Business
Commission Laments Youth Unemployment In Africa
Statistics by the African
Union Commission yesterday showed that 70 per cent of the over 200 million African youths are either not employed or are underemployed following lack of inadequate skills or poor education or both among others.
The AU Commission yesterday said it had developed modules and policy framework to tackle the current unemployment challenges facing majority of the youths across the continent.
The AU Commission’s Commissioner for Social Affairs, Mustapha Kaloko, made this known while signing a partnership agreement for the Joint Youths Employment Initiative for Africa (JYEIA) yesterday in Addis Ababa.
The initiative is a partnership between the AU Commission, the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the International Labour Organisation (ILO).
Kaloko said the initiative would address the unemployment challenges outlined by the African Heads of State and Governments at their Summit in Malabo in July 2011 “to tackle more decisively the youths employment challenges in Africa.
“This is part of the follow-up to the 2004 Ouagadougou Declaration and Action Plan to the same effect,’’ he said.
The African Heads of State and Government had agreed to address the youth and women unemployment situation in their various countries by an annual average of two per cent.
He said that the initiative would improve the ever worsening UN employment problem for young people in most African countries and also tackle the urgent need to make Africa benefit from the untapped potential and the “demographic dividend of its youths’’.
According to him, while operating at country, sub-regional, and continental levels, the Commission’s, JYEIA support initiative will be active in three main areas: policy, support and support for implementation at national level.
Others are sub-regional and regional youth employment plans and policies as well as; knowledge building and dissemination.
He noted that at the country level, the initiative would not support particular projects or actions but would focus on conducting a thorough diagnostic work to provide the platform for an effective, integrated and nationally owned definition and implementation of priorities and areas of interventions.
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Senate Orders NAFDAC To Ban Sachet Alcohol Production by December 2025 ………Lawmakers Warn of Health Crisis, Youth Addiction And Social Disorder From Cheap Liquor
The upper chamber’s resolution followed an exhaustive debate on a motion sponsored by Senator Asuquo Ekpenyong (Cross River South), during its sitting, last Thursday.
He warned that another extension would amount to a betrayal of public trust and a violation of Nigeria’s commitment to global health standards.
Ekpenyong said, “The harmful practice of putting alcohol in sachets makes it as easy to consume as sweets, even for children.
“It promotes addiction, impairs cognitive and psychomotor development and contributes to domestic violence, road accidents and other social vices.”
Senator Anthony Ani (Ebonyi South) said sachet-packaged alcohol had become a menace in communities and schools.
“These drinks are cheap, potent and easily accessible to minors. Every day we delay this ban, we endanger our children and destroy more futures,” he said.
Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, who presided over the session, ruled in favour of the motion after what he described as a “sober and urgent debate”.
Akpabio said “Any motion that concerns saving lives is urgent. If we don’t stop this extension, more Nigerians, especially the youth, will continue to be harmed. The Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria has spoken: by December 2025, sachet alcohol must become history.”
According to him, “This is not just about alcohol regulation. It is about safeguarding the mental and physical health of our people, protecting our children, and preserving the future of this nation.
“We cannot allow sachet alcohol to keep destroying lives under the guise of business.”
According to him, “This is not just about alcohol regulation. It is about safeguarding the mental and physical health of our people, protecting our children, and preserving the future of this nation.
“We cannot allow sachet alcohol to keep destroying lives under the guise of business.”
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