THISDAY Celebrates 15 Teachers, Okogie, Balarabe, Tejuosho, Okoya, others..........
L-R: Chairman/Editor-in-Chief, THISDAY Newspapers, Prince Nduka Obaigbena; Recipient, Life-time Achievement Award, Oba Adedapo Tejuoso; former President, United States of America, Mr. Bill Clinton; and Governor of Ogun State, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, during the 18th THISDAY Annual Awards, held at the June 12 Cultural Center, Abeokuta, Ogun State...Tuesday Photo: Kunle Ogunfuyi.
Former United States President, Mr. Bill Clinton, Tuesday called for more
efforts from Nigeria to tackle the problems of insecurity in the country.
Clinton, the special guest at the 18th edition of the THISDAY Awards, which held in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, said in his address at the event, attended by a galaxy of personages, including former President Olusegun Obasanjo, that the Federal Government should tackle the myriads of problems, including insecurity, facing the nation by making universal education available to the youth as well as addressing the problem of poverty.
As part of the ceremony, 15 teachers, from the
primary to tertiary level, were honoured for their dedication to duty under the
theme 'Celebrating Nigeria's Best Teachers'.
Ten others, including renowned industrialist, Mr.
Oba Otudeko, retired Catholic Archbishop of Lagos Diocese, Olubunmi Cardinal
Okogie, and Second Republic Governor of Kaduna State, Alhaji Balarabe Musa,
were conferred with the Life-time Achievement Awards.
L-R: Teacher Emeritus and nonagenarian, Pa Dotun Oyewole; former
President of the United States, Mr Bill Clinton; and Ogun State Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun; during the 18th Annual ThisDay Awards to celebrate Nigeria’s Best Teachers, at the newly redesigned June 12 Cultural Centre, Abeokuta - See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/02/clinton-lists-nigerias-challenges/#sthash.54VQH9Cd.dpuf
President of the United States, Mr Bill Clinton; and Ogun State Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun; during the 18th Annual ThisDay Awards to celebrate Nigeria’s Best Teachers, at the newly redesigned June 12 Cultural Centre, Abeokuta - See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/02/clinton-lists-nigerias-challenges/#sthash.54VQH9Cd.dpuf
L-R: Teacher Emeritus and nonagenarian, Pa Dotun Oyewole; former
President of the United States, Mr Bill Clinton; and Ogun State Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun; - See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/02/clinton-lists-nigerias-challenges/#sthash.54VQH9Cd.dpuf
Clinton, who was making his fourth appearance at
the THISDAY Awards, explained that education is more important in dealing with
the challenges facing Nigeria and the entire world, adding that with the
benefit of education, people could take charge of their lives and contribute
positively to the development of their countries, especially by taking
advantage of Information Communication Technology (ICT).President of the United States, Mr Bill Clinton; and Ogun State Governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun; - See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/02/clinton-lists-nigerias-challenges/#sthash.54VQH9Cd.dpuf
He said: “It is an age where if we are
sufficiently educated, we can be empowered, but with enormous challenges.
First of all, all of these new opportunities technology had given us have not
yet succeeded in automatically reducing poverty and inequality of opportunities
in accessing education, health care. It is a global phenomenon.
“If we really want to take advantage of
education, empowerment and information technology, we have to solve this
problem. The second problem we have in the world is quite unstable as we
all know. We have to stop this problem. One major problem of unemployment is
this instability all over the world.
“We have to find a way through education, through
the information technology revolution to change the way we produce and consume
energy and to change the way we use local resources in a way that sustains
them. We have to know how to do this and do it right. And in every case,
education will play a major role whether in developed or developing countries.
“We need intelligent people to take a new way to
challenge themselves. There is a lot of work to be done but we cannot ever
neglect the role of education.
“I am convinced that if we can make universal
education, including education in the heart, available to all the young people
of the world and give them a chance without their angers, without the kind of divisive
feelings that we have built up over our lifetimes, to seize the empowerment of
the information technology revolution, then humanity's brightest days lie
ahead. And that is why it is important today to honour these educators.”
Clinton recalled that when he became the
president, he made a list of the 10 most important countries in the world
before the 21st century and Nigeria was one of them.
“I would say you have about three big challenges.
Like 90 per cent of the country has resources, but you haven’t done very well
with the oil money. Secondly, you have to somehow bring economic
opportunity to the people who don't have it. This is not a problem specific in
Nigeria but almost every place in the world. Prosperity has always been
concentrated in and around urban areas.
"You have all these political problems - and
now violence problems - that appear to be rooted in religious differences and
all the rhetoric of the Boko Haram and others, but the truth is the poverty
rate in the North is three times of what it is in Lagos and to deal with that,
you have to have both a powerful stable local government and a national
policy,” he added.
In his speech, Ogun State Governor, Senator
Ibikunle Amosun, referring to the honour bestowed on the 15 teachers, said he
was happy to partner THISDAY to honour a group of professionals who are
important to national development but could easily be forgotten.
He justified the choice of Ogun State as the host
of the event, saying that the symbolism could not be lost on teachers, as the
state is the gateway to knowledge having recorded such historic achievements as
the seat of the first newspaper, the first Holy Bible and the first secondary
school in Nigeria.
It was the first time the award went outside Lagos
and Abuja.
Amosun promised that his administration would not only sustain those legacies but build on them.
Amosun promised that his administration would not only sustain those legacies but build on them.
He said the state and the entire South-west
Nigeria were eternally grateful to the late Premier of the defunct Western
Region, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, for introducing free education in the region in
1955.
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