Ms Amina Mohammed, the UN Deputy Secretary-General, has asked older
Nigerians to pave the way for the youth by creating leadership
opportunities for them .
According to the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN, Mohammed stated this at
a Cultural Night organised by Nigerians working at the United Nations
System and urged older Nigerians to stop competing with the younger ones
for employment opportunities.
“Whenever there are opportunities, try and pave the way for the young
ones; you are getting old and we want to see the young ones in the
system.
“We need to give the youth the opportunity because if we don’t give
them the opportunities, they can easily fall victims of crimes,” she
said.
According to her, the Nigerian employees at the UN system are getting
old and there is the need for the Nigerian youth to be allowed to come
into the system.
Mohammed has repeatedly stressed the need for Nigeria to create
opportunities for its burgeoning youth population at the UN System
through the Junior Professional Officers’ (JPO) Programme, including
internship for young Nigerian graduates.
According to her, Nigeria has the opportunity to sponsor its youth for UN careers through the JPO.
But Nigeria has not seized the opportunity in a long while, she noted.
JPO is a programme for the young people to come and grow their career
at the UN and it has 37 positions for Nigeria – one for each of the 36
States and the Federal Capital Territory.
The JPO programme provides young professionals with hands-on
experience in multilateral technical co-operation, and is one of the
best ways to gain entry level positions within the UN system.
JPOs are sponsored by their own government, which fund their placement in one of a range of UN organisations.
“Home really does need us; there are leaders and we are trying with the professionals that we see in the United Nations.
“The work we need to do is not just to the world but also to remember
that at the root of all that, you are only as good as where you come
from.
“And it’s really important that we remember, with what we do here,
what we can get back home, that we can encourage those at home, and
inspire them.
“It’s not just what we do for the world but can’t we take those
expertise back home? Amina said, urging them to make the best use of
every opportunity they got.
She condemned what she termed alarming gender-based violence in
Nigeria, saying it has increased in dimensions that one could never
imagine.
“So when I look back home and I see that there are women that are
coming back from Boko Haram captivity, they come back with a type of
violence that many, for the rest of their lives, can’t recover from.
“But I also see that what is worse is the kind of violence that is
visited upon the young girl. She is indoctrinated and convinced to tie a
bomb around her and blow it off; that’s violence against girls; that’s
violence against women.
“But what I wanted to say was that as we look at the gender-based
violence initiative that we put a spotlight on our own nation; we all
have a part to play.
“I know we would spend some money in Nigeria on this initiative but
we all have a part to play individually and collectively in trying to
bring it to zero,” she said.
Mohammed also lamented how girls were left behind in education,
stressing that everyone needs to have an education – the boys and the
girls.
“The boys we didn’t educate are the same ones that kidnap the girls that we educated.
“So education for everyone is exposure for everyone; it matters so
much; it really does give us the basis, the moral compass to help us
navigate through life.”
Nigeria’s Ambassador/Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN,
Samson Itegboje, commended the Nigerians in the UN and particularly
lauded the appointment of Mohammed as the UN Deputy Chief.
Itegboje said Nigeria was proud of Mohammed, describing her as an
“ultimate authority and a reference point when it comes to Sustainable
Development Goals’ issues”.
The Nigerian envoy said: “Nigeria is a great country; we are a happy
people, you can’t take that away from us; we have gone through difficult
times but we are happy that we have a government that is responsive to
the yearnings and aspirations of dear people of Nigeria”.
Col. Jolly Abu (rtd), President, United Nations Staff Recreation Club
Nigeria Association, said the cultural night was organised to showcase
Nigeria’s culture.

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