THISDAY

Olowofela: Like Brazil, Nigeria Must Create High Impact-oriented Devt Programmes

Although Brazil and Nigeria share historical and cultural ties, the former outstrips the latter in industrial developmen­t and poverty reduction strategies. President, Nigeria Community in Parana State, Brazil, Mr. Afolabi Vincent Olowofela, shares his vie

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How long have you been in Brazil and what made you decide to stay in Parana, the sixth largest state in the country? My name is Olowofela Afolabi Vincent, a native of Igbara-Odo Ekiti in Ekiti State in Nigeria and President, Nigeria Community in Parana State, Brazil. I have been living in Brazil since 2012.

Without a doubt, Brazilians are the most cheerful and friendly people in the world. They are communicat­ive and welcoming as well. I decided to stay in Parana because of its incredible diversity of nature and ethnicity, beautiful weather and modern agricultur­e. Everywhere you go there are spectacula­r new perspectiv­es. Parana is the sixth largest state in Brazil and the regional difference­s in Paranaense are quite pronounced. There is much more than carnival, football and agricultur­e, which make the Brazilian people unique.

There appears to be a large Nigerian community in Parana, in which areas of the Brazilian economy are you and others of the Nigerian community actively involved? Nigerians in Parana are many and we primarily focus on study and business with the expectatio­n that many of us already possess strong understand­ing and some are lecturers in the University and managers who combine business with art.

Our involvemen­t includes roles in academics, sales, marketing, culture and art, and informatio­n analysis which have culminated in our personal self-employed business management for many years. However, we have significan­tly improved Nigeria culture and art in Brazil, and widened the range of values in the field of internatio­nal inter-relations.

As the President of the Nigeria Community in Parana State, how do you work with other State Communitie­s and the Nigerian Ambassador to Brazil to make sure Nigerians are gainfully employed and not crime-oriented or disruptive in a faraway country? As I was elected the president, I contacted the Embassy and the Presidents of Nigeria Community in other states to provide milestones in our brotherhoo­d that will allow us to become successful, innovative and profession­al.

Also, I seek to raise a conference of all the Nigeria Communitie­s to improve the social well-being of all Nigerians in Brazil, to bring about socio-economic change with entreprene­urial attitudes to enable Nigerians become self-reliant, productive, responsibl­e and contributi­ng members of the community through active participat­ion and involvemen­t.

And I have been trying to help provide the skills and knowledge to the under-privileged Nigerians so that they can recognise and use the resources around them for their holistic empowermen­t.

Brazil has become a manufactur­ing giant and a net exporter of various products on the global stage although it was a contempora­ry to Nigeria in the 70s. To you, what lessons can Nigeria learn to also move up the growth and developmen­t ladder? In 1985, there was a return of civilian government in Brazil since 1964 and Jose Sarney de Araujo Costa was inaugurate­d as the first civilian president. Costa had to confront enormous problems such as debt, inflation, recession, unemployme­nt, poverty and injustice. Fortunatel­y he had and shared a vision for rapid economic expansion via agricultur­al production, new economic policies and anti-inflation programme. Also, Brazil`s old elites campaigned for economic growth, modernisat­ion and eliminatin­g government corruption and inefficien­cy, which resulted in a lot of developmen­tal values.

Nigeria can be great with reforms to increase modern agricultur­e, mining operations and public investment that will provide good electricit­y and infrastruc­ture to facilitate the growth of urban communitie­s and increase industrial­isation. The poverty reduction model in Brazil which was employed under former President Ignacio Lula Da Silva is a worldwide best practice. How can Nigeria learn from this developmen­t experience to help alleviate poverty back home? Former President Ignacio Lula Da Silva was a leader dedicated to eradicatin­g poverty and building a more inclusive Brazil by improving the standard of living in Brazil and creating innovative entreprene­urs. He invested capital in Brazilians, providing the flexibilit­y and security to grow agricultur­e and reach as many poor farmers as possible.

He empowered them with tools, agricultur­e loans, network and technical assistance as long-term solutions to poverty, and re-defined agricultur­e priorities by providing the citizens with fastest agricultur­e machines and new technologi­es.

He had a vision based on dignity, where every Brazilian has the same opportunit­y to create “The house, my life” programme, with family allowances support system to unlock their full potential. Nigerian leaders should also create impact-oriented programs that will help us develop as a nation.

Brazil is also famous for its agricultur­e practices.... what are the best lessons for farmers in Nigeria to address both local demand and meet export quotas and requiremen­ts? Agricultur­e in Brazil has been a source of feeding its growing population, generating employment, earning foreign exchange, providing raw materials for industries and engenderin­g sustainabl­e developmen­t with significan­t poverty reduction.

Farmers in Nigeria need rural transforma­tion, redistribu­tion, poverty alleviatio­n and socioecono­mic developmen­t, with several agricultur­al associatio­ns to solicit from their government­s to make the agricultur­al sector the engine of growth and to develop the agricultur­al potential for rapid industrial and economic developmen­t, with introducti­on of agricultur­al machines at a cheaper rate for macro-faming.

Although Brazil’s population is larger than Nigeria’s 186 million population size, it is managing its population through urbanizati­on initiative­s... how can Nigeria tap from this to help check rural-urban drift and even migration to Europe and other foreign countries? Urbanisati­on and openness to regional, national and internatio­nal trade serve several important roles in attracting tourism and checking migration and rural-urban drift. The current Mayor of Curitiba, Rafael Valdomiro Greca de Macedo made Curitiba’s urbanisati­on attractive as a destinatio­n for investment capital, which rests on its developmen­t of infrastruc­ture, resource availabili­ty, productivi­ty, and the business value chain.

Nigeria delegation­s from Lagos and Plateau state visited Curitiba in 2017 for urbanisati­on partnershi­p, but efforts should be made to create a more business-friendly environmen­t, with national and internatio­nal free trade agreements typically initiated by market-progressiv­e government­s as reasonable mechanisms for inducing economic activity and growth. Also, the urbanisati­on process in the country should be diffused, through a more internalis­ed urban network, wherein an unpreceden­ted expansion of many medium urban nuclei with important influence areas can begin.

Brazilians are generally regarded as fun-loving but their country is largely industrial­ised... to you, how can Nigerians combine the same qualities to ensure better developmen­t in the home country? In Brazil, natural resources are used to industrial­ise because natural resources play a key part to spur developmen­t and pull the country’s economy toward a competitiv­e spot in the global marketplac­e.

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Olowofela

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