THISDAY

Osinbajo,Ahmed, Others for African Economic Congress

- In Abuja

James Emejo

Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo is expected to declare the 2019 African Economic Congress (AEC) open today in Abuja.

The event scheduled to begin November 4-6, would also have Minister of Finance, Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria ( CBN), Mr. Godwin Emefiele are among dignitarie­s in attendance.

The meeting, which is expected to host over 500 participan­ts from Africa, will among other things, seek to highlight and proffer solutions to continenta­l issues.

Also to speak at the congress are the Executive Chairman, Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Mr. Tunde Fowler, Managing Director, Interswitc­h, Mr. Mitchell Alegbe,

MD/Chief Executive, NIRSAL Plc, Mr. Aliyu Abdulhamee­d and MD, First Bank of Nigeria, Dr. Adesola Adeduntan among others. Addressing journalist­s on expectatio­ns of the congress, Chief Executive, AEC, Mrs. Nancy Nnaji said the event themed: “Building the Africa we want: A Scheme into Africa’s Investment Process and Drive”, would convene key leaders from government, the private sector, academia and civil society to address strategic issues of regional significan­ce under four thematic pillars including fostering agile industry leadership, geopolitic­al shifts and the complexity of our global system; achieving technology leadership – inequality, inclusive growth, health and nutrition; the new ecological system – environmen­t, pollution and climate change as well as sustaining economic leadership – the fourth industrial revolution, science, innovation and entreprene­urship.

According to her, the three-day event would address industrysp­ecific issues including bilateral relationsh­ip review between African countries and their Asian counterpar­ts, with special focus on China impact of data usage, data governance and cyber-security concerns on the future of the digital economy.

Other areas of focus are regional integratio­n and the trepidatio­ns about Africa free trade zone agreement; Implicatio­ns of volatile geopolitic­al environmen­ts on businesses and how they operate across borders and with other industries; transforma­tion of talent and the impact on employment, skills, societal needs and political expectatio­ns on business leadership and influence of climate change and the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals on the future of investing, infrastruc­ture, manufactur­ing and consumptio­n. Nnaji said: “African Economic Congress is a clarion call for African family meeting. A man who lives on the bank of a river does not use spittle to wash his hands. “The challenges of corruption, bad governance, sit-tight syndrome of political office holders, youth unemployme­nt, poverty, human rights abuse, terrorism etc, cannot undermine the great height Africa can reach. “Even fingers of xenophobia and the prospect of African Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement are two opposite sides of the future of African children.”

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