After fighting off spirited attempts
to scuttle its establishment, Joseph Ushigiale who recently visited the
factory reports that the Calabar Garment Factory is emerging as a
pioneering outfit that will drive the lucrative outsourcing business for
local and global brands
Barring any last minute changes,
President Muhammadu Buhari would again be in Calabar, the Cross River
State capital for the official inauguration of the multi-billion naira
ultra-modern Calabar Garment Factory.
For governor of Cross River State,
Senator Ben Ayade, it is a remarkable sign of good tidings and a
befitting way to start 2017 in grand style given the political capital
he would reap from the factory’s inauguration by the President. Ayade is
no stranger to such inauguration; recall that he scored a first, last
year when he went down on record as the first opposition governor whose
state was the President’s first port of call immediately on assuming
office, to inaugurate the Super Highway, a 260km route that would link
the Southern with the Northern Nigeria.
Started barely a year ago, the factory
which stands conspicuously next to the Cross River State Pharmaceutical
and Rice City companies currently witnessing a frenzy of construction
works along the newly christened Industrial Boulevard, located along the
President Goodluck Jonathan Bye Pass behind the Margaret Ekpo
International Airport, has already been completed, equipped and ready
for production.
According to the state Commissioner for
Commerce and Industry, Peter Egba, the garment factory ranks among the
administration’s first signature projects to be delivered within its
first year in office. “The idea is primarily to industrialise the state;
the governor is deliberately initiating policies that would gradually
change the perception of the state as a civil service and a mere tourism
state to an industrial hub and wean the state off dependence on federal
allocation.” He told THISDAY at the factory recently.
He said “from the inception of this
administration, the governor’s direction has been to decouple the state
from waiting every month for federal allocation to a state that is
largely driven by industries and agriculture. These are areas we have
seen that we have great comparative advantages. Therefore, what the
governor keeps emphasising is to utilise these comparative advantages we
hold over other states in these areas to create a full value chain for
agriculture and industries.”
He told THISDAY that one of the major
thrust of embarking on these two key sectors was because of the stark
realities of the army of unemployed youths across the state. Egba
acknowledged that with agriculture, the state has the opportunity to
pull millions of indigenes from poverty and want, stating that it was
for that reason that the administration is engaging in its current
industrialisation push beginning with the garment factory.
“We have already engaged over 1000
workers to begin work in the factory added to this are the multiplier
effects that come with other ancillary services. We are currently
planning to add restaurants, warehouse and sick bay as we strive to
empower the people. There are also plans to introduce microfinancing to
the local farmers through the small holders’ scheme to grow cotton for
the state to buy their produce as off-takers.
“This is the first project on the newly
opened Industrial Boulevard to start and be completed by our
administration. This will be followed by the pharmaceutical and cosmetic
as well as the Rice City factories to create a production hub for
medicare supplies, fashion products and rice seed multiplication,” he
declared.
At the opening of the factory recently,
Ayade explained that his concept of the factory was beyond creating
employment opportunities. He said his idea is to provide a safety net
for the underprivileged in the society as well as create a platform for
skills acquisition.
According to him, “When we set up this
factory, the intention was not just to create jobs but to guarantee that
young men and women who have been challenged by circumstances of their
births have the opportunity to better their lots.
“I’m so excited at what I am seeing here today – the number of people and their energy – and it is an indication that our factory has taken off. Remember, the factory has the capacity to create 3,000 jobs.
“I’m so excited at what I am seeing here today – the number of people and their energy – and it is an indication that our factory has taken off. Remember, the factory has the capacity to create 3,000 jobs.
“Truly, if you call yourself a leader,
your focus should be on the vulnerable and the weakest that we are
engaging today. We will guarantee you good salaries, food and proper
transportation.”Ayade urged the new employees, who he tagged ‘great
fashion engineers’, to leverage on the opportunity to express their
innate potentials and be the pride of the state.
He said, “We want to show to the world that we have skills, great fashion engineers. I call you engineers because you are going to provide the skills that we have not seen before.”
He said, “We want to show to the world that we have skills, great fashion engineers. I call you engineers because you are going to provide the skills that we have not seen before.”
Egba disclosed that the factory has a
capacity to employ 3,000 workers who will run on three shifts per day
producing a minimum of 2,000 shirts per day. He disclosed that to
forestall a future where the factory would be confronted with scarcity
of raw materials, the state government has adopted the federal
government’s backwards integration working closely with the Central Bank
of Nigeria (CBN) to grow and process cotton.
According to him, “we have already keyed
into the federal government’s backwards integration scheme through the
CBN’s Anchor Borrowers programme to grow cotton in the northern part of
the state where we discovered the climate is quite favourable for cotton
cultivation. Afterwards, there are plans to set up both ginnery and
yarnery factories proximate to the farms to convert the cotton into yarn
for the factory.”
On the composition of the factory, Egba
explained that the factory will operate a five line production chain
running on three shifts; adding that there are 540 machines comprising
industrial sewing, cutting tables, heat transfer, button fixer, and
several machines for the production of jeans and different brands of
t-shirts.
He disclosed that so far, the factory has already received enquiries
from the Nigerian police, Peace Corps, private schools and a host of
other interested clients willing to place their respective orders for
different clothing products. For now, he said the factory has already
produced uniforms for staff, homeland security, green police and other
state-based security outfits.
Providing insight into the state
government’s efforts to position the factory as a first choice
outsourcing factory for global brands, Egba said “we have entered into
an agreement with a Lagos-based firm to engage a reputable Indian
company which will arrive Calabar very soon to audit our equipment and
affirm our preparedness to provide cutting edge services to global
brands. The firm will also be vested with the task of training our staff
and prepare them for the task of partnering through outsourcing with
global brands like GAP, NEXT, Mango etc. It will also be expected to
recommend where there are manifest gaps in the production value chain
and how such gaps should be closed to ensure maximum productivity.”
However, regardless of the significant
milestone recorded by Ayade in delivering the garment factory, the path
to the establishment of the factory was not without its own hiccups. In
fact, it was strewn with thorns and dogged by controversy from day one.
Ayade’s traducers had accused him of converting the garment factory,
which was his former constituency project while he was senator to a
state project. Ayade has denied this allegation.
To corroborate Ayade’s position, Egba explained that “the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) invited us to provide clarifications on the status of the garment factory and I categorically stated that the factory is a state government entity and also showed them evidence that it has right from the inception of this administration been budgeted for.
To corroborate Ayade’s position, Egba explained that “the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) invited us to provide clarifications on the status of the garment factory and I categorically stated that the factory is a state government entity and also showed them evidence that it has right from the inception of this administration been budgeted for.
“I think what people fail to come to
terms with is that the project is being operated through a Special
Purpose Vehicle (SPV) approved by legislation to guide against official
interference. The SPV authorised the warehousing of shares through Barr.
Emmanuel Ubua and Dr. Edward Obiakachalla who are holding 1.5m shares
each with the Ministry of Finance Investment (MOFI) holding 3m while the
rest 4m are still pending unalloted until the need will arise to raise
more capital for expansion,” he explained to THISDAY.
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