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Presidency, Ortom trade blames over Benue killings

GOVERNOR Samuel Ortom and the Presidency are trading blames over the endless killings perpetrated in Benue State by suspected armed herdsmen.

The presidency, in a statement released on Wednesday, April 19, by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President, Garba Shehu, had labelled Ortom ‘incompetent’ as a result of the lingering insecurity in the state.

Shehu, in the statement, said President Muhammadu Buhari should not be held responsible for the attacks on Benue people.


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“It is they who have experienced first-hand the mass killings, the torture, the litany of atrocities as Benue’s security situation plummeted ever further. It is they who buried their loved ones while watching their careless, irresponsible and incompetent governor politicise on those freshly dug graves.

“And it is they who turned to the last privilege they had left: their democratic privilege, to resoundingly kick out Ortom and his so-called Peoples Democratic Party in favour of a new governor, Reverend Father Hyacinth Iornem Alia from Buhari’s party, the APC.”

The presidential spokesman said the Buhari administration had taken several steps to tackle the killings in Benue, noting that more results would have been achieved if Ortom had cooperated.

However, reacting to the statement, Ortom said the Presidency’s attempts to twist events and history in Benue is “unfortunate and reprehensible”.

Ortom described Buhari as a failure, noting that he was not able to secure the country.

The governor also accused Buhari of endorsing the killings in Benue State.

“Shehu Garba’s infantile statement on the security situation in Benue State has once again confirmed our position that the killings, mass murder in Benue has the full endorsement of the Buhari government. It also goes to confirm that the presidential spokesman does not only speak for Buhari but for some terrorist groups too.

“Indeed, the presidential spokesman’s futile attempts to twist events and history in Benue State is unfortunate and reprehensible. It shows how much he and others in that league have misled the government and Nigerian people in the last inglorious eight years.

“It is common knowledge that as the Commander-in-Chief, Buhari has empowered and emboldened the Fulani pastoralists in their expansionist agenda including killings. It is equally a known fact that President Buhari has failed woefully in securing Nigeria, and Benue state in particular,” he said.

Ortom added the Benue people will not forget the atrocities caused by the Buhari administration.

“What the Buhari administration has done to our people through the militants as confirmed by Shehu Garba is to spit on the graves of our compatriots mowed down needlessly by militia. We shall not forget these atrocities.”

He further stressed that besides unleashing killers on his people, the Buhari government denied Benue State any meaningful project in the last eight years, including the repair of Federal Government roads in the state which he said are now death traps. 

“For the avoidance of doubt, Governor Samuel Ortom was elected in 2015 and re-elected in 2019 to defend the interest of the people of Benue and never to be a lackey in the hands of expansionists using every means to perpetrate evil against the Benue citizens.

“By Garba Shehu’s latest statement, the Presidency has clearly demonstrated that Governor Ortom is right when he consistently accused the APC-led Federal Government of complicity in the killings orchestrated against Benue people by the herdsmen as represented by  Miyetti Allah Kautal, Fulani Nationality Movement, FUNAM and other Fulani socio-cultural groups.

“If the Presidency can find it convenient to lay the blame of the massive killings that the Fulani have continued to perpetrate in Benue on Governor Ortom, what can it say of the massacre and kidnappings in Plateau, Southern Kaduna, Niger, Sokoto and President Buhari’s home state of Katsina among other states where the killing of innocent citizens has continued unchallenged?

“The Presidency has shown in this recent public statement that they have placed cows above human lives and made the animals to urinate on the graves of those they massacred in Benue and elsewhere across the country. If not, they wouldn’t have gone to town to mock the slain in their graves.”

Trends of Insecurity in Benue state

In March 13, 2023, The ICIR reported that 5,138 people were killed and 18 local government areas attacked by suspected herdsmen under Governor Samuel Ortom’s administration.

The Executive Secretary of the Agency, Emmanuel Shior gave the figure in Makurdi during a press briefing on the humanitarian situation in the state since the inception of Ortom’s administration about eight years ago.

Shior noted that the attacks which happened in 18 of the 23 LGAs of the state led to the death of 1,177 and 809 people in 2015 and 2016, respectively.

Also, according to him, 43 were killed in 2017; 440 in 2018; 174 in 2019; 88 in 2020; 2,131 in 2021; 172 in 2022 and 104 since January 2023.

About two weeks after the report, scores of people were reported to have been killed while many others sustained injuries as suspected armed herders stormed some Benue local government areas.

Also, on Wednesday, April 5, at least 46 people were killed in an attack by suspected armed herdsmen on Umogidi in the Otukpo LGA of the state.

In another report, suspected herdsmen attacked Mgban community, in the Guma Local Government Area (LGA) of Benue state on Friday, April 7, killing dozens of residents.

Following the attacks, Ortom, on Tuesday, April 11, suspended the operations of Livestock Guards, the state’s security outfit that prosecutes herdsmen and impounds cattle for violating the Benue anti-open grazing law.

He also gave a two-week ultimatum to herdsmen who invaded rural communities after the 2023 general elections to leave the state.

According to the report, about 130 villagers were reportedly killed and several communities plundered as the state witnessed renewed attacks by suspected armed herdsmen few weeks after the election.

FG withdraws immigration suit against Seplat

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THE Federal government has withdrawn charges bordering on abuse of Nigeria’s immigration laws that it had preferred against Seplat Energy Plc, the company disclosed in a statement it released to the investing public on Thursday, April 20.

The notice of withdrawal of the action was dated April 6 and issued by the Director, Legal Services, of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), it added.

The statement was titled, ‘Notice of Withdrawal/Discontinuance of Immigration Suit against Seplat Energy and Its Directors,’ and signed by its Board chairman, Basil Omiyi.

Seplat quoted the NIS as stating in part that “the Claimant hereby discontinues all the proceedings in this charge against the above-named Defendants.”

The federal government had filed criminal charges against Seplat, the company’s chief executive officer (CEO), Roger Brown, the board chairman, Basil Omiyi, for alleged breach of extant provisions of the Immigration Act 2015.

In the lawsuit, with Charge No. FHC/AB/CR/149/2023, filed at the Federal High Court (FHC), Abuja on April 6, the federal government accused the defendants of allowing Brown to accept employment as the CEO of Seplat without the statutory approval of the Comptroller-General of Immigration.

The ICIR recalls that the FHC sitting in Lagos vacated the ex parte interim orders against Seplat Energy Plc, its CEO Roger Brown, and Board chairman Basil Omiyi, and also vacated the order that restrained Brown from participating in the running of the company, filed by five persons who claimed to be minority shareholders of Seplat.

Seplat, however, said it would continue to engage with the ministry of Interior to close the allegations presented to the ministry as a result of which the residency status of its CEO was withdrawn.

The company also referred to its announcement of April 6 where it confirmed that the FHC sitting in Lagos vacated the ex parte interim orders against the company and its executives.

“This announcement is made further to the Company’s announcement of 13 March 2023 and pursuant to Rule 17.10 of the Rulebook of the Nigerian Exchange, 2015 (Issuer’s Rule),” Seplat added.

Anambra tops in cases of childhood tuberculosis in Nigeria – Official

ANAMBRA State has the highest number of cases of Childhood tuberculosis (TB) in Nigeria, according to the Programme Manager of the Anambra State Tuberculosis, Leprosy and Buruli Ulcer Management, Ugochukwu Chukwulobelu.

Chukwulobelu disclosed this on Thursday, April 20, at a stakeholders’ engagement organised by the Federal Ministry of Health, in partnership with the KNCV Tuberculosis Foundation and Breakthrough Action Nigeria, in Awka.

According to Chukwulobelu, Nigeria ranks number six in the world and number one in Africa, with every local government having tuberculosis cases.

He described tuberculosis as an airborne disease caused by a bacteria called “Mycobacterium tuberculosis”, which usually attacks the lungs and could also damage other parts of the body.

“Anambra has the highest burden of TB drug resistance cases and childhood TB contribution in the South-East and Nigeria. This is not a good thing for the state,” the programme manager said.

He noted that the government is planning to set up 14 laboratories with gene Xpert machines for diagnoses to reduce the rate of the disease in the state.

The planned project will be carried out in collaboration with the National Tuberculosis and Leprosy Control Programme (NTBLCP)

“We have about 800 Directly Observed Treatments (DOTS) Centres for TB, but the major problem is lack of awareness among residents about TB, its diagnosis and treatment,” he said.

Persistent cough for two weeks or more, fever, unexplainable weight loss and drenching night sweats are signs used to screen patients.

“Residents should report suspected cases of TB within their communities. TB patients should also adhere to their treatments to prevent drug resistance TB cases which are even more dangerous.

“Everyone has a role to play to reduce the burden of the disease.”

Findings have shown that tuberculosis is a prevalent disease in Nigeria.

The country is among the 30 high TB burden countries globally and has the highest number of cases in Africa, according to a report by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The problem of TB in Nigeria has been made worse by drug-resistant TB and the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

The report suggests that TB kills 18 Nigerians every hour.

Attacks on journalists: Police to review election duty guidelines

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THE Nigeria Police Force (NPF) has said it will review its election duty guidelines to ensure protection of journalists during elections.

The Force Public Relations Officer (PRO) Olumuyiwa Adejobi disclosed this while speaking during a Twitter Space organised by the Wole Soyinka Centre on the topic, ‘How safe were journalists during 2023 elections?’

Speaking on attacks on journalists during the polls, Adejobi said the police will review its guidelines to ensure that journalists and observers are given more protection in future elections.

“There was a pocket book we published on election duty guidelines for officers, I think we are going to make an amendment to that. For other elections we want to have, we are going to review these guidelines to include protection of journalists and observers that will be moving up and down on election duty.”

He assured that the NPF is working on cases of attacks on journalists recorded during the election and also called on journalists to bring forward cases that have not been attended to.

“So cases recorded so far, I think some of our commands are on it and they are working on these cases and all I can say is to urge our people (journalists), we always believe that it’s when we publish (reports) that we are fighting it. I don’t want to believe that it’s every case that you must publish even when you publish you need to follow up so that you can have justice in that matter.

“I think we need to learn more. I think in the next election there will be constant training and retraining for all of us. There will be at least a forum for all of us where journalists, security agencies will have a joint forum to be coordinated by INEC itself so that all of us will be on the same page.”

However, he said journalists need to be abreast of relevant laws to avoid running into problems while discharging their responsibilities.

“If you don’t know the law you are going to run foul of the law and there’s no sentiment in law,” he said.

Adejobi also warned against cybercrimes, noting that the Cybercrime Act of 2015 should guide Nigerians, including journalists, on what to post on the social media.

“I think Nigerians are now aware of the existence of the Cybercrime Act of 2015 and sincerely when you read it you will know that copy and paste can lead you to jail if you are not careful. So I want to urge us to please read this law very well. All these laws are there for us so as to be guided whenever we are discharging our duties as journalists.”

The Force PRO explained that many people pick on journalists when they see them discharging their duties during elections.

“I think the electoral process is a very complex process that’s always very difficult to police or secure. As you know democracy itself is a very difficult thing to police. I want to say that every body including security operatives was a victim one way or the other during the election. Don’t forget that security operatives were attacked one way or the other, not only the journalists.

“But I think the fear of the unknown in Nigeria makes many of us see journalists as our enemies. I don’t know why you decide to just attack a journalist. By mere looking at a journalist people pick offense and say these people have come,” he observed.

He also stressed that the police worked with the International Press Centre to resolve many issues relating to attacks on journalists.

“Over time we can continue to do lectures, training for security operatives and those that come in contact with journalists, not only the security operatives this time around, everybody particularly government people who see journalists as their enemies and it is not supposed to be so.”

The Force PRO equally called for the support of journalists and other Nigerians in the campaign against political thuggery in the country.

Stressing that journalists were not the only ones attacked during the general elections, he noted that police officers and other security operatives as well as ordinary citizens were also brutalised by political thugs.

“Let me say that we need to see how we want to address political thuggery. Journalists are not the only ones that were attacked, security operatives were also attacked, people were attacked but despite the fact that we have armed men to follow people, they were still being attacked because these political thugs are there.

“We need to address political thuggery in this country. It is a collective responsibility,” the police spokesperson said.

FG moves to evacuate Nigerians trapped in Sudan

THE Federal Government has commenced moves to evacuate Nigerians trapped in Sudan.

This follows reports of unrest in the country as a result of violent clashes between the Sudanese Army and a paramilitary group, Rapid Support Forces.

The plan to evacuate Nigerians trapped in the country is in response to a request by Nigerian students in Sudan for immediate evacuation from the country.

A statement released by Gabriel Odu for the Media, Public Relations and Protocols Unit of the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM) on Thursday, April 20, said various Federal Government agencies are working out an arrangement for the evacuation of Nigerians in Sudan.

The agencies involved are NiDCOM, National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the Nigerian mission in Sudan.

“The Commission has received the letter of solicitation by the National Association of Nigerian Students in Sudan for possible evacuation of students, especially those in Khartoum, the Sudanese capital,” the statement said.

NIDCOM, in the same vein, urged “all Nigerian students in Sudan and Nigerians living in Sudan to be security conscious and calm”.

Background of the crisis 

The Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have been fighting for control of the government since February 15. As a result, at least 180 people have been killed. 

The crisis, which began in Khartoum, is spreading to residential areas in the capital, which could increase the number of casualties.  

Thousands of Nigerian students are trapped as a result of the conflict.

The National Association of Nigerian Students in Sudan (NANSS) wrote to the Federal Government, appealing for the evacuation of its members.

The students said they are stranded, living in fear with no access to basic amenities and are facing dangerous threats.

“We hereby write soliciting and yearning for the Nigerian Government’s intercession to rescue and send for an immediate evacuation of the Nigerian students that are stuck in the centre of the ongoing war,” the group said in a letter. 

Nigeria and Sudan have had a close relationship since 1960. According to student organisations, about 10,000 Nigerian students are studying in the country.

Also, thousands of other Nigerians are engaged in businesses in Sudan.

Illegal logging in Africa is a threat to security

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By Catherine Lena Kelly, National Defense University and Carl Pilgram, Africa Center for Strategic Studies

African countries are estimated to lose US$17 billion each year to illegal logging. High-value timber species are in global demand.

Illegal logging is most prevalent in the continent’s tropical rainforests. Foreign demand for rare hardwoods from these forests has dramatically increased. A significant driver is Chinese demand for teak, redwood and mahogany. According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Africa’s share of rosewood exports to China rose from 40% in 2008 to 90% in 2018.

UNODC World Wildlife Crime Report 2020

Illegal logging has negative environmental effects that weaken human security. Deforestation in the world’s second largest carbon sink, the Congo Basin, is an urgent example.

Beyond environmental degradation, timber trafficking also affects national security. Drawing from our recent report, which is based on our recent research and programmatic work at the Africa Center for Strategic Studies, we have analysed three ways that illegal logging affects national security and what that means for current measures to counter it.

Firstly, illegal logging amplifies threats posed by organised criminal groups and violent extremist organisations. Secondly, illegal logging amplifies governance problems. This is because it facilitates collusion between senior corrupt officials and criminal networks. Thirdly, such collusion weakens accountable governance of natural resources in African countries. That’s a key ingredient of peace and security and a source of resilience to national security challenges.

Countering illegal logging requires two things. One is dismantling the high-level criminal networks driving it. The other is stopping the government-embedded actors who facilitate it. Oversight and accountability are therefore vital. Here, civil society can play a role.

The knock-on effects

Illegal logging happens through small-scale and commercial operations.

The ENACT Organised Crime Index is a well-known measurement tool for assessing criminality and resilience. It identifies and tracks criminal networks, state-embedded actors, foreign actors and “mafia-style” armed groups that are locally well known and that control territory.

The work of these groups has several knock-on effects.

Violent extremism and insurgency: The illicit timber trade fuels conflict and instability by providing resources for violent actors. For instance, trafficking networks in Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of Congo linked to Ahlu-Sunnah Wa-Jama and related militant groups in Mozambique made an estimated US$2 million per month from illegal logging in 2019.

In Senegal, the Movement of Democratic Forces of Casamance recently funded its insurgency through the illicit logging of rosewood. Warlords and militias in Liberia, Central African Republic and the DRC have also used the trade for financing.

Collusion and corruption: Illegal logging often relies on government corruption and elite collusion with criminal networks. This subverts the rule of law and accountable governance.

Criminal networks are often aided by high-level state actors. For private gain, they help criminals purchase commercial concessions, acquire fake permits, or falsely declare the species of timber exports to launder them.

Elites colluding in this trade then use the international financial system to move the profits into private bank accounts. This contributes to the estimated $88 billion in illicit financial flows leaving Africa yearly.

In Equatorial Guinea, Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, son of President Obiang, profited immensely from the transport and export of rare hardwoods. As minister of agriculture and forestry, he sold some national forests to private companies and used a shell company linked to the ministry to charge fees for processing, loading, and transporting timber.

In 2021, the Zambian Anti-Corruption Commission seized 47 trucks illegally laden with rosewood bound for Namibia and Zimbabwe. The operation was allegedly facilitated by certain ministers and family members of former Zambian president Edgar Lungu.

In 2019, Gabon’s vice-president and minister of forestry were part of a rosewood trafficking scandal. Since then, the government has sought to increase transparency in natural resource governance.

Solutions

Many African states have tried to halt logging – with limited success.

Guinea-Bissau, the DRC and Kenya have controversially ended moratoria on logging. Mozambique lacks the capacity to enforce existing bans.

It’s easy to get around a moratorium when state security and justice systems do not operate transparently. A moratorium can even harden criminal networks without addressing the corruption and livelihood challenges that facilitate illegal logging.

Several other approaches to forest monitoring are being tried at smaller scale. These include using satellites or genetic markers of protected trees.

The Kenya Forestry Service is pioneering an app for officers to use satellite data in community-based initiatives.

Regional responses have potential. In 2008, the Central African Forests Commission established an agreement involving the environment and forestry ministries of eight countries to help coordinate law enforcement.

The agreement emphasises cross-border and interagency coordination between security, justice, and forestry officials. These harmonised forest management practices are also promising in southern Africa.

Agreements like these are valuable but politically difficult to implement.

An example is the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora . It is a binding agreement about the international trade of certain timber products. But it depends on states adopting relevant domestic legislation and policies.

Nonbinding instruments like the Zanzibar Declaration on the Illegal Trade in Timber and Forest Products and the Accra Declaration on Combating Illegal Trade in Rosewoods, Timber, and Forest Products also signal countries’ intent to honour commitments.

But doing so requires credible enforcement mechanisms.

Bridging gaps

Stronger oversight of actors involved in natural resource governance can help. Civil society has a role here.

For example, in Gabon, civil society has pressured the government for greater transparency in logging contracts. In Cameroon, it has facilitated independent monitoring of forest regulations.

In Ghana, legal cases have been filed that aim to preserve forests. And independent journalism has pressured officials to curtail illegal transport of rosewood.

Civil society also builds economic resilience to illegal logging. In Tanzania and the DRC, civil society has enhanced community control over land management and made legal livelihoods in the logging sector more feasible.

Uganda’s afforestation projects have also helped.

Key takeaways

External oversight is a key part of countering illegal logging. It works best where civil society is strong.

Internal oversight is also important. Inspectors general, specialised prosecutors and independent anti-corruption bodies can help expose the kingpins organising illegal operations.

International cooperation between security, justice, and forestry officials should accompany oversight, so that these actors can share intelligence and facilitate the arrest, investigation, and prosecution of those engaged in illegal logging.

Regional and international agreements are working in the right direction. What they need is better implementation.

Caden Browne, a Political Science PhD student at Boston University, contributed to this report while on internship at the Africa Center for Strategic Studies, National Defense University.The Conversation

Catherine Lena Kelly, Associate Dean and Associate Professor, National Defense University and Carl Pilgram, Senior Academic Associate, Africa Center for Strategic Studies

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Nigeria Content Board reaffirms commitment to 70% in-country capacity in oil, gas industry

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THE Nigeria Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) has restated its commitment to meeting 70 per cent capacity development in oil and gas in 2027, with a focus on local capacity in engineering and procurement.

The Executive Secretary of the NCDMB, Simbi Wabote, told journalists at a press conference in Abuja on Wednesday, April 19 that the Board had been monitoring the progress of local capacity development in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry.


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He put the current capacity at 54 per cent.

Wabote said, “In 2017, we launched a 10-year strategic programme, which we said would take Nigerian content to 70 per cent in 2027. We have focused on that goal and we have not deviated. We also have parameters which we used in measuring the trajectory.

“We did our last review of how much progress we have made in terms of how much the Nigerian oil and gas industry has grown in capacity, and how much we have participated in the oil and gas business focusing on engineering, fabrication, procurement and construction. All these parameters were used in measuring how far we have come.”

He said that out of the $5 billion investment in liquified natural gas had 50 per cent of local content involvement of the country’s local engineers, fabricators and construction workers.

He also said the NCDMB was committed to growing local capacity in neighbouring African countries under the African Continental Free Trade Area Agreement.

Wabote informed that the forthcoming Nigeria Oil and Gas Fair next month in Bayelsa state would expand the linkage of industries to grow local capacity and development of in-house capacity.

He said the Fair would also provide opportunities for investors, operators and government officials.

Zelensky invites Nigeria’s President-elect, Tinubu to Ukraine

THE President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy has congratulated Nigeria’s President-elect Bola Tinubu, 51 days after he was declared winner of the February 25 Presidential Election.

Tinubu, who contested under the platform of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), polled 8,794,726 votes to win the election. His closest rival, Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), got 6,984,520 votes.


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Zelensky also invited Tinubu to Ukraine for a state visit, according to a statement released by Tinubu’s spokesperson Tunde Rahman, on Thursday, April 20.

The Ukraine leader, according to the statement, said his country was ready to further strengthen cooperation with Nigeria at the bilateral level, despite its ongoing war with Russia.

Zelensky was quoted as saying that the proposed visit would contribute to consolidating joint efforts of the international community towards food security.

“I invite you to pay an official visit to Ukraine at a time convenient for you. I am confident that your visit will strengthen the dialogue between our countries and contribute to the further consolidation of joint efforts of the international community aimed at solving the urgent challenges of today, in particular the crisis situation caused by Russia regarding the guarantee of world food security,” Zelensky said.

He also appreciated Nigeria’s support for the Resolution of the General Assembly of the United Nations Organisation ‘Principles of the UN Charter’ underlying a comprehensive, just and sustainable peace in Ukraine.

“I count on the active participation of Nigeria in its practical implementation. We see the further provision of global food security, of which Ukraine was and remains a reliable guarantor at the global level, as an important direction of cooperation,” Zelensky added.

Highlights of the manifesto of the incoming government dubbed “Renewed Hope 2023 – Action Plan for a Better Nigeria” include an enlightened agricultural policy that promotes productivity and assures decent incomes for citizens, especially those in rural communities.

A report published by The ICIR in May 22 noted that the invasion of Ukraine by Russia was a threat to food security in Nigeria.

The report identified the sharp increase in the cost of a loaf of bread as one of the effects of the Russia/Ukraine war on the Nigerian economy.

The ICIR equally reported that European Union (EU) Economic Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni said the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on food security will potentially have “dramatic consequences” for African countries that rely on grain imports.

Speaking during an official visit to Bucharest, Romania, Gentiloni said food security would not be an issue in Europe, which is struggling with high inflation rather than low food supplies.

According to the EU commissioner, many parts of Africa, particularly the Horn of Africa, are expected to feel the tremors of the intensifying crisis in Ukraine, especially as the prices of food, oils and fertiliser rise.

Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022 and Nigeria was among 141 nations that voted in support of a United Nations resolution that condemned Russia’s action.

Hubert H. Humphrey fellowship program seeks entries

THE Hubert H. Humphrey is inviting applications to its Fellowship Program which provides a year of non-degree graduate-level study, leadership development, and professional collaboration with United States counterparts.

Primary funding for the Humphrey Program is provided by the US Congress through the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the US Department of State.

Participants from the following regions are eligible: Sub-Saharan Africa, Europe, Middle East and North Africa, East Asia and Pacific, South and Central Asia, and the Western Hemisphere. For a full list of participating countries, click here.

During the program, fellows pursue both their individual program goals and work closely with their Humphrey colleagues in workshops and seminars. Unlike a typical American graduate school experience, the program encourages fellows to travel away from their host campus to learn more about American culture and to network with their American peers.


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Applicants are required to have at least an undergraduate degree, a minimum of five years of full-time, professional experience, demonstrated leadership qualities, a commitment to public service in their community, and fluent English.

Journalism and communication mid-career professionals with limited experience in the United States can apply for this program.

There are rolling deadlines for different regions, ranging typically from April to September. Interested applicants can apply here.

Applications open for workshop on migration, refugees

SWITCH Perspective is seeking applications for a 10-day workshop on migration slated for September 4, 2023, to September 15, 2023.

The workshop will be divided into two parts. The first week will include sessions, discussions, and an analysis of media reporting on migration and refugees. For the second week, participants will get a chance to work on a topic of their own based on the work done during the first week.

The workshop is open to journalists, photographers, filmmakers, writers, academics, NGO workers and civil society activists working on documenting, analysing, or telling stories about migration in its various forms.

The working language of the workshop is English, with some sessions translated from Arabic to English.

Journalists and researchers who are interested in migration and refugees can attend a workshop in Beirut, Lebanon.

The deadline for the submission of applications is May 5, 2023. Interested applicants can apply here.