Shettima: We’re Taking Bold Steps to Change Nigeria’s Economic Fortune 

Vice President Kashim Shettima, yesterday, said the President Bola Tinubu-led administration has so far taken bold and courageous decisions that would, in the long run, change Nigeria’s economic fortune for the better.

This, he noted, formed the basis for the present administration’s determination to ensure youth empowerment and human capital development.

Shettima, who made this disclosure, when he received the management of the National Institute for Security Studies (NISS) led by the Commandant, Alhaji Ayodele Adeleke, at the State House, Abuja, assured them that the present government was determined to bequeath a country firmly on the path of prosperity.

The NISS delegation was at the Presidential Villa to present to the vice-president the report of a study conducted by 86 participants in the institute’s Executive Intelligence Management Course (EIMC) 16band with the theme: ‘Globalisation and Regional Economic Integration: Implications for Sustainable Development in Africa’.

Speaking during the presentation, the vice-president commended the faculty and members of the EIMC 16 for their efforts, noting that the recommendations of the study aligned with the perspectives of the Tinubu administration, especially the “advocacy for investing in ICT and infrastructure development.”

On the theme of the EIMC 16 research study, he said, “It is very apt, especially given the circumstances we have found ourselves in on the African continent. We are challenged from all angles – cyber-terrorism, human and drug trafficking, money laundering, transnational extremism and banditry, and the challenges of climate change.”

On the need to diversify the economy away from oil, Shettima noted that in the next 20 to 30 years, oil might not be as valuable as it currently sold.

“Our only luck and happiness is that we are largely a gas nation. But our most important resource is our human capital, which we need to harness. We have to invest in education. I believe that with the right infrastructure and qualitative leadership, we can transform this nation,” he stated.

The vice-president further noted that with the right leadership at all levels of governance, the country’s growing population could be harnessed and positively deployed to transform the economy.

“Let us create jobs, engage the youths; let us invest in their education. All these challenges of terrorism and banditry will be contained but the fundamental question is the quality of leadership,” he said.

EIMC is designed to provide strategic-level security/intelligence officers, as well as top-level management, with the requisite skills to handle their positions and contribute positively to the implementation of national security policies and national development.

The participants for EIMC 16 were drawn from 35 agencies in Nigeria and four other African countries of Chad, The Gambia, Niger and Rwanda.

Commandant of the institute, Ayodele Adeleke, while speaking earlier, thanked Tinubu for his commitment to excellence and a sense of responsibility since he assumed office.

According to him, “The EIMC is a flagship programme of the institute, among other courses, aimed at impacting the requisite knowledge to participants to equip them with leadership skills to be able to address the dynamics of national and global security challenges in their respective countries as well as to foster inter-agency synergy and international cooperation.”

He, however, called on African economies to invest in ICT infrastructure as a key driver for economic growth, while investing in research and development.

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