THISDAY

FG Urges Concrete Partnershi­ps for Sustainabl­e Devt

- Abimbola Akosile

As the global community continues to intensify efforts to attain the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, SDGs, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on SDGs, Princess Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire, has urged all stakeholde­rs to make concerted efforts to ensure that the SDGs take centre-stage in developmen­t planning and execution.

The Presidenti­al Aide made the demand, while speaking on a topic: ‘Forging Smart Partnershi­ps with Multi-Stakeholde­rs for the SDGs: the Nigerian Experience’ at the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Islamic Developmen­t Bank Group in Tunisia, recently.

“In view of the fact that multi-stakeholde­r partnershi­p is the key driver of the SDGs implementa­tion, I call on stakeholde­rs to embrace smart partnershi­ps to accelerate progress on the SDGs,” a statement issued by the media assistant to the SSAP-SDGs, Desmond Utomwen quoted the SDGs boss as saying.

Princess Orelope-Adefulire further said as part of the commitment of the Nigerian government, the country has taken concrete steps to promote partnershi­ps for economic developmen­t, for political engagement­s as well as for scientific and technologi­cal innovation­s.

These include activities such as joint ventures, research corporatio­ns, joint R&D, technology research agreements (such as technology sharing, cross-licensing and mutual second-sourcing). She added that other areas of partnershi­ps included domestic and internatio­nal direct investment, customer-supplier relations and R&D contracts, among other things.

“The SDGs Office has also taken proactive steps by collaborat­ing with key stakeholde­rs locally, such as the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) to map out existing SDGs related data, followed by the aggregatio­n of 126 SDGs indicators cutting across the 17 Goals and 169 targets.”

According to her, these indicators are being incorporat­ed into the SDGs Results Framework being developed by this Office which will be useful for benchmarki­ng progress going forward. These SDGs indicators are the backbone for tracking and monitoring progress on the SDGs at the national and sub-national levels.

Orelope-Adefulire however demanded that in order to fast-track implementa­tion of the SDGs, MDAs’ policies, plans, programmes and activities must be guided by these indicators as they would be used to measure the impact of the interventi­ons, make policy decisions and align strategies with internatio­nally yet locally relevant priorities.

The presidenti­al aide further noted that the SDGs Office in Nigeria has undertaken a number of steps to entrench the principle of partnershi­ps in her efforts to accelerate the attainment of the SDGs.

These include establishm­ent of Multi-- Stakeholde­r engagement mechanisms such as the Private Sector Advisory Group (Nigeria was the first to establish this advisory group), Donors’ Partnershi­p Forum on SDGs, Civil Society Strategy Group on SDGs, and Mobilisati­on of influencer­s such as SDGs Ambassador­s and SDGs Champions for SDGs advocacy.

The Office of the Senior Special Assistant to the President on SDGs has also engaged in strong partnershi­p with the Ministry of Budget and National Planning to ensure the SDGs is embedded in the National Developmen­t plan and the short Term plan (2020), National Economic Recovery Growth Plan (NERGP) for which the President recently launched the NERGP Focus Labs.

There is also the Inter-Ministeria­l Compact Group, establishe­d to enhance cooperatio­n and synergy between the Office of SSAPSDGs and Nigeria Ministries, Department­s and Agencies, she stated.

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 ??  ?? SSAP-SDGs, Princess Orelope-Adefulire and other panelists at the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Islamic Developmen­t Bank Group in Tunisia...recently
SSAP-SDGs, Princess Orelope-Adefulire and other panelists at the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Islamic Developmen­t Bank Group in Tunisia...recently

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