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dora akunyili | Zikoko!
  • Everything to Know About the National Orientation Agency

    Everything to Know About the National Orientation Agency

    Sometimes, it’s difficult to keep up with the number of agencies in Nigeria, much less be informed on what their duties and responsibilities are. In this article, we’ll be shedding light on an agency founded in 1993 with the major role of promoting national unity, patriotism, and the advancement of Nigerian society. 

    What’s this agency?

    On August 10, 1993, the military government of General Ibrahim Babaginda established the National Orientation Agency (NOA), which is currently under Garba Abari leadership. 

    It’s an arm of the Ministry of Information, and its main objective is to ensure that government policies and programmes are better understood by the general public. They also work to mobilise favourable public opinions towards these policies and ensure that Nigerians across all ethnicities and ages develop social values promoting patriotism and nationalism. 

    Some functions of the National Orientation Agency include:

    • Mobilisation of favourable public opinion and support for government policies, activities and programmes. 
    • Educate Nigerians on their rights, privileges, responsibilities and obligations as citizens.
    • Encouraging and promoting the spirit of dignity of labour and commitment to the production and consumption of home-grown commodities and services.
    • Propagate the need to avoid all vices in public life, which includes corruption, dishonesty, and electoral and census malpractice.
    • Sensitize Nigerians for positive patriotic participation in national affairs and issues.
    • Re-orient citizens about power, its use, and the proper role of government in serving the collective interests of Nigerians. 

    The NOA has worked on issues ranging from health to encouraging nationalism, discouraging electoral malpractice, and rehabilitating repentant insurgents. 

    Let’s look at some of the campaigns conducted by the NOA.

    Great People, Great Nation

    When Prof. (Mrs.) Dora Akunyili was the Minister of Information and Communications in March 2009, she was the driving force behind the “Great People, Great Nation” campaign. 

    The campaign was created to rebrand the country and reject negative labels used to describe Nigeria and Nigerians by the Western media. There were also hopes that it would foster a new sense of commitment in Nigerians towards righting wrongs and creating a better country. 

    Change Begins With Me

    In an effort to promote integrity and accountability among Nigerians, President Muhammadu Buhari led this campaign in September 2016. It was also aimed at fighting corruption and promoting peaceful coexistence in the country. 

    To drive home the campaign’s point, the federal government collaborated with the private sector to sponsor campaigns to reach the public. 

    National Campaign Against Fake News

    The current Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, launched this campaign in July 2018.

    Its primary objective was to sensitise Nigerians to the dangers posed to national peace and security by spreading fake news. 

    Operation Safe Corridor Programme

    This programme was established in 2016 to rehabilitate, deradicalise, and integrate voluntary and repentant defectors from the Boko Haram terrorist group. Although the effectiveness of this programme is still in doubt as Northern Nigeria is still suffering from insecurity, about 2167 repentant Boko Haram members have graduated from the programme.

    The National Orientation Agency fosters peace and national unity in Nigeria, and looking at the country’s current state, the importance of this agency cannot be overstated. 

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  • These Nigerian Women Should Have Won the National Merit Award

    These Nigerian Women Should Have Won the National Merit Award

    Have you ever heard of the Nigerian National Order of Merit (NNOM) award? We’d probably have overlooked it too if something extraordinary hadn’t happened on November 28, 2022.

    The Nigerian National Merit Award (NNMA), is the body that awards the NNOM. It announced that none of the Nigerians nominated this year were found worthy of it.

    What’s the NNOM about?

    The NNOM is an academic award conferred on distinguished academicians and intellectuals who have made outstanding contributions to the growth and development of Nigeria.

    The NNMA was established by Act no. 53 of 1979 of the military regime of Olusegun Obasanjo and amended by Act 96 of 1992 (now known as CAP122 LFN) by General Ibrahim Babangida. 

    Why’s no one getting an award in 2022?

    The NNMA received 32 nominations for the NNOM award for 2022. Four of the nominations were in science, nine in medicine, five in engineering technology and 14 in the humanities. The NNMA board chairman, Shekarau Aku, announced that none of them stood out.

    The NNMA’s surprising decision made us curious enough to look at the list of past winners and we found something interesting. The board started dishing out the award in 1979, 76 people have won including names like Wole Soyinka and Chinua Achebe. 

    In that time, only four women have ever won it. The NNMA’s governing board is populated by men and its chairpersons have always been men. A better name for the NNOM is “Nigerian National Order of Men.”

    More Nigerian women definitely should have won the award. We made a list of some notable names.

    Molara Ogundipe

    Molara Ogundipe [The Nation]

    She was a Nigerian poet, critic, editor, feminist and activist. Molara Ogundipe taught English Studies, Writing, Comparative Literature and Gender. She was also a Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Port Harcourt.

    She’s a foremost writer in African feminism and championed “Stiwanism” which is Social Transformation in Africa Including Women. She died in 2019 and would’ve been a worthy winner.

    Dora Akunyili

    Dora Akunyili [ICIR Nigeria]

    The “iron lady” is one of Nigeria’s most celebrated icons. Dora Akunyili was a Nigerian professor remembered for her tenure as the Director-General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC). She waged war on the spread of fake drugs in Nigerian markets. She survived an assassination attempt, and gained international recognition for her work in pharmacology, public health and human rights.

    Akunyili was good enough to earn over 900 awards before her death in 2014. Yet, the cabal of men at the NNMA didn’t look in her direction.

    Buchi Emecheta

    Buchi Emecheta [The Guardian UK]

    She had to fight to get an early education. Buchi Emecheta faced violence from a jealous husband who burnt her first ever manuscript. These challenges didn’t stop her from becoming  a critically acclaimed writer and professor. Emecheta’s magnum opus is The Joys of Motherhood which we all remember her for. She died in 2017 without winning an NNOM.

    Grace Alele-Williams

    Grace Alele-Williams [Punch]

    She was a Nigerian professor of mathematics education. Grace Alele-Williams was the first Nigerian female vice-chancellor at the University of Benin. 

    Alele-Williams earned the Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON) award before her death in March 2022. Yet, the very honour she should have been even more deserving of as a leading academic strangely eluded her. 

    Zulu Sofola

    Zulu Sofola [Zaccheus Onumba]

    She was the first published female Nigerian playwright and dramatist. Sofola was notably the first female professor of theatre arts in Africa. Her work focused on magic, myth and ritual to examine conflicts between traditionalism and modernism in which male supremacy persists. She died in 1995.

  • Professor Akunyili’s Daughter, Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Just Smashed A $1.1M Auction Record With Her Work

    Not everytime talk about how Wizkid is taking over Africa. Many times, Nigerian artists have smashed records and proved that Nigerians sabi the work.

    In November 2016, outstanding artist and daughter to the late iconic Dora Akunyili, Njideka Akunyili Crosby, set a new auction record for her intimate art, ‘Drown’ which sold for $1,092,500-which is over 3 times the initial high estimate.

    In the record-breaking ‘Drown’, Njideka created a stunning self-portrait of her husband, Justin.

    The painting, which is basically an acrylic, colored pencil and solvent transfer on paper sold for over $1M (N400 million) at Sotheby’s in New York.

    She has shown that greatness truly runs in her blood and we couldn’t be more proud of her!