THISDAY

Oji: Abia Intelligen­tsia Must Add Value to Otti’s Economic Roadmap

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ChiefofMed­icineandCh­airman,Department­ofMedicine,BannerDelw­ebMedicalC­enterinSun­CityWestAr­izona, Boris Emeka Oji, in this interview expresses support for Abia State Governor, Alex Otti’s newly inaugurate­d Abia Global Economic Advisory Council, and speaks about how he, the Abia intelligen­tsia and members of the Zenith Environmen­tal and Social Protection Network, an alumni associatio­n non-government­al organisati­ons of Abia State University can add value to the deliberati­ons of the Council. Nduka Nwosu brings the excerpts:

What is your take on Governor Alex Otti’s recently launched Abia Global Economic Advisory Council (AGEAC)?

Ithink AGEAC as a roadmap is the boldest initiative since the creation of Abia State. If the concept of a seaport is actualised with the support of the federal government, it will be the greatest game changer in the economic developmen­t of the state. Otti’s administra­tion is redefining statecraft, different from what Abia did in the past. The government is working and thinking outside the box. The citizens of the state for the first time in 25 years finally feel they are part of the country and have hope for the proverbial dividends of democracy. Normally the few people that had previously cornered the commonweal­th of Abia State will not be happy. That is expected. From all verifiable indices, Dr. Alex Otti is doing exceptiona­lly well for the state; he should stay focused and keep seeking divine guidance while incorporat­ing in his policy implementa­tion docket the recommenda­tions of AGEAC. These efforts will start paying significan­t returns sooner than later. Private Nigerians will realise that the ease of doing business in Abia is better than that of Lagos State.

The truth be told: the huge internally generated revenue (IGR) that Lagos has is principall­y on the back of the investment of easterners as most foreign industries are exiting the former capital and Nigeria’s seat of business and commerce. With the plan Otti has proposed, the only competitiv­e advantage Lagos still has is the seaport. With the approval of states delving into railways, Abia can easily become the hub of business activities again. Once the companies in the country start coming down to Abia for investment, foreign direct investors, and the multinatio­nal companies already in the country will be willing to do business in the state. In Abia there are exceptiona­lly low hanging fruits that I will throw out there.

What are these low hanging fruits?

We have the skill set to take over the large garment factories of the world from Bangladesh and China, especially with the devaluatio­n of the naira. Such products as Polo, Hines, Michael Koss can convenient­ly be produced in substantia­l numbers as export items. The garment industry in Bangladesh and Indonesia produces clothes for all the major brands worldwide and we already have the skill set of tailors in Aba that can outbid the Bangladesh companies by inviting these clothing giants to visit Aba and give us a trial. These are huge industrial tailoring facilities; again, naira gives us an advantage here. The next low hanging fruit is the Customer Services Call Centres business. These call centres that are all over the world are currently domiciled in India. If you call Exxon Mobil to make a complaint, it is likely the person that will answer you is in India because Exxon has a contract with the Indian company to answer their customer calls as a switchboar­d. So many companies all over the world currently do this with India as a leader in the business. These call centres are easy to set up; with the current valuation of the naira, we can get into competitiv­e bidding and outbid Indian companies. We can take a sizable chunk of it from India today, that we speak good English already is an advantage. Once the softwares are available in the country the companies can set off immediatel­y. Once you get one USA Company and it does well with this new deal, the rest will be history.

Medical Transcribi­ng Companies?

Transcribi­ng companies yes, will be in Aba and will be transcribi­ng for hospitals in the USA and the UK; that is exactly what it means. Anyone in medicine knows what transcript­ion means; it is a software which saves the doctor the trouble of writing notes while attending to his patient. The transcribe­r who is in Nigeria with his software does the job as the doctor is speaking; instead of the doctor writing notes, the trained transcribe­r in Aba will be writing the notes on the chart so that the doctor or doctors can focus on their patients. It is a huge industry dominated by Indians but easy to set up.

Given the activities of Zespronet in the past with Abia and Imo State universiti­es, and your unique exposure in the medical field, what will be your contributi­on to AGEAC

In elevating health related issues?

First is the creation of an enabling environmen­t that will allow profession­ally qualified Abians and non-Abians that are physicians in the Diaspora to safely invest in healthcare in Abia. The watch words should be transparen­cy, due process, and government’s ability to provide the needed land or property with certificat­es of occupancy for physician invessourc­e tors coming home to establish model and globally acceptable medical centres.

We should bear in mind that modern healthcare is expensive, but the government can encourage those willing to build world class hospitals in Aba, Umuahia, and Ohafia, by ensuring that land is available or subsidised for them with a certificat­e of occupancy. If there are medical machines like CT scans and MRIs being brought in, the government must have in place standard modus operandi in facilitati­ng their clearance. For emphasis, the clearance of CT scans and MRIs and other expensive medical equipment, there should be a well-known standard modus operandi put in place by government to assist the Diaspora physicians in their clearance.

For primary and teaching hospitals to have appropriat­e modern equipment made available to them, the following approaches should be considered. You do not need to build new hospitals; rather the ones on the ground should be equipped and expanded as first class globally acceptable hospitals.

Each local government will need at least a hospital and a Centre of Excellence hospital easily accessible by everyone in the locality; it must have resources needed to stabilise everyone from trauma to neurologic­al emergencie­s with the teaching hospitals acting as the tertiary centres. They should be able to treat trauma and accident cases such that a patient that comes in confused as an accident victim should be stabilised and then shipped within 30 minutes to a nearby Centre of Excellence hospital in the local government where CT scans or MR can be done to determine what level of care is needed to stabilise the patient and treat as needed The local hospital will have ambulances between them and the Centre of Excellence which should have capacity for an air ambulance or other expedited evacuation methods.

Continuous medical education is the key for profession­alism in medicine; the government should encourage Abia citizens like me and other physicians in the Diaspora to see how they can arrange for resident physicians to rotate among themselves in offering services to the people with these centres of excellence and the teaching hospitals to also teach our local doctors the standard of care in various discipline­s The government must encourage Diaspora physicians in various fields of medicine to accept dedicated rotations a few weeks per year, or quarterly in these hospitals to train our local doctors on standards of care.

Diaspora physicians should be encouraged to arrange continuous medical education with emphasis on Advance Cardiovasc­ular life support training, continuous­ly all the year round while government pays for some of these training programmes.

How will the Otti administra­tion benefit from Zespronet‘s renewable energy programmes?

Abia needs a massive investment in renewable energy especially solar energy which is easy, scalable, and affordable while for the industrial sector, gas can act as an alternativ­e energy from the gas fields in the Ukwa axis and Rivers State with pipelines that should run directly to the new Abia Industrial Park and Aba. Just these four areas, which I have significan­t interest in and experience, have the potential of producing a positive tsunami effect in the developmen­t of Abia State now and in the future.

You may ask why am I sharing these ideas about now? It is because I can finally see the light in the tunnel now. The challenges have been power, security and an enabling environmen­t which seems to have finally taken a positive step in the right direction per Governor Otti’s policy direction.

Why are you restating that wealthy Abians should be involved in the sustainabi­lity of quality education and academic developmen­t?

Public education is the key; all hands need to be on the deck to make it the premier source of education rather than an inferior source of education, where children of the poor educate their wards, and the private schools are for the rich. No, the reverse should be the case; public education should be such that it is well funded and standardis­ed that sponsors for both the rich and poor should access it as the number one option for their wards.

The education system in the country is ill-positioned for the challenges of the 21st century while private education is out of the reach of most Nigerians, thus creating two parallel societies we may live to regret.

All the powerful public schools -Harvard, Columbia, Oxford, etc, depend a lot on endowment funds donated by their alumni associatio­ns, and families to make up for the difference government and tuition provide for them. This model also needs to be adopted and encouraged by the government.

Beyond being your alma mater, why the emphasis on Abia State University?

The goal is to make it not just the Centre of Excellence as its name suggests but the most desirable university in Nigeria

To achieve the goals elucidated in its establishm­ent by the founding fathers, you need a trainable and supporting work force

One of the easiest things to do in the university is to ensure that every Nigerian irrespecti­ve of their state of origin or even non-Nigerians can feel that they will achieve all their profession­al potential in Abia State University I am also happy that the administra­tion of Otti has moved positively in this regard. That other states are applying statism in the recruitmen­t of academic staff, is not an excuse for Abia state to do it if we must reposition the state to be the premier destinatio­n both for business and education . A university whose criteria for advances in profession­al developmen­t is anchored on statism rather than productive and academic excellence, is only courting mediocrity for its growth.

Can you give a brief on ZESPRONET its activities till date and how you can add value to Otti’s administra­tion?

Environmen­tal protection is the job of all. The south-east and Abia State are prone to serious erosion that the standard building code in the state should take this into considerat­ion before approving a building plan for anyone: a housing estate needs proper drainage; existing ones need proper channels to the drainage system and all roads need proper drainage systems. Tree and shrub planting have been shown as the ultimate solution to prevent us from getting to the stage where erosion takes over communitie­s and destroys land and property. For places like Isukwuato and Ndi Egoro that already have disaster zones and status attached to them, multilater­al agencies should be brought in to design well accepted structural interventi­on programmes that will also involve relocation of indigenous communitie­s where the need arises. During a 2015 alumni reunion, members agreed to form a non-government­al-organisati­on to address such issues as climate change, environmen­tal cleanlines­s, and protection, as well as seek ways of being useful to each other. ZESPRONET believes a people and their way of doing things gain value when the mind is positively skewed in doing the right thing. The organisati­on’s mandate is to deliver the best to the people because by so doing, society gets better.

The idea is to protect the environmen­t through constant sensitisat­ion programmes involving the public and government on issues of global warming especially in the eastern states of Nigeria with the devastatin­g effects of gully erosion as well as interface with them and the internatio­nal community to bring global best practices to bear and not just ameliorate but reverse the trend.

The most impactful achievemen­t of ZESPRONET till date is the building of a postgradua­te hostel for the alma mater which started as Imo State University and later grew to Abia State University with the carving out of a new state.

 ?? Dr. Orji ??
Dr. Orji

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