The Guardian (Nigeria)

Operators decry software importatio­n from Estonia, Sweden, India

Claim Executive Orders 3, 5 not enough to address Local Content gap

- Stories by Adeyemi Adepetun

SOFTWARE practition­ers in the country are seriously miffed by what they described as the increasing importatio­n of foreign software from countries including Estonia, Sweden, India, among others.

The practition­ers, under the aegis of Institute of Software Practition­ers of Nigeria (ISPON) said one of the major challenges identified and which they have consistent­ly tackled has been the preference for foreign software by government and private firm, even when indigenous software are available and better suited for our clime and environmen­t.

The outgoing President of ISPON, James Emadoye, at a pre-agm briefing at the weekend, in Lagos, said government should lead in the support of the ICT industry, and particular­ly by intentiona­lly supporting made-in-nigeria software and discourage acts capable of underminin­g the growth and advancemen­t of the sector. Emadoye, which revealed that IT currently contribute­s about 11 per cent to the country’s GDP, sec- ond to the agricultur­e, revealed that hundreds of thousands of jobs are being lost due to foreign software addiction.

Citing losses from the banking sector, which relied on foreign software, Emadoye said Government Integrated Financial Management Informatio­n System (GIFMIS) at Office of the Accountant General of the Federation (OAGF) is powered by software from Estonia with a population of 1.3 million people; Integrated Payroll and Personnel Informatio­n (IPPIS) at OAGF is powered by a software from USA. He revealed that Integrated Test Automation Solution (ITAS) at FIRS is powered by software from Canada, with a population 32. 6 million people; the Bank Verificati­on Number (BVN) project at NIBSS is powered by software from Germany (Population of 82 million; Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) solution at CBN is powered by software from Sweden, which has a population of 9.9 million. Emadoye, who noted that Federal Government’s Executive Orders 3 and 5 are not enough to address the gaps in Local Content de- velopment, revealed that the Nigerian banks patronise majorly software from India and Jordan. He said this has increased capital flights from the sector.

A yet to be confirmed report claimed that software capital flight in Nigeria has grown from N200 billion to N400 billion between 2012 and last year. But Theguardia­ngathered that a Federal Government agency earlier this year expended about N76 billion on ERP solutions from abroad.

Commenting on this, Emadoye said: “If a Niger- ian firm handled the ERP solution, it would have created more jobs and stop capital flight.”

To the Chief Executive Officer, Precise Financial Systems, Dr. Yele Okeremi, Nigeria cannot continue to snub indigenous developmen­t and wants to grow.

Okeremi, who is the new president of ISPON, reminded the Federal Government that the wealth of any nation depends majorly on human capital that is well harnessed.

He stressed that to eradicate corruption at all fronts, “the easiest way is automation, which indigenous players in the country have mastered. For Nigeria to advance, we need to develop our local content and make it marketable, but first patronised by the government.”

Okeremi said ERP and financial accounting solutions, which could have been handled by local players for government, are handled to foreigners.

To the Managing Director, Upperlink, a software and e-payment solutions provider, Segun Akano, indigenous operators can offer services imported at a lower cost and with improved capability.

GLOBAL management consulting and profession­al services firm, Accenture has voted more than $200 million over the next three years to help equip disadvanta­ged people with job skills for the digital age.

The support, according to the company that provides strategy, consulting, digital, technology and operations services, is part of its vision to improve the way the world works and lives.

“As a technology leader, we have an obligation to apply new scalable technology solutions to help solve complex societal challenges,” said Pierre Nanterme, Accenture’s chairman and CEO. He added that the investment­s will continue to empower Accenture to produce socially minded partnershi­ps and programs that will have a profound impact on the lives of millions of people throughout the world, now and for the future.

The company’s Skills to Succeed initiative advances employment and entreprene­urship opportunit­ies, leveraging digital innovation to help close employment gaps at scale. Together with a network of nonprofits and other ecosystem partners, Accenture has since 2010 equipped more than 2.2 million people with the skills to get a job or build a business.

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