 million for the GREATER ONITSHA WATER SCHEME.

The sad thing is, as I type, most parts of the GREATER ONITSHA WATER SCHEME boreholes site have since been sold off to private individuals. The sales started last year. The implication is that the city of Onitsha may have lost a golden opportunity of having running water in over 3 decades. At first, I thought the destruction of some of the boreholes supposedly by those who bought lands there was going on without the knowledge of the state govt, never mind that the Onitsha governor's lodge where the state governor has been staying for over 3 months now shares a fence with the site. So I reached out to the state chairman of physical planning board, Barrister Chike Chukwuweike who refused to respond to my question. In responding to my WhatsApp message, the state Commissioner for public utilities, Mr Emeka Ezenwanne denied the sale of the Water Scheme site but didn't give further explanation even as heavy duty equipment keep destroying some of the boreholes. And I would have believed the Commissioner except I know some of the people who bought land there just as I know some who acted as land agents.

What this means is that all the 1.8 Billion paid by the previous govt is now gone. All the financial support already given and yet to be given by the world bank for the scheme gone. Just because we have leaders who think of nothing but selling everything just to have enough money to spend as they wish.

Check the whole of Igbo-land and tell me just one city you can beat your chest and say yes, this is it! Go to Enugu, to get water, you have to speak long grammar with water tanker drivers with all their 'shakara'. In Onitsha, you will see someone carrying 50 litters of water to climb 5 storey building in Awada. And a governor is busy selling off a World Bank assisted water scheme site.

N'ezie, "Ịfe ólú melu Igbo dị ofu mana ife Igbo melu ọnwe fa di asaa".

“They” inflicted one injury on Ndigbo while the latter inflicted seven injuries on themselves

A shame, isn't it??
*Charles* *Ogbu*


The issue is not leadership problem in Igbo land because the world has leadership issue. However Nigerian society has transformed into emptiness where values are ridiculously misplaced. If you deal with Nigerians while staying outside the country, you realize how hopelessly the society has fallen into the cracks of decadence. I can safely say that virtues have given way to stupidity.

3 Likes

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by Nobody: 8:45am On Aug 11, 2020
ignatiusez:
I've said it before and it bears repeating now, the biggest singular tragedy facing Ndigbo is the tragedy of leadership.

What you are seeing here is the GREATER ONITSHA WATER SCHEME bolehole site in G.R.A, Onitsha, Anambra state. This is a World Bank assisted project aimed at providing RUNNING WATER to Onitsha and its environs. As in, you come home and open your tap and water will start running just the way it is in those places we refer to as saner clime.

In 2013, the then govt of Peter Obi paid the sum of 1.8 Billion naira to a South African company, Peterson Candy International to resuscitate the Water Scheme
The then state Commissioner for public utilities, one Chief Emeka Nwankwu equally announced that they've secured a letter of credit for $700 million for the GREATER ONITSHA WATER SCHEME.

The sad thing is, as I type, most parts of the GREATER ONITSHA WATER SCHEME boreholes site have since been sold off to private individuals. The sales started last year. The implication is that the city of Onitsha may have lost a golden opportunity of having running water in over 3 decades. At first, I thought the destruction of some of the boreholes supposedly by those who bought lands there was going on without the knowledge of the state govt, never mind that the Onitsha governor's lodge where the state governor has been staying for over 3 months now shares a fence with the site. So I reached out to the state chairman of physical planning board, Barrister Chike Chukwuweike who refused to respond to my question. In responding to my WhatsApp message, the state Commissioner for public utilities, Mr Emeka Ezenwanne denied the sale of the Water Scheme site but didn't give further explanation even as heavy duty equipment keep destroying some of the boreholes. And I would have believed the Commissioner except I know some of the people who bought land there just as I know some who acted as land agents.

What this means is that all the 1.8 Billion paid by the previous govt is now gone. All the financial support already given and yet to be given by the world bank for the scheme gone. Just because we have leaders who think of nothing but selling everything just to have enough money to spend as they wish.

Check the whole of Igbo-land and tell me just one city you can beat your chest and say yes, this is it! Go to Enugu, to get water, you have to speak long grammar with water tanker drivers with all their 'shakara'. In Onitsha, you will see someone carrying 50 litters of water to climb 5 storey building in Awada. And a governor is busy selling off a World Bank assisted water scheme site.

N'ezie, "Ịfe ólú melu Igbo dị ofu mana ife Igbo melu ọnwe fa di asaa".

“They” inflicted one injury on Ndigbo while the latter inflicted seven injuries on themselves

A shame, isn't it??
*Charles* *Ogbu*


From onitsha water scheme to Enugu to ndigbo.


What sort of emotional entities are we currently breeding for Christ sake..

Nigeria carved a niche of 36 independent states and someone cannot make a complete sense without looking for who to equate to other.


Is Anambra state a cultural state or political state?


Igbo should only be mentioned in cultural issues and that's it.


All these Igbo this...Igbo that..is getting too irritating and boring..

Talk about onitsha water scheme and the political space it us situated and not all these gibberish that ended your essay.

2 Likes

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by Nobody: 8:51am On Aug 11, 2020
Dedetwo:



The issue is not leadership problem in Igbo land because the world has leadership issue. However Nigerian society has transformed into emptiness where values are ridiculously misplaced. If you deal with Nigerians while staying outside the country, you realize how hopelessly the society has fallen into the cracks of decadence. I can safely say that virtues have given way to stupidity.


You are writing nonsense. The problem you lots have is that you won't face issue as it is but keep using Igboland as excuse instead facing the leaders of such current enclave.

You will talk about Aba and you see on riff Raff saying Igbo leadership...what concerns Igbo leadership than facing the current human being you all voted to rise and face governance as you all voted for.


You will elect a criminal, defend the criminal and turn around and start using Igbo as leadership qualification.

1 Like

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by Nobody: 10:00am On Aug 12, 2020
How South East lost out in $93b foreign investments
By Lawrence Njoku, Southeast Bureau Chief
12 August 2020 | 4:30 am


• Why investors shun region
• Low returns, poor infrastructure trigger apathy
• Investors attack governors
• We’re doing our best, govs’ forum insists

Despite relative peace in the region, the Southeast zone has remained unattractive to investors, a situation analysts ascribe to unfriendly tax regimes, poor quality of infrastructure and low return on investment.

Of Nigeria’s $93,284,945,10559 billion foreign direct investments (FDI) between 2013 and first quarter of 2020, the Southeast got the least, amounting to a paltry $203,898,690 million and representing just less than one percent (0.22%) of the total investments.

A breakdown of Southeast figures from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) within a seven-year threshold showed[b] Abia State as having a total of $9,710,000 million in foreign direct investments between 2013 and 2014; Anambra State hosted $38,091,000 million within the same period; while Ebonyi had none of such investments at all. With figures put at $151,490,000 (2014), Enugu State was reported to have garnered the most investments within the period. Imo State had a total foreign direct investments of $3,500,000 between 2015 and 2019.[/b]

Stakeholders in the zone said the reason for the relatively low investments was because political leaders of the area had not paid attention to the economic frontiers of the region with a view to making it an industrial hub, as was the case in Southwest states of Lagos and Ogun. The Zone, they said, would, in the medium to long-term, borrow to sustain its socio-political operations as well as witness continuous workforce emigration in search of employment in other zones.

Although foreign investments in other zones (Southwest, South South, North Central, Northeast and Northwest), remain normal, Southwest has the largest chunk of the FDI. Some states in some of the zones have also managed to have industrial and mini-industrial hubs that are attractive to investors.

Comparative figures, as gleaned from NBS estimates, indicate that within the same period (2013 – 2020), other zones of the country received the following capital importation: Southwest $81,808,183,342.05 (87.70%wink; South-South, $470,688,204.67 (0.50%); North Central, $10,732,800,098.87 (11.51%); North east, $ 39,414,980.00 (0.04%); and Northwest, $29,959,790 (0.03%).


Reacting to the observation that regions in the northern part of the country also had low investments during the period, Development Expert, Dr Chiwuike Uba, insisted that figures on Southeast investments was abysmally low, especially as most donors and multilateral agency programme interventions were focused on the northern region, which made up for low investments in the area.

He also stated that low investment in Southeast states was a reflection of unpreparedness, lack of commitment to industrialisation, and poor business environment prevalent in the region.

Citing data from the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Uba stated that Ogun State had become home to manufacturing and agro-processing investments, with over 70 percent share of manufacturing investments in Nigeria between 2014 and 2017.

“The data reveals that 74.42 percent of manufacturers’ investment of N691.77 billion in 2014 went to Ogun State. This trend continued in 2015 and 2016 with the State having over 70% of the investments, while other zones shared the remaining investments, with Apapa and Ikeja having the bigger share of the investment. Evidently, from the available data, in 2017, Ogun and Lagos (Apapa and Ikeja) attracted 32.9ercent and 48.8 percent of the investments”


Given further reasons for the development, the Economist explained that manufacturers and other investors would often appreciate incentives because they were key enablers of investments. Ogun State had specifically offered tax and land rebates, as well as seamless issuance of certificate of occupancy, which lowered production costs. As part of the investment promotion and protection mechanisms, a one-stop-shop was established to facilitate easy and single point of contact for investors dealings with various ministries, departments, and agencies of the state.

On what the southeast region should do to change the ugly trend, Uba advised that the region needed to improve the business environment. “Currently, the region is not ranked well on the World Bank’s Sub-national Ease of Doing Business and on the AfriHeritage’s Business Environment and Competitiveness across Nigerian States (BECANS),” he said. “No real investor will invest in an environment or economy that does not support or grow his investment.

[b]“South East does not have a functioning and operational industrial cluster. Unfortunately, most of the industrial layouts have been converted to estates. [/b]While the DAWN Commission in the South West has done so well for the region in promoting investments, our own South East Governors’ Forum Secretariat, which ultimately should serve as the think-tank, seems to be more political than it should be.

“Clearly, the region lacks strategic direction for industrialization and mobilization of investments. There is urgent need to create the right incentives to attract the right investments. We must rethink our strategy, model, and policies”

He added, however, that, while the Southeast battles with the internally induced constraints inhibiting investments, it was important to observe some of the external factors, including nearness to seaport and dry ports, among other advantages enjoyed by the South West that were not in the Southeast.

“While the region develops the dry ports and the free economic zones approved by the Federal Government, the dredging of River Niger to allow ferrying of goods with smaller ships would be of great importance to the economy of the region, as well. The zone needs to develop an industrialization plan, while it works to improve business environment. How many of the states in the South East have the States investment opportunities well defined and posted on the State’s website? In fact, with the exception of Anambra, almost all the states in the region have no dedicated agency for investment promotion and protection. For the states that have established one, it is operated like the typical political office with all the bureaucracy and managed by a politician,” he said.

He observed that the Southeast appeared to give more preference to foreign investors than to local investors. Foreign and domestic investors, he said, should be treated equally, in open, transparent, and dependable conditions.

“The region should provide basic infrastructures (school, good roads, hospitals, etc) needed to drive businesses. Investment positioning is very important. Kwara State showed what positioning can achieve when it created a positive business climate leading to the establishment of Songhai Farms public private venture.”

But a former Director at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), explained that investment in Nigeria had generally been low, pointing out that the Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF), which included land development and production facilities, as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), declined from 89.386 percent in 1981 to 19.018 percent in 2018.

He argued that investments, especially around third world countries, have been made to develop natural resources, like crude oil, coal and timber and by putting in place production and infrastructure facilities, stressing however that the southeast was naturally resource-poor and does not attract investment in that respect.

“The coal deposit in Enugu State, the oil and gas resources in Abia, Anambra and Imo states and the rock and metallic minerals in Ebonyi State are not being actively developed because they cannot be easily linked to the local economy or the export market. This is so because the region lacks economic infrastructure such as railways, waterways, roads, power, gas, water dams and ports. Without economic infrastructure, investment in production of made-goods and services, such as manufacturing, is difficult.

“Besides, fiscal policy of government makes manufacturing in the zone noncompetitive. Imports of a number of manufacturing inputs is restricted to Lagos, where there is an import inspection facility, making plants outside the Lagos area doubly noncompetitive against foreign and domestic producers. This explains why a number of manufacturers from the Southeast zone have large investments in pharmaceuticals, electrical goods and food manufacturing in the Lagos area, while their zone is deprived.”

He, however, expressed the hope that the Federal Government could remedy the investment gap by intentionally, investing in economic infrastructure in the Southeast.

“Economically, it will increase economic output and labour employment in the zone and in the country at large. Socially, it will foster community peace because the default internal emigration of economically active people from the Southeast zone is creating colonies in other zones that in the long-term will create disharmony by raising fear of dominance and exclusion. People from the zone can also be more intentional in their investment behaviour by limiting their investment outside the zone. This is important, not only for safety of the investment portfolio but also to attract economic infrastructure and foreign investments,” he suggested.

Aligning with Uba however, an Investor, Henry Chibuzo, observed that lack of political will, security threats, lack of coordination among governors of the zone and poor infrastructure had continued to discourage investment in the southeast region. He stated that ease of doing business in the zone had remained cumbersome, stressing that, even when an investor decided to live with it, low patronage from governments could cause an exit.

“I have also noticed that many states in the Southeast have Investment Promotion agencies but these agencies are not properly funded. There is no cohesion among them in terms of driving the southeast investment programme; everybody is pursuing investment at individual level. There ought to be strategic collaboration. The governors ought to come together. There is no strategic effort that can trickle down to investment attraction in the zone.”

He added that security threats had threatened investment in agriculture, especially since the rise in farmer/herder issues in the zone, stressing that certain investors that came into the zone and invested in agriculture in the Uzouwani area of Enugu State had their crops destroyed.

“Moving through the southeast, there are several checkpoints and the policemen on the road care less about who is coming. They are only there to exploit the people. Any investor, who probably was in the southwest, south-south and on coming into the southeast to discover this level of security checkpoints, will certainly not want to have any business to do here.”

An Estate Management Expert, Obichukwu Umeh, stated that governments of the zone had not given enough encouragement to Igbo Investors to deepen investment in the zone

Using what happens in the sector as a case study, he stated that only a few of his colleagues could invest in housing in the Southeast, as, according to him, “you are subjected to all manner of levies by community and government officials, even when you have paid exorbitantly to procure land. You pay to fence your land; you pay neighborhood security; you pay more than 20 percent of what you bought the land to get approval for your drawing, among others. It is not easy. That is why the cost of acquiring accommodation is too high in the zone compared to other zones of the country. That aside, provision of road, electricity and water among other facilities that could make the place habitable is also on the investor. These are the challenges.”

Citing a housing project he did in Asaba Delta State, he stated that when he indicated interest to do a low-cost housing on the land he provided, “the state government freely did the access road and extended electricity to the area. For the boreholes we sunk in the process of construction, the government also helped us to ensure that the water was reticulated, which actually helped to reduce cost on the occupants. So we really need to look inwards and encourage investment in this zone.”

The Southeast governors however stated that they had supported investors in the zone and had continued to provide platforms for interaction and make their businesses thrive in the area.

Director of Communications, Southeast Governors Forum, Mr Mike Udah, told The Guardian that the governors “are in frequent contact with Southeast Chamber of Commerce and other stakeholders with a view to boosting investment in the region.”

He added: “On a yearly basis, they organised the Southeast Economic Summit. The taxation regime in the Southeast is as friendly as ever. Recently, following the outbreak of COVID-19, the governors of the Southeast, went a step further to stop outright some levies and in some cases, reduce them in effort to ensure that investors and ordinary citizens do not suffer.”

As an interventionist plan, the Ohanaeze Ndigbo had recently set up the Alaigbo Stabilization Fund, in partnership with governors of the zone, to cure the infrastructural deficit of the Southeast and boost investments.

President General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief Nnia Nwodo had said, while inaugurating the 54-member Steering Committee for the Fund, that it was envisioned as key instrument to articulate strategies, mobilize resources and coordinate policies to assuage the deep yearnings of Ndigbo for prosperous development and happy home.

Nwodo explained during the inauguration that Igbo nation had resolved to urgently address the total neglect of the area by the Federal Government since after the civil war to build an industrialised homeland having modern world-class physical and social infrastructure, competitive, attractive for investments and generating employment for the teaming youthful population.

1 Like

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by Nobody: 10:21am On Aug 12, 2020
Two things are obvious.

1) The PLANNED CITY EFFECT. Unless you have livalble cities of substance with infrastucture not much FDI for you. This is why Enugu continues to outmatch every single other state in the SE. Enugu CITY continues to remain attractive long since the colonialists left. It has generally good roads, clean, neat environment, no crazy markets everywhere. Meanwhile just look at Aba, Umuahia, Owerri, Onitsha to see why the only foreigners you see there are Chinese and Indian factory workers. Same goes for why the SW (LAGOS), NC (ABUJA) and SS (PORT HARCOURT) stand out.


2) INDUSTRY. I said it before being attacked here and there. You need to have industry. Not selling goods you buy at 50 naira for 100 naira which is the South-East development model. 10 factories each producing goods worth 3b of revenue is far more valuable than 10 markets selling 3b of goods each because a factory has a DEEPER supply chain. What would make that factory function might be another 3b worth of economic activity from suppliers, energy producers, equipment, etc. Whereas, a market only needs a 10x10 concrete block and mama ngozi and pen and paper.


mktinsight:
How South East lost out in $93b foreign investments
By Lawrence Njoku, Southeast Bureau Chief
12 August 2020 | 4:30 am


• Why investors shun region
• Low returns, poor infrastructure trigger apathy
• Investors attack governors
• We’re doing our best, govs’ forum insists

Despite relative peace in the region, the Southeast zone has remained unattractive to investors, a situation analysts ascribe to unfriendly tax regimes, poor quality of infrastructure and low return on investment.

Of Nigeria’s $93,284,945,10559 billion foreign direct investments (FDI) between 2013 and first quarter of 2020, the Southeast got the least, amounting to a paltry $203,898,690 million and representing just less than one percent (0.22%) of the total investments.

A breakdown of Southeast figures from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) within a seven-year threshold showed[b] Abia State as having a total of $9,710,000 million in foreign direct investments between 2013 and 2014; Anambra State hosted $38,091,000 million within the same period; while Ebonyi had none of such investments at all. With figures put at $151,490,000 (2014), Enugu State was reported to have garnered the most investments within the period. Imo State had a total foreign direct investments of $3,500,000 between 2015 and 2019.[/b]

Stakeholders in the zone said the reason for the relatively low investments was because political leaders of the area had not paid attention to the economic frontiers of the region with a view to making it an industrial hub, as was the case in Southwest states of Lagos and Ogun. The Zone, they said, would, in the medium to long-term, borrow to sustain its socio-political operations as well as witness continuous workforce emigration in search of employment in other zones.

Although foreign investments in other zones (Southwest, South South, North Central, Northeast and Northwest), remain normal, Southwest has the largest chunk of the FDI. Some states in some of the zones have also managed to have industrial and mini-industrial hubs that are attractive to investors.

Comparative figures, as gleaned from NBS estimates, indicate that within the same period (2013 – 2020), other zones of the country received the following capital importation: Southwest $81,808,183,342.05 (87.70%wink; South-South, $470,688,204.67 (0.50%); North Central, $10,732,800,098.87 (11.51%); North east, $ 39,414,980.00 (0.04%); and Northwest, $29,959,790 (0.03%).


Reacting to the observation that regions in the northern part of the country also had low investments during the period, Development Expert, Dr Chiwuike Uba, insisted that figures on Southeast investments was abysmally low, especially as most donors and multilateral agency programme interventions were focused on the northern region, which made up for low investments in the area.

He also stated that low investment in Southeast states was a reflection of unpreparedness, lack of commitment to industrialisation, and poor business environment prevalent in the region.

Citing data from the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Uba stated that Ogun State had become home to manufacturing and agro-processing investments, with over 70 percent share of manufacturing investments in Nigeria between 2014 and 2017.

“The data reveals that 74.42 percent of manufacturers’ investment of N691.77 billion in 2014 went to Ogun State. This trend continued in 2015 and 2016 with the State having over 70% of the investments, while other zones shared the remaining investments, with Apapa and Ikeja having the bigger share of the investment. Evidently, from the available data, in 2017, Ogun and Lagos (Apapa and Ikeja) attracted 32.9ercent and 48.8 percent of the investments”


Given further reasons for the development, the Economist explained that manufacturers and other investors would often appreciate incentives because they were key enablers of investments. Ogun State had specifically offered tax and land rebates, as well as seamless issuance of certificate of occupancy, which lowered production costs. As part of the investment promotion and protection mechanisms, a one-stop-shop was established to facilitate easy and single point of contact for investors dealings with various ministries, departments, and agencies of the state.

On what the southeast region should do to change the ugly trend, Uba advised that the region needed to improve the business environment. “Currently, the region is not ranked well on the World Bank’s Sub-national Ease of Doing Business and on the AfriHeritage’s Business Environment and Competitiveness across Nigerian States (BECANS),” he said. “No real investor will invest in an environment or economy that does not support or grow his investment.

[b]“South East does not have a functioning and operational industrial cluster. Unfortunately, most of the industrial layouts have been converted to estates. [/b]While the DAWN Commission in the South West has done so well for the region in promoting investments, our own South East Governors’ Forum Secretariat, which ultimately should serve as the think-tank, seems to be more political than it should be.

“Clearly, the region lacks strategic direction for industrialization and mobilization of investments. There is urgent need to create the right incentives to attract the right investments. We must rethink our strategy, model, and policies”

He added, however, that, while the Southeast battles with the internally induced constraints inhibiting investments, it was important to observe some of the external factors, including nearness to seaport and dry ports, among other advantages enjoyed by the South West that were not in the Southeast.

“While the region develops the dry ports and the free economic zones approved by the Federal Government, the dredging of River Niger to allow ferrying of goods with smaller ships would be of great importance to the economy of the region, as well. The zone needs to develop an industrialization plan, while it works to improve business environment. How many of the states in the South East have the States investment opportunities well defined and posted on the State’s website? In fact, with the exception of Anambra, almost all the states in the region have no dedicated agency for investment promotion and protection. For the states that have established one, it is operated like the typical political office with all the bureaucracy and managed by a politician,” he said.

He observed that the Southeast appeared to give more preference to foreign investors than to local investors. Foreign and domestic investors, he said, should be treated equally, in open, transparent, and dependable conditions.

“The region should provide basic infrastructures (school, good roads, hospitals, etc) needed to drive businesses. Investment positioning is very important. Kwara State showed what positioning can achieve when it created a positive business climate leading to the establishment of Songhai Farms public private venture.”

But a former Director at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), explained that investment in Nigeria had generally been low, pointing out that the Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF), which included land development and production facilities, as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), declined from 89.386 percent in 1981 to 19.018 percent in 2018.

He argued that investments, especially around third world countries, have been made to develop natural resources, like crude oil, coal and timber and by putting in place production and infrastructure facilities, stressing however that the southeast was naturally resource-poor and does not attract investment in that respect.

“The coal deposit in Enugu State, the oil and gas resources in Abia, Anambra and Imo states and the rock and metallic minerals in Ebonyi State are not being actively developed because they cannot be easily linked to the local economy or the export market. This is so because the region lacks economic infrastructure such as railways, waterways, roads, power, gas, water dams and ports. Without economic infrastructure, investment in production of made-goods and services, such as manufacturing, is difficult.

“Besides, fiscal policy of government makes manufacturing in the zone noncompetitive. Imports of a number of manufacturing inputs is restricted to Lagos, where there is an import inspection facility, making plants outside the Lagos area doubly noncompetitive against foreign and domestic producers. This explains why a number of manufacturers from the Southeast zone have large investments in pharmaceuticals, electrical goods and food manufacturing in the Lagos area, while their zone is deprived.”

He, however, expressed the hope that the Federal Government could remedy the investment gap by intentionally, investing in economic infrastructure in the Southeast.

“Economically, it will increase economic output and labour employment in the zone and in the country at large. Socially, it will foster community peace because the default internal emigration of economically active people from the Southeast zone is creating colonies in other zones that in the long-term will create disharmony by raising fear of dominance and exclusion. People from the zone can also be more intentional in their investment behaviour by limiting their investment outside the zone. This is important, not only for safety of the investment portfolio but also to attract economic infrastructure and foreign investments,” he suggested.

Aligning with Uba however, an Investor, Henry Chibuzo, observed that lack of political will, security threats, lack of coordination among governors of the zone and poor infrastructure had continued to discourage investment in the southeast region. He stated that ease of doing business in the zone had remained cumbersome, stressing that, even when an investor decided to live with it, low patronage from governments could cause an exit.

“I have also noticed that many states in the Southeast have Investment Promotion agencies but these agencies are not properly funded. There is no cohesion among them in terms of driving the southeast investment programme; everybody is pursuing investment at individual level. There ought to be strategic collaboration. The governors ought to come together. There is no strategic effort that can trickle down to investment attraction in the zone.”

He added that security threats had threatened investment in agriculture, especially since the rise in farmer/herder issues in the zone, stressing that certain investors that came into the zone and invested in agriculture in the Uzouwani area of Enugu State had their crops destroyed.

“Moving through the southeast, there are several checkpoints and the policemen on the road care less about who is coming. They are only there to exploit the people. Any investor, who probably was in the southwest, south-south and on coming into the southeast to discover this level of security checkpoints, will certainly not want to have any business to do here.”

An Estate Management Expert, Obichukwu Umeh, stated that governments of the zone had not given enough encouragement to Igbo Investors to deepen investment in the zone

Using what happens in the sector as a case study, he stated that only a few of his colleagues could invest in housing in the Southeast, as, according to him, “you are subjected to all manner of levies by community and government officials, even when you have paid exorbitantly to procure land. You pay to fence your land; you pay neighborhood security; you pay more than 20 percent of what you bought the land to get approval for your drawing, among others. It is not easy. That is why the cost of acquiring accommodation is too high in the zone compared to other zones of the country. That aside, provision of road, electricity and water among other facilities that could make the place habitable is also on the investor. These are the challenges.”

Citing a housing project he did in Asaba Delta State, he stated that when he indicated interest to do a low-cost housing on the land he provided, “the state government freely did the access road and extended electricity to the area. For the boreholes we sunk in the process of construction, the government also helped us to ensure that the water was reticulated, which actually helped to reduce cost on the occupants. So we really need to look inwards and encourage investment in this zone.”

The Southeast governors however stated that they had supported investors in the zone and had continued to provide platforms for interaction and make their businesses thrive in the area.

Director of Communications, Southeast Governors Forum, Mr Mike Udah, told The Guardian that the governors “are in frequent contact with Southeast Chamber of Commerce and other stakeholders with a view to boosting investment in the region.”

He added: “On a yearly basis, they organised the Southeast Economic Summit. The taxation regime in the Southeast is as friendly as ever. Recently, following the outbreak of COVID-19, the governors of the Southeast, went a step further to stop outright some levies and in some cases, reduce them in effort to ensure that investors and ordinary citizens do not suffer.”

As an interventionist plan, the Ohanaeze Ndigbo had recently set up the Alaigbo Stabilization Fund, in partnership with governors of the zone, to cure the infrastructural deficit of the Southeast and boost investments.

President General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief Nnia Nwodo had said, while inaugurating the 54-member Steering Committee for the Fund, that it was envisioned as key instrument to articulate strategies, mobilize resources and coordinate policies to assuage the deep yearnings of Ndigbo for prosperous development and happy home.

Nwodo explained during the inauguration that Igbo nation had resolved to urgently address the total neglect of the area by the Federal Government since after the civil war to build an industrialised homeland having modern world-class physical and social infrastructure, competitive, attractive for investments and generating employment for the teaming youthful population.

1 Like

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by leicestercamper: 10:40am On Aug 12, 2020
Always spewing nonsense. Which Enugu are you talking about? Where is the planning, good road and neat environment? The only thing that's hiding the mess in Enugu from the media is lack of opposition political parties, like we see in Anambra, Imo, even Abia where opposition are very vibrant.

As per industrial presence, Enugu comes almost at the base of influx of new businesses and industries in SE. Forget the propaganda report that has no direct reflection on ground. Where are the industries in Enugu state compare to massive inflow in Anambra? Abia and Imo even have more industrial presence than Enugu state.

Check stats of new industrial/businesses that have berth the SE since 2015-2020. Also check the poverty rating in the SE, because you cannot separate investments and its output effect in poverty alleviation. Poverty in Enugu state is above national average, which means it is the worst in SE and entire southern Nigeria outside Ebonyi state. We need to find out why is that.


[s]
mktinsight:
Two things are obvious.1) The PLANNED CITY EFFECT. Unless you have livalble cities of substance with infrastucture not much FDI for you. This is why Enugu continues to outmatch every single other state in the SE. Enugu CITY continues to remain attractive long since the colonialists left. It has generally good roads, clean, neat environment, no crazy markets everywhere. Meanwhile just look at Aba, Umuahia, Owerri, Onitsha to see why the only foreigners you see there are Chinese and Indian factory workers. Same goes for why the SW (LAGOS), NC (ABUJA) and SS (PORT HARCOURT) stand out.2) INDUSTRY. I said it before being attacked here and there. You need to have industry. Not selling goods you buy at 50 naira for 100 naira which is the South-East development model. 10 factories each producing goods worth 3b of revenue is far more valuable than 10 markets selling 3b of goods each because a factory has a DEEPER supply chain. What would make that factory function might be another 3b worth of economic activity from suppliers, energy producers, equipment, etc. Whereas, a market only needs a 10x10 concrete block and mama ngozi and pen and paper.
[/s]

2 Likes

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by leicestercamper: 10:44am On Aug 12, 2020
Investment inflow has direct effect on poverty alleviation. When we look at poverty ranking by states, it is clear where the most investments are going whether it is FDI or domestic investment portfolios.


mktinsight:
How South East lost out in $93b foreign investments
By Lawrence Njoku, Southeast Bureau Chief
12 August 2020 | 4:30 am


• Why investors shun region
• Low returns, poor infrastructure trigger apathy
• Investors attack governors
• We’re doing our best, govs’ forum insists

Despite relative peace in the region, the Southeast zone has remained unattractive to investors, a situation analysts ascribe to unfriendly tax regimes, poor quality of infrastructure and low return on investment.

Of Nigeria’s $93,284,945,10559 billion foreign direct investments (FDI) between 2013 and first quarter of 2020, the Southeast got the least, amounting to a paltry $203,898,690 million and representing just less than one percent (0.22%) of the total investments.

A breakdown of Southeast figures from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) within a seven-year threshold showed[b] Abia State as having a total of $9,710,000 million in foreign direct investments between 2013 and 2014; Anambra State hosted $38,091,000 million within the same period; while Ebonyi had none of such investments at all. With figures put at $151,490,000 (2014), Enugu State was reported to have garnered the most investments within the period. Imo State had a total foreign direct investments of $3,500,000 between 2015 and 2019.[/b]

Stakeholders in the zone said the reason for the relatively low investments was because political leaders of the area had not paid attention to the economic frontiers of the region with a view to making it an industrial hub, as was the case in Southwest states of Lagos and Ogun. The Zone, they said, would, in the medium to long-term, borrow to sustain its socio-political operations as well as witness continuous workforce emigration in search of employment in other zones.

Although foreign investments in other zones (Southwest, South South, North Central, Northeast and Northwest), remain normal, Southwest has the largest chunk of the FDI. Some states in some of the zones have also managed to have industrial and mini-industrial hubs that are attractive to investors.

Comparative figures, as gleaned from NBS estimates, indicate that within the same period (2013 – 2020), other zones of the country received the following capital importation: Southwest $81,808,183,342.05 (87.70%wink; South-South, $470,688,204.67 (0.50%); North Central, $10,732,800,098.87 (11.51%); North east, $ 39,414,980.00 (0.04%); and Northwest, $29,959,790 (0.03%).


Reacting to the observation that regions in the northern part of the country also had low investments during the period, Development Expert, Dr Chiwuike Uba, insisted that figures on Southeast investments was abysmally low, especially as most donors and multilateral agency programme interventions were focused on the northern region, which made up for low investments in the area.

He also stated that low investment in Southeast states was a reflection of unpreparedness, lack of commitment to industrialisation, and poor business environment prevalent in the region.

Citing data from the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Uba stated that Ogun State had become home to manufacturing and agro-processing investments, with over 70 percent share of manufacturing investments in Nigeria between 2014 and 2017.

“The data reveals that 74.42 percent of manufacturers’ investment of N691.77 billion in 2014 went to Ogun State. This trend continued in 2015 and 2016 with the State having over 70% of the investments, while other zones shared the remaining investments, with Apapa and Ikeja having the bigger share of the investment. Evidently, from the available data, in 2017, Ogun and Lagos (Apapa and Ikeja) attracted 32.9ercent and 48.8 percent of the investments”


Given further reasons for the development, the Economist explained that manufacturers and other investors would often appreciate incentives because they were key enablers of investments. Ogun State had specifically offered tax and land rebates, as well as seamless issuance of certificate of occupancy, which lowered production costs. As part of the investment promotion and protection mechanisms, a one-stop-shop was established to facilitate easy and single point of contact for investors dealings with various ministries, departments, and agencies of the state.

On what the southeast region should do to change the ugly trend, Uba advised that the region needed to improve the business environment. “Currently, the region is not ranked well on the World Bank’s Sub-national Ease of Doing Business and on the AfriHeritage’s Business Environment and Competitiveness across Nigerian States (BECANS),” he said. “No real investor will invest in an environment or economy that does not support or grow his investment.

[b]“South East does not have a functioning and operational industrial cluster. Unfortunately, most of the industrial layouts have been converted to estates. [/b]While the DAWN Commission in the South West has done so well for the region in promoting investments, our own South East Governors’ Forum Secretariat, which ultimately should serve as the think-tank, seems to be more political than it should be.

“Clearly, the region lacks strategic direction for industrialization and mobilization of investments. There is urgent need to create the right incentives to attract the right investments. We must rethink our strategy, model, and policies”

He added, however, that, while the Southeast battles with the internally induced constraints inhibiting investments, it was important to observe some of the external factors, including nearness to seaport and dry ports, among other advantages enjoyed by the South West that were not in the Southeast.

“While the region develops the dry ports and the free economic zones approved by the Federal Government, the dredging of River Niger to allow ferrying of goods with smaller ships would be of great importance to the economy of the region, as well. The zone needs to develop an industrialization plan, while it works to improve business environment. How many of the states in the South East have the States investment opportunities well defined and posted on the State’s website? In fact, with the exception of Anambra, almost all the states in the region have no dedicated agency for investment promotion and protection. For the states that have established one, it is operated like the typical political office with all the bureaucracy and managed by a politician,” he said.

He observed that the Southeast appeared to give more preference to foreign investors than to local investors. Foreign and domestic investors, he said, should be treated equally, in open, transparent, and dependable conditions.

“The region should provide basic infrastructures (school, good roads, hospitals, etc) needed to drive businesses. Investment positioning is very important. Kwara State showed what positioning can achieve when it created a positive business climate leading to the establishment of Songhai Farms public private venture.”

But a former Director at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), explained that investment in Nigeria had generally been low, pointing out that the Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF), which included land development and production facilities, as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), declined from 89.386 percent in 1981 to 19.018 percent in 2018.

He argued that investments, especially around third world countries, have been made to develop natural resources, like crude oil, coal and timber and by putting in place production and infrastructure facilities, stressing however that the southeast was naturally resource-poor and does not attract investment in that respect.

“The coal deposit in Enugu State, the oil and gas resources in Abia, Anambra and Imo states and the rock and metallic minerals in Ebonyi State are not being actively developed because they cannot be easily linked to the local economy or the export market. This is so because the region lacks economic infrastructure such as railways, waterways, roads, power, gas, water dams and ports. Without economic infrastructure, investment in production of made-goods and services, such as manufacturing, is difficult.

“Besides, fiscal policy of government makes manufacturing in the zone noncompetitive. Imports of a number of manufacturing inputs is restricted to Lagos, where there is an import inspection facility, making plants outside the Lagos area doubly noncompetitive against foreign and domestic producers. This explains why a number of manufacturers from the Southeast zone have large investments in pharmaceuticals, electrical goods and food manufacturing in the Lagos area, while their zone is deprived.”

He, however, expressed the hope that the Federal Government could remedy the investment gap by intentionally, investing in economic infrastructure in the Southeast.

“Economically, it will increase economic output and labour employment in the zone and in the country at large. Socially, it will foster community peace because the default internal emigration of economically active people from the Southeast zone is creating colonies in other zones that in the long-term will create disharmony by raising fear of dominance and exclusion. People from the zone can also be more intentional in their investment behaviour by limiting their investment outside the zone. This is important, not only for safety of the investment portfolio but also to attract economic infrastructure and foreign investments,” he suggested.

Aligning with Uba however, an Investor, Henry Chibuzo, observed that lack of political will, security threats, lack of coordination among governors of the zone and poor infrastructure had continued to discourage investment in the southeast region. He stated that ease of doing business in the zone had remained cumbersome, stressing that, even when an investor decided to live with it, low patronage from governments could cause an exit.

“I have also noticed that many states in the Southeast have Investment Promotion agencies but these agencies are not properly funded. There is no cohesion among them in terms of driving the southeast investment programme; everybody is pursuing investment at individual level. There ought to be strategic collaboration. The governors ought to come together. There is no strategic effort that can trickle down to investment attraction in the zone.”

He added that security threats had threatened investment in agriculture, especially since the rise in farmer/herder issues in the zone, stressing that certain investors that came into the zone and invested in agriculture in the Uzouwani area of Enugu State had their crops destroyed.

“Moving through the southeast, there are several checkpoints and the policemen on the road care less about who is coming. They are only there to exploit the people. Any investor, who probably was in the southwest, south-south and on coming into the southeast to discover this level of security checkpoints, will certainly not want to have any business to do here.”

An Estate Management Expert, Obichukwu Umeh, stated that governments of the zone had not given enough encouragement to Igbo Investors to deepen investment in the zone

Using what happens in the sector as a case study, he stated that only a few of his colleagues could invest in housing in the Southeast, as, according to him, “you are subjected to all manner of levies by community and government officials, even when you have paid exorbitantly to procure land. You pay to fence your land; you pay neighborhood security; you pay more than 20 percent of what you bought the land to get approval for your drawing, among others. It is not easy. That is why the cost of acquiring accommodation is too high in the zone compared to other zones of the country. That aside, provision of road, electricity and water among other facilities that could make the place habitable is also on the investor. These are the challenges.”

Citing a housing project he did in Asaba Delta State, he stated that when he indicated interest to do a low-cost housing on the land he provided, “the state government freely did the access road and extended electricity to the area. For the boreholes we sunk in the process of construction, the government also helped us to ensure that the water was reticulated, which actually helped to reduce cost on the occupants. So we really need to look inwards and encourage investment in this zone.”

The Southeast governors however stated that they had supported investors in the zone and had continued to provide platforms for interaction and make their businesses thrive in the area.

Director of Communications, Southeast Governors Forum, Mr Mike Udah, told The Guardian that the governors “are in frequent contact with Southeast Chamber of Commerce and other stakeholders with a view to boosting investment in the region.”

He added: “On a yearly basis, they organised the Southeast Economic Summit. The taxation regime in the Southeast is as friendly as ever. Recently, following the outbreak of COVID-19, the governors of the Southeast, went a step further to stop outright some levies and in some cases, reduce them in effort to ensure that investors and ordinary citizens do not suffer.”

As an interventionist plan, the Ohanaeze Ndigbo had recently set up the Alaigbo Stabilization Fund, in partnership with governors of the zone, to cure the infrastructural deficit of the Southeast and boost investments.

President General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief Nnia Nwodo had said, while inaugurating the 54-member Steering Committee for the Fund, that it was envisioned as key instrument to articulate strategies, mobilize resources and coordinate policies to assuage the deep yearnings of Ndigbo for prosperous development and happy home.

Nwodo explained during the inauguration that Igbo nation had resolved to urgently address the total neglect of the area by the Federal Government since after the civil war to build an industrialised homeland having modern world-class physical and social infrastructure, competitive, attractive for investments and generating employment for the teaming youthful population.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by rdokoye: 1:41pm On Aug 12, 2020
No nation has ever developed from FDI, local investments should always be most important, which I'm sure SE ranks number one in.

I'd rather Innoson expand his car manufacturing to Imo and in Anambra, than any foreigner coming to leech off the economy.

7 Likes

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by kingzizzy: 2:36pm On Aug 12, 2020
Been a while since I visited Onitsha GRA

1 Like

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by gwafaeziokwu: 2:59pm On Aug 12, 2020
All these non Igbos that have invaded this thread causing trouble should leave us alone abeg.

If you like use a thousand monikers to insult Enugu, Abia, Anambra ,Imo and Ebonyi, it is practically impossible to divide Ndigbo.

You guys forgot easily that we were in the trenches for 30 months fighting off fierce enemies and never for once did we turn against each other. We fought as one , and emerged from the ashes as one. Helped our selves through the apprentice system and community scholarships to become the formidable block we are today.

So take your iberiberism to somewhere else.

9 Likes

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by gwafaeziokwu: 3:31pm On Aug 12, 2020
mktinsight:
Two things are obvious.

1) The PLANNED CITY EFFECT. Unless you have livalble cities of substance with infrastucture not much FDI for you. This is why Enugu continues to outmatch every single other state in the SE. Enugu CITY continues to remain attractive long since the colonialists left. It has generally good roads, clean, neat environment, no crazy markets everywhere. Meanwhile just look at Aba, Umuahia, Owerri, Onitsha to see why the only foreigners you see there are Chinese and Indian factory workers. Same goes for why the SW (LAGOS), NC (ABUJA) and SS (PORT HARCOURT) stand out.


2) INDUSTRY. I said it before being attacked here and there. You need to have industry. Not selling goods you buy at 50 naira for 100 naira which is the South-East development model. 10 factories each producing goods worth 3b of revenue is far more valuable than 10 markets selling 3b of goods each because a factory has a DEEPER supply chain. What would make that factory function might be another 3b worth of economic activity from suppliers, energy producers, equipment, etc. Whereas, a market only needs a 10x10 concrete block and mama ngozi and pen and paper.



Eziokwu you don't know what you are talking about. Your mission on this thread is to kill the spirit and make it look like you are concerned.

1.Onitsha and Aba is two of the most planned cities in the south East. How can you open your mouth and say that Onitsha is unplanned? That it is only Chinese and Indians that you will find in the south East. So Indians and Chinese no longer count as foreign? Are Lebanese not the owners of most of the industries in south West. Are they more foreign than the Indians or chinese. What is your problem Mr. Man.

The systemic developmental injustice against Igbos has left major infrastructure in choas. The people have tried to pull through against all odds and yet what they keep getting from your types is down grading of their daily hustle. No American brought money into Anambra , that means Anambra is a dead state. So the industry of the Igbo man should now be measured by the number of foreigners that took a peep and want to take advantage.

What is our business if the foreign investment is low. With all the foreign investment in Ogun state Anambra still beat them in Gross domestic product in the latest Cbn/NBS publication. What it means is that more goods and services was produced in Anambra than Ogun during the time in qunction, yet if you check Ogun have more direct investment. Enugu beat Oyo in the same chart so what are we talking. If we can do it locally , what is the craze to go foreign!


Ndigbo biko, never leave your indigenous economic model and start listening to these people who love owambe more than anything. We are not cut from the same stock abeg. Leave us with our economic model. You like the easy way out, while we like to work it out! While one enslaves you forever, the other make you eternal boss!

Few years ago ,you guys laughed at our apprentice model as if we pooed on our trousers, today it is been studied in major universities in the world. Ndiigbo and their future generations has locked down wealth through it.

Today, it's FDI. You guys don't get it. WE ARE THE FU**ING DIRECT INVESTMENT FOR CHRIST SAKE.
Our wealth is spread out to all nations of the world. All we need do is to bring it back. That is our drive. Aku luo uno!! Let our wealth reach home and we are fine.

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by AmericanQuarter: 4:22pm On Aug 12, 2020
gwafaeziokwu:


Eziokwu you don't know what you are talking about. Your mission on this thread is to kill the spirit and make it look like you are concerned.

1.Onitsha and Aba is two of the most planned cities in the south East. How can you open your mouth and say that Onitsha is unplanned? That it is only Chinese and Indians that you will find in the south East. So Indians and Chinese no longer count as foreign? Are Lebanese not the owners of most of the industries in south West. Are they more foreign than the Indians or chinese. What is your problem Mr. Man.

The systemic developmental injustice against Igbos has left major infrastructure in choas. The people have tried to pull through against all odds and yet what they keep getting from your types is down grading of their daily hustle. No American brought money into Anambra , that means Anambra is a dead state. So the industry of the Igbo man should now be measured by the number of foreigners that took a peep and want to take advantage.

What is our business if the foreign investment is low. With all the foreign investment in Ogun state Anambra still beat them in Gross domestic product in the latest Cbn/NBS publication. What it means is that more goods and services was produced in Anambra than Ogun during the time in qunction, yet if you check Ogun have more direct investment. Enugu beat Oyo in the same chart so what are we talking. If we can do it locally , what is the craze to go foreign!


Ndigbo biko, never leave your indigenous economic model and start listening to these people who love owambe more than anything. We are not cut from the same stock abeg. Leave us with our economic model. You like the easy way out, while we like to work it out! While one enslaves you forever, the other make you eternal boss!

Few years ago ,you guys laughed at our apprentice model as if we pooed on our trousers, today it is been studied in major universities in the world. Ndiigbo and their future generations has locked down wealth through it.

Today, it's FDI. You guys don't get it. WE ARE THE FU**ING DIRECT INVESTMENT FOR CHRIST SAKE.
Our wealth is spread out to all nations of the world. All we need do is to bring it back. That is our drive. Aku luo uno!! Let our wealth reach home and we are fine.



Apt!. You have said it all. On a side note, I have consistently in my mind questioned that guy's mission on this thread. My happiness is that most people here are never swayed nor deceived by his unwholesome machinations.

13 Likes

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by maiunguwar: 8:55pm On Aug 12, 2020
AmericanQuarter:



Apt!. You have said it all. On a side note, I have consistently in my mind questioned that guy's mission on this thread. My happiness is that most people here are never swayed nor deceived by his unwholesome machinations.
That Mkskintight of a guy is up to no good.He should not be taken serious.

8 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by Nobody: 5:07am On Aug 13, 2020
Keep living in a state of delusion caused by sychophancy. But may the truth one day set you free.

This is the main business street of Awka the capital city of Anambra State. Zik Avenue named after Nigerias first President. Look at the disgraceful chaos, filth and a road that residents turn to self help to fix because Willie Obiano is busy building roads to villages.

AmericanQuarter:



Apt!. You have said it all. On a side note, I have consistently in my mind questioned that guy's mission on this thread. My happiness is that most people here are never swayed nor deceived by his unwholesome machinations.

2 Likes

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by AmericanQuarter: 6:54am On Aug 13, 2020
I don't have time for misguided bitter fellows and their unfounded rubbish that doesn't reflect reality. Anambra has the best road networks at least in this region. Go cure yourself of insanity, this thread is not a psych ward.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by AmericanQuarter: 7:01am On Aug 13, 2020
maiunguwar:
That Mkskintight of a guy is up to no good.He should not be taken serious.

You are very correct. I am delighted that everyone here knows his mission and have blanked him completely. He should be treated as persona non grata.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Update on developments in Anambra state-photos by AmericanQuarter: 7:35am On Aug 13, 2020
Innoson investing in human resources and making black race proud



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GThBWF_KsC8

Credit

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Few Pics From Imo State / Abubakar Shekau, Boko Haram Leader Speaks To BBC Hausa, Enjoys Killing People.

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