THISDAY

New NCS Executives Urged to Embrace Local Content, Others

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The past presidents of the Nigeria Computer Society (NCS), on Tuesday in Lagos, tasked the incoming National Executive Council (NEC) of the society on the need to strengthen Informatio­n Technology (IT) advocacy and local content developmen­t, which they described as key to the growth of the computing profession and for the national developmen­t of the country.

They gave the advice during the official handing over of the mantle of leadership to the new NEC in Lagos, following a successful election during this year’s internatio­nal conference and Annual General Meeting (AGM), which held in Gombe last month.

The immediate past president, Professor Adesola Aderounmu, who handed over to Prof. Adesina Simon Sodiya, stressed the need for full advocacy on IT policy formulatio­n and implementa­tion by government.

“The new NEC should be able to engage government in the right IT policy implementa­tion that will help the country to grow, especially in the area of local content policy implementa­tion.

“Local content policy implementa­tion is key and if we do not get it right, there will be a lot of challenges for the country.

“We started advocacy in the area of local content during my two terms tenure of four years but not much was achieved in the area of local content developmen­t and implementa­tion. We need the right IT policy that will drive local content in the country. By local content, I mean indigenous software. If we are encouraged to develop local content in the area of software developmen­t, it will go a long way to boost employment in the country,” Aderounmu advised.

The new INEC of NCS also need to focus on incubation centres that will provide the enabling environmen­t, which will address the challenge of using IT to address national issues.

“In the last three years, we have added over 2,500 members to NCS and I want the new INEC to continue in the membership drive,” Aderounmu added.

Other past presidents like Alhaji Ladi Ogunye, Dr. Chris Nwannenna and Prof. Charles Uwadia, spoke on the collaborat­ion and the need to use technology to drive processes like meetings and elections.

Responding to the advice from his predecesso­rs, Sodiya promised to even go beyond the advice and tasks, with a promise to carry out advocacy on the need for government agencies to drive governance with IT.

“We have identified some government agencies that are not IT complaint and we are ready to take them up on IT governance.

“I work in an academic environmen­t, a university to be precise, and every five years government brings assert declaratio­n forms for us to fill and we kept filling the same form. If government is serious about fighting corruption, then it should automate most of its processes especially the assert declaratio­n form filling.

“We cannot develop as a nation if government processes are not automated, and to achieve this, government must deploy IT in governance to boost efficiency and productivi­ty,” Sodiya said.

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