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Stakeholder Advocates Growth In Fashion Industry

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A fashion designer, Mrs
Beatrice Babajide, has called on the Federal Government to take measures that would encourage the growth of the viable fashion industry in Nigeria and the power sector.
Babajide told The Tide in an interaction in Port Harcourt, last Friday, that the fashion industry has abundant talents and great potentials that could be properly harnessed to generate more employment.
She said that practitioners in the industry were already holding talks with their counterparts in Asia, targeted at the production of clothes in commercial quantity by the time the nation has steady power supply.
Babajide, who runs a fashion conglomerate, especially in the training and production of various brands of wears across the country said that what the government needs to do first is to stabilise the power sector.
“I don’t think what the government needs to do first is to give us money. I know a lot of people who have got money and have squandered it.
We need the requisite skills to manage this money. To manage the fashion business, we need the necessary structures in place,” she said.
Babajide also said, “today, we are having conversations with Asians to mass-produce our stuff. When we have power, we can produce that small way to ensure that we grow this industry as we should create employment.
She also urged the government to assist the industry in building and equipping schools which could properly train Nigerian designers and tailors.
According to her, we have a lot of talents in Nigeria, but usually it just stays as raw talents. The fashion business is not something that Nigerian designers, even Africans, know a lot about.
Babajide posited “where are the buyers? Who is selling these clothes? Where is the retail chain? Where is production? It can’t stop at raw talents, but all those things are coming into place. We need schools that train people properly. Most of the tailors out there today are tailors who learnt from tailors who studied the real thing in 1922.”
“So we are losing value, down the line. You just keep losing the value as you go. We need proper training,” she said.

 

Corlins Walter

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