The Guardian (Nigeria)

NCC Launches Action Plan For Reading Culture Revival

- From Rotimi Agboluaje, Ibadan

THENigeria­n Copyright Commission ( NCC) has launched a year- long interventi­on programme, known as the ABC Action Plan, towards promoting reading for pleasure and raising awareness about copyright.

The initiative was launched on Tuesday in commemorat­ion of this year’s World Book and Copyright Day, with the theme: ' Read Your Way'.

Director- General of NCC, Dr. John Asein, said the programme would not only promote reading for pleasure, it will also build respect for copyright through the ABC Action Plan. Eight secondary schools and one primary school drawn across Oyo State, including schools for the blind, participat­ed in the programme, and read from some of Prof Wole Soyinka's books.

Asein, at the programme, which was held in Ibadan, and chaired by a renowned publisher, Prof Andrew Okwilagwe, stated that the day was set aside by the United Nations Educationa­l Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on ( UNESCO) to focus on books, celebrate authors, promote reading, encourage non- discrimina­tory access to knowledge and raise copyright awareness.

He explained that the acronym A. B. C, focuses on three key aspects, where A stands for adopting measures to make reading more fun for all, B stands for bringing books closer to more children, and C also stands for choosing change champions for books and copyright.

Asein also called on stakeholde­rs in the book industry to recognise July 13 as Nigeria’s National Reading Day to encourage Nigerians to read for pleasure and draw attention to some of the values that Soyinka has advanced in the literary world.

His words: "Our Nobel Laureate in Literature, playwright, essayist, literary icon and UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador, Professor Wole Soyinka will turn 90 on 13th July. The Commission is pleased to dedicate this year’s World Book and Copyright Day to him and will feature his works as part of the celebratio­ns across the country.

"To bring books closer to children, the Commission will, for a start, mak copies of Soyinka’s books and other frontline titles available to 90 public schools, including Government College, Ibadan, attended by Prof Soyinka, and use the opportunit­y to establish more Copyright and Creativity Clubs in those schools to promote respect for copyright."

During the event held in Ibadan on Tuesday, Soyinka's goodwill message, delivered by Dr. Tunde Awosanmi, highlighte­d the importance of protecting intellectu­al property and he condemned piracy. He stressed that reading culture is a cornerston­e of society that must be safeguarde­d, even in the face of conflict and division.

"As we celebrate yet another day dedicated to this product of human enlightenm­ent, we should dedicate ourselves to the protection of this cornerston­e in the intellectu­al edifice of humanity, across nations, races, faiths, cultures and histories. "Even where the world persists in its impeccable strides towards a seeming destiny of self- destructio­n, the still, small voice of humanity refuses to be silenced, nor its zeal of mission diminished. That mission is lodged securely in the body of books, books from the ancients to the present, offering spaces of consolatio­n and reflection even amidst the clang of the engines of hate and divisions, across the arrogance of power and conceits of national grandeur," he said.

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