
NIDO is the official platform recognized by the Federal Government through which individual Nigerian in the Diaspora and corporate bodies can channel their developmental efforts to Nigeria. In this sense, the organisation partners with both public and private businesses in focused areas such as Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), professional networking, stakeholder advocacy and skills transfer to Nigeria. Following its election in November 2011, the Board of Directors of NIDO Europe identified Trade & Investment as a priority policy are. Other priority areas include political reform, youth empowerment/employment, education – particularly basic and vocational education – health and security.
To mention just a few of the initiatives that the organisation has been involved in, NIDO Europe, in partnership with its sister organisations in Asia, Africa and Canada inaugurated the Diaspora Trade & Investment Mission to States of Nigeria, which started with Osun State on 23 August 2012. The goal is to take the Trade Mission to as many states in the federation as possible, and there are ongoing talks with a number of states about that. In the same vein, London will be playing host to an unprecedented Nigeria Trade Forum from 24 to 26 January 2013.
The organisation rests on the goodwill and public spirit of its current seven-man Board of Directors and by extension the 19 Regional Chapter Chairpersons. Thinking strategically, the Board realises that a clear articulation of its policies and the strategies of achieving them can no longer be wished away. It is in this perspective that NIDO Europe is working towards the creation of Nigerian Diaspora National Development Strategy. The aim is that the document will highlight and discuss issues on which the organisation is focusing its ongoing interactions with Diaspora Nigerians, the Nigerian government, development partners and the private sector. These are development issues that are of concern to Nigerians both home and abroad; issues in which Nigerians in Diaspora can take charge and over which they can exercise some measure of influence; and issues that the organisation can use its unique position to bring to the center of concern in policy circles.
NIDO Europe therefore invites contributions of ideas on issues such as trade and investment, political reform, youth empowerment/employment, education, particularly basic and vocational education, health and security. Submissions from both Nigerians and non-Nigerians, both at home and in the Diaspora, are welcome. We would like to have the contributions in before October 15.
We look forward to reading your contributions.
Forging Partnerships with the Nigerian Diaspora. Whao! Can’t beat them? “350 Nigerians in the Diaspora Brainstorm on National Development” What is “National Development”? A hefty bribe and a cut of the profits in return for doing your job? Nigeria will not work until the public officials stop stealing and hiding the loot in EU & USAhttp://www.strategypage.com/qnd/nigeria/default.aspx
In a world of high speed technology where events are being shaped to make life easier for all, our people still prefer to fly thousands of miles and sit round a table with an autocratic chief executive, OBJ. “Forging Partnerships with the Nigerian Diaspora” is not about engagement with anyone! It is about a hefty bribe and a cut of the profits in return for doing your job!
The Diaspora lot meeting with this government have failed to educate them on collaboration working via the internet which has removed the need for flying, just because people enjoy the comfort of 1st Class/business class travel on 747Air does not mean it will deliver benefits to the people (why are they meeting in the 1st place?) in Nigeria.
I contibuted to the Professor Pat Utomi(PPU) NVS podcast and eloquence that was not! I do not think PPU is fit to rule Nigeria because his message came across as an unfinished dissertation from one of the students, but then again we are all still learning.
Nigeria needs building, shaping and running now! Given that the essence of African leadership belonged to the past and should not exist anymore, he seemed to be apologising for the abusive conditions of the old where the worker is not valued.
Do we really care about who rule or lead Nigeria? We simply just want to get the job done! How do we do that? The podcast did not reveal anything new to me. It was full of this current government’s rhetoric. A country that sits on 10% of the world’s oil should emulate Lagos State to fund essential programmes??? How about two fingers to OPEC and ask all the multinationals to come up with $100B pollution and corruption levy?
How to move Nigeria forward is everywhere, the question is; what are the actions?July 24, 2006