Tag: WTO

  • Tinubu hails Okonjo-Iweala’s WTO reappointment

    Tinubu hails Okonjo-Iweala’s WTO reappointment

    President Bola Tinubu on Friday congratulated Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, former Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, on her unanimous re-election today as the Director-General of the World Trade Organisation (WTO).

    Okonjo-Iweala made history in 2021 as the first African and first woman to lead the 164-nation-member WTO.

    Her first term as the seventh director-general of the WTO will expire on Aug. 31, 2025, while the second term begins Sept.1, 2025, Mr Bayo Onanuga, Special Adviser to the President, Information and Strategy, said in a statement.

    Tinubu said Okonjo-Iweala’s unanimous appointment for a second four-year term demonstrated the trust and confidence the international community placed in her leadership to advance multilateral trade for sustainable global development.

    “President Tinubu is confident that her continued leadership will strengthen the international economic organisation’s role as a critical pillar of inclusive global economic growth and good governance in the next four years.

    “As a committed member of the WTO, ECOWAS, and the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), Nigeria will continue to support the WTO’s mission to foster a fair, inclusive, and equitable multilateral trading system.

    “President Tinubu assures Okonjo-Iweala of Nigeria’s steadfast support as she consolidates her bold reforms, dedication to equitable global trade practices, and tireless efforts to promote international cooperation,” Onanuga said.

  • How Okonjo-Iweala emerged WTO DG for second term

    How Okonjo-Iweala emerged WTO DG for second term

    Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala on Friday emerged as the Director-General of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) for a second four-year term, which will commence on 1 September 2025.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Okonjo-Iweala is the seventh Director-General of the WTO. She first assumed office as Director-General on 1 March 2021, becoming the first woman and first African to lead the WTO. Her first term concludes on 31 August 2025.

    The reappointment process, initiated on 8 October 2024, was overseen by Ambassador Petter Olberg of Norway, Chair of the General Council. With no additional nominations submitted by the 8 November deadline, Dr. Okonjo-Iweala stood as the sole candidate.

    DG Okonjo-Iweala, thereafter, confirmed her willingness to serve a second four-year term in a letter to the Chair on 16 September.

    During a special General Council meeting on 28-29 November 2024, Dr. Okonjo-Iweala outlined her forward-looking vision for the WTO. Following her presentation and a Q&A session with members, the Council formally endorsed her reappointment by consensus.

    Ambassador Olberg praised her achievements, stating: “The General Council commends Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala for her outstanding leadership during her first term. Amid significant global economic challenges, she strengthened the WTO’s ability to support its members and set a forward-looking agenda for the organization.

    “Her leadership was instrumental in securing meaningful outcomes at pivotal moments, including the 12th and 13th Ministerial Conferences (MC12 and MC13), where major milestones were achieved.”

    “As we look ahead, the Council fully supports Dr. Okonjo-Iweala’s commitment to ensuring that the WTO remains responsive, inclusive, and results-driven. Her leadership will be critical as the organization continues to advance a resilient, rules-based, and equitable global trading system.”

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala’s bio

    Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala took office as WTO Director-General on 1 March 2021. She is a global finance expert, an economist and international development professional with over 40 years of experience working in Asia, Africa, Europe, Latin America and North America.

    Dr Okonjo-Iweala was formerly Chair of the Board of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. She was previously on the Boards of Standard Chartered PLC and Twitter Inc.

    She was appointed as African Union (AU) Special Envoy to mobilise international financial support for the fight against COVID-19 and WHO Special Envoy for Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator.

    She is a skilled negotiator and has brokered numerous agreements which have produced win-win outcomes in negotiations. She is regarded as an effective consensus builder and an honest broker enjoying the trust and confidence of governments and other stakeholders.

    Previously, Dr Okonjo-Iweala twice served as Nigeria’s Finance Minister (2003-2006 and 2011-2015) and briefly acted as Foreign Minister in 2006, the first woman to hold both positions.

    She distinguished herself by carrying out major reforms which improved the effectiveness of these two Ministries and the functioning of the government machinery.  She had a 25-year career at the World Bank as a development economist, rising to the No. 2 position of Managing Director, Operations.

    As a development economist and Finance Minister, Dr Okonjo-Iweala steered her country through various reforms ranging from macroeconomic to trade, financial and real sector issues.

    She is a firm believer in the power of trade to lift developing countries out of poverty and assist them to achieve robust economic growth and sustainable development.

    As Finance Minister, she was involved in trade negotiations with other West African countries and contributed to the overhaul of Nigeria’s trade policy enabling it to enhance its competitiveness.

    She is renowned as the first female and African candidate to contest for the presidency of the World Bank Group in 2012, backed by Africa and major developing countries in the first truly contestable race for the world’s highest development finance post.

    As Managing Director of the World Bank, she had oversight responsibility for the World Bank’s $81 billion operational portfolio in Africa, South Asia, Europe and Central Asia.

    Dr Okonjo-Iweala spearheaded several World Bank initiatives to assist low-income countries during the 2008-2009 food crisis and later during the financial crisis. In 2010, she was Chair of the World Bank’s successful drive to raise $49.3 billion in grants and low interest credit for the poorest countries in the world.

    As Minister of Finance in Nigeria, she spearheaded negotiations with the Paris Club of Creditors that led to the wiping out of $30 billion of Nigeria’s debt, including the outright cancellation of $18 billion.

    In her second term as Finance Minister, Dr Okonjo-Iweala was responsible for leading reform that enhanced transparency of government accounts and strengthened institutions against corruption, including the implementation of the GIFMS (Government Integrated Financial Management System), the IPPMS (Integrated Personnel and Payroll Management System), and the TSA (Treasury Single Accounts).

    Dr Okonjo-Iweala has been listed in the Top 100 Most Powerful Women in the World (Forbes, 2023, 2022, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012 and 2011), as one of the Top 100 Most Influential People in the World (TIME, 2014 and 2021), one of the 25 most influential women (Financial Times, 2021), Minister of the Decade, People’s Choice Award by Nigeria’s This Day newspaper (2020), one of Transparency International’s Eight Female Anti-Corruption Fighters Who Inspire (2019), one of the 50 Greatest World Leaders (Fortune, 2015), the Top 100 Global Thinkers (Foreign Policy, 2011 and 2012), the Top Three Most Powerful Women in Africa (Forbes, 2012), the Top 10 Most Influential Women in Africa (Forbes, 2011), the Top 100 Women in the World (The UK Guardian, 2011), the Top 150 Women in the World (Newsweek, 2011), and the Top 100 most inspiring people in the World Delivering for Girls and Women (Women Deliver, 2011).

    She has also been listed among 73 “brilliant” business influencers in the world by Condé Nast International.

    In 2023, she was awarded the Lord Byron International Prize from the Society for Hellenism and Philhellenism, the Global Economy Prize from the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, and the 2022 Laureate Prize of Ambassadors from the International Organisation of La Francophonie.

    In 2022, she obtained the Global Leadership Award by the American Academy of Achievement. In 2021, she received a Global Leadership Award from the United Nations Foundation as a “Champion for Global Change”.

    In 2020, she became an Angelopoulos Global Public Leader at Harvard University Kennedy School. She was also appointed to the Presidential Economic Advisory Council (PEAC) for President of South Africa His Excellency Cyril Ramaphosa in 2020. In 2019, Dr Okonjo-Iweala was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2017, she received the Madeleine K. Albright Global Development Award from the Aspen Institute, the Women’s Economic Empowerment Award from WEConnect International, and the Vanguard Award from Howard University.

    In 2016, she received the Power with Purpose Award from the Devex Development Communications Network and the Global Fairness Award from the Global Fairness Initiative in recognition of her contribution to sustainable development. She was also conferred High National Honours from the Republic of Cote d’Ivoire and the Republic of Liberia.

    She was also the recipient of Nigeria’s second highest national honour Grand Commander of the Order of the Niger (GCON, 2022) and Nigeria’s third highest National Honors Commander of the Federal Republic (CFR). In 2023, she received the Grand Cross of the Order of Rio Branco from the Federative Republic of Brazil.

    In addition, Dr Okonjo-Iweala has been awarded the David Rockefeller Bridging Leadership Award (2014), the President of the Italian Republic Gold Medal by the Pia Manzu Centre (2011), the Global Leadership Award by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs (2011), the Global Leadership Award by the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs (2010), the Bishop John T. Walker Distinguished Humanitarian Service Award (2010), the Humanitarian Award for a Lifetime of Public Service and Advocacy of Sustainable International Development of the United Nations Association of New York (2022), and the Alumnae Recognition Award from the American Association of University Women (2022).

    She was named Finance Minister of the Year (Africa Investor Magazine, 2014), Finance Minister of the Year for Africa and the Middle East (THE BANKER, 2004), Global Finance Minister of the Year (EUROMONEY, 2005), Finance Minister of the Year for Africa and the Middle East (Emerging Markets Magazine, 2005), and Minister of the Year (THISDAY, Newspaper 2004 and 2005).

    Dr Okonjo-Iweala is currently the co-Chair of the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate with Lord Nicholas Stern and Mr Paul Polman , co-chair of the Global Commission on the Economics of Water, and chair of the Board of the African University of Science and Technology, Abuja.

    She presently serves on the following advisory boards or groups — the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, the Oxford University Martin School Advisory Council, Mercy Corps International Advisory Board, the International Commission on Financing Global Education (Chaired by Gordon Brown), Tsinghua University Beijing — School of Public Policy and Management Global Advisory Board, the CARICOM (Caribbean) Commission on the Economy, and the Bloomberg Task Force on Fiscal Policy for Health, among others.

    She is also a member of the G30 Group of top 30 people in International Finance and the council of the Prince of Wales’s initiative Earthshot Prize and an inaugural board member of the Ellen Johnson Sirleaf Foundation.

    Previously, she was also a Senior Adviser at Lazard (2015-2019), and she served as the co-Chair of the Global Partnership for Effective Development Cooperation with UK Secretary Justine Greening, and Chair of the World Bank’s Development Committee (2004).

    She was also a member of the International Monetary and Finance Committee of the IMF (2003-2006 and 2011-2015), the United Nations’ Secretary General’s High-Level Panel on the Post-2015 Development Agenda, the Danish Government-led Commission on Africa, the World Economic Forum Global Leadership Council on Transparency and Corruption, and the Commission on World Growth (led by Nobel Prize winner Professor Michael Spence).

    She served for a decade on the Rockefeller Foundation Board and the World Economic Forum Young Global Leaders. She was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Dr Okonjo-Iweala has also served on the advisory board of the ONE Campaign, the Clinton Global Initiative, the Global Development Network, and the University of Oxford’s Blavatnik School of Government.

    Dr Okonjo-Iweala is the founder of Nigeria’s first ever indigenous opinion-research organization, NOI-Polls. She also founded the Center for the Study of Economies of Africa (C-SEA), a development research think tank based in Abuja, Nigeria. She is a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Center for Global Development, and at the Brookings Institution, premier Washington D.C. think tanks.

    Dr Okonjo-Iweala graduated magna cum laude with an A.B. in Economics from Harvard University (class of 1977) and earned a Ph.D. in Regional Economics and Development from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT, 1981).

    She has received honorary degrees from 21 universities worldwide, including from: Yale University, the University of Pennsylvania, Brown University, Trinity College (University of Dublin), Amherst College, Colby College, Tel Aviv University, Northern Caribbean University, Jamaica, University of Amsterdam, American University, Nyenrode Business University, London School of Economics and Political Science, and a host of Nigerian universities including Abia State University, Delta State University, Oduduwa University, Babcock University, and the Universities of Port Harcourt, Calabar, and Ife (Obafemi Awolowo).

    She is the author of several books, including Women and Leadership: Real Lives, Real Lessons co-authored with Julia Gillard (Penguin Random House, July 2020), Fighting Corruption is Dangerous: The Story Behind the Headlines (MIT Press, 2018), Reforming the UnReformable: Lessons from Nigeria, (MIT Press, 2012), and The Debt Trap in Nigeria: Towards a Sustainable Debt Strategy (Africa World Press, 2003). She also co-authored with Tijan Sallah the book Chinua Achebe: Teacher of Light (Africa World Press, 2003).

    She has also published numerous articles including, Finding A Vaccine is Only the First Step (Foreign Affairs, April 2020), Mobilizing Finance for Education in the Commonwealth (Commonwealth Education Report 2019), Shine a Light on the Gaps — an essay on financial inclusion for African Small Holder Farmers (Foreign Affairs, 2015), Funding the SDGs: Licit and Illicit Financial Flows from Developing Countries (Horizons Magazine, 2016).

    Dr Okonjo-Iweala is married to neurosurgeon Dr Ikemba Iweala. They have four children and five grandchildren.

  • Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala reacts after reappointment as WTO DG

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala reacts after reappointment as WTO DG

    Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has reacted after her reappointment as the Director-General of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), saying it is a privilege to continue serving as Director-General for a second four-year term.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Dr Okonjo-Iweala was reappointed WTO DG on Friday following the decision by the General Council to appoint her for a second four-year term, which will commence on 1 September 2025.

    “I am deeply honoured by the trust and support of the WTO General Council and its 166 Members. It is a privilege to continue serving as Director-General for a second four-year term.

    “In recent years, the WTO has played a vital role in helping Members navigate pressing global challenges, including the pandemic, conflict, and heightened geopolitical tensions. I commend Members for their hard work and determination in achieving progress despite unprecedented levels of uncertainty and rapid economic shifts.

    “As we look ahead, I remain firmly committed to delivering results that matter—results that ultimately improve the lives of people around the world. By promoting trade as a driver of economic growth and resilience, the WTO will continue to provide a collaborative platform for Members to address shared global challenges.

    “I am deeply committed to working alongside the talented and dedicated staff of the WTO to build a more inclusive, equitable, and rules-based multilateral trading system that benefits all,” Okonjo-Iweala said.

  • BREAKING! Nigeria’s Okonjo-Iweala reappointed WTO DG

    BREAKING! Nigeria’s Okonjo-Iweala reappointed WTO DG

    World Trade Organization chief Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala was reappointed Friday for a second term, in the shadow of the coming return of Donald Trump and his disdain for international trade rules.

    Okonjo-Iweala, the first woman and the first African to head the WTO, was the only candidate in the race, and had been all but assured a second term.

    The organisation’s 166 members “today agreed to give incumbent Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala a second term as director-general,” the WTO said in a statement.

    But with Okonjo-Iweala the only candidate, African countries called for the process to be speeded up, officially to facilitate preparations for the WTO’s next big ministerial conference, set to be held in Cameroon in 2026.

    The unstated objective is to “accelerate the process, because they did not want Trump’s team to come in and veto her as they did four years ago”, said Keith Rockwell, a senior research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation.

    The common practice of appointing directors-general by consensus made it possible in 2020 for Trump to block Okonjo-Iweala’s appointment for months, forcing her to wait to take the reins until after President Joe Biden entered the White House in early 2021.

  • WTO: 58 member countries support Nigeria’s Okonjo-Iweala for second term in office

    WTO: 58 member countries support Nigeria’s Okonjo-Iweala for second term in office

    About 58 countries of the 164 member states of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) members have voiced support for a proposal from the African Group backing incumbent Director General, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, to serve a second term.

    These 58 countries of the trade association made this known at a July 22 meeting of the WTO General Council, according to a statement by the world trade body.

    “The African Group requests that the current Director-General make herself available to serve a second term, and has proposed that the process of reappointing the Director-General should be started as soon as possible,” the statement partly read.

    “Fifty-eight members, several speaking on behalf of groups of members, took the floor to comment and express their support for the African Group proposal. They called on DG Okonjo-Iweala to make her intentions regarding a second term known as soon as possible. Most of these members praised the DG’s hard work and her achievements during her first term.

    Okonjo-Iweala, 70, said she was very grateful for the support from members. “Everything that I’ve accomplished, we’ve accomplished together,” she said.

    However, Okonjo Iweala noted that although she’s grateful for the support she would get back to members very soon regarding her intentions.

    Okonjo-Iweala, the seventh WTO boss, took office on March 1, 2021 for a single term of four years which will expire on August 31, 2025. She is eligible for a second term.

    The former Nigerian Finance Minister navigated stiff opposition to become the first woman and the first African to serve as WTO Director-General. Before her current appointment, she twice served as Nigeria’s Finance Minister from 2003 to 2006 and from 2011 to 2015. She also briefly acted as Foreign Minister in 2006, the first woman to hold both positions.

    The skilled negotiator had a 25-year career at the World Bank as a development economist, rising to the number two position of Managing Director, Operations.

  • Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala presented for 2nd term at WTO

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala presented for 2nd term at WTO

    The African Group at the World Trade organisation (WTO) presented a proposal at its General Council (GC) to re-elect Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala as director-general of the organisation.

    Adebayo Thomas, the Director, Press and Public Relations, Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, said this in a statement in Abuja.

    According to him, the proposal is for members to consider Okonjo-Iweala to run for another term as chief executive officer of the organisation.

    He said the proposal was to also enable the Chair of the General Council (GC) to commence the process of the appointment of the director-general as soon as possible.

    He quoted Amb. Abdulhamid Adamu, Nigeria’s Permanent Representative to WTO, at the GC, as saying that members debated on the issue.

    “And all members pointed to all the efforts and qualities of Okonjo-Iweala and her contributions to the organisation which enhanced a lot of progress and development.

    “They all affirmed that she deserves to be reappointed as the director-general.

    “All the members in the meeting from all regions that took the floor almost 58 members supported the proposal,” he said.

    He added that members resolved that the General Council Chair should start consultations on the process of appointment soonest as approved by council.

    Responding, Okonjo-Iweala thanked all members and assured to respond soonest with her acceptance after consultation with family members.

  • The World Bank, IMF, WTO and other witchcraft organisations – By Owei Lakemfa

    The World Bank, IMF, WTO and other witchcraft organisations – By Owei Lakemfa

    The    World Bank’s Lead Economist for Nigeria, Alex Sienaert on Wednesday, December 13, 2023 said he was sniffing around for fuel subsidy    that the Tinubu administration might    still be paying.      Like a headmaster warning an errant pupil, Sienaert told the    Nigerian Government it does not appear to him that    petrol prices are fully adjusting to market conditions so he suspects    a partial return of the subsidy. In his talk down      on the Tinubu government, the Cape Town University- Oxford    graduate claimed that “the cost reflective of retail PMS price” should dictate far higher prices.    He added: “We think the price of petrol should be around N750 per litre more than the N650 per litre currently paid by Nigerians.”

    The World Bank which like the International Monetary Fund, IMF and World Trade Organisation, WTO exercises power in the underdeveloped countries without responsibility, thinks nothing about    the suffocating cost of fuel which is strangulating the economy and people. In fact, Sienaert says even his    new price is not high enough: “These are just estimates to give you a sense of what cost-reflective pricing most likely looks like.”

    Ordinarily, Nigeria as a self-respecting sovereign nation, should by now have thrown      the arrogant  Sienaert out of the country.

    First, there is nothing wrong or criminal in a government subsidising its people as is done in the West.    Secondly, the World Bank approaches fuel pricing    in Nigeria not as an economic issue, but as a belief that it must continuously rise.    It was N173 per litre in May 2022, one year later it was N545 then, N626, yet the bank wants it to rise further.

    The ‘expertise’ of    Sienaert is not anchored    on sound economic principles. It is based on the fact that he works for the World Bank    and is a product of another shark American institution, JP Morgan. As we know, the latter is ever enmeshed in    fraudulent schemes from unlawful trading in precious metals, criminally trading in US Treasury    to financing international sex trafficking like the Jeffrey Epstein racket. JP Morgan is so fraudulent that it was caught    deleting 47 million files to hide its fraudulent activities in the 1970s and 1980s.

    The World Bank itself is notorious for giving loans to countries like Nigeria and spending the money on their behalf including on American ‘experts’ machinery and vehicles. In other words, the funds    never really leave American shores.

    In    the late 1980s, the World Bank convened a meeting of African leaders in Nairobi and told them Africa does not need universities. That Africa does not need university graduates but technicians. Kenyan President William Ruto    revealed in June 2023 that underdeveloped countries pay far more to borrow money from the World Bank than the Western countries. He added: “We want to pay equal to everybody.”

    In reality, the World Bank is simply a US racket    called the  International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, IBRD established in 1944 to further American interests in the guise of assistance.

    The world does not own a bank, so there is no such thing as a World Bank, what is so-called, is a US racket entrapping    many countries.  This    is why only the US President appoints the President of the World Bank, and only American citizens can be so appointed.

    The European version of this international racket is the International Monetary Fund, IMF. Only Europeans can be the Managing Director of the IMF. Both bodies see the    role of underdeveloped countries as that to provide raw materials, and Europe and America, as that    to manufacture goods and provide intellectuals to run the world. Their aim is to continually under develop Africa and turn its countries    into scrapyards.    They have the same aims and often, the same unimaginative methods. For example, on fuel, they encourage importation, not local refining, and then instruct on prices. In 2011, the then IMF Managing Director, Christine Madeleine Odette Lagarde toured some African countries like Nigeria, Ghana and Kenyan instructing them to drastically increase the price of PMS.

    The decision of the Jonathan administration, prompted by then Finance Minister, Dr.    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala to implement the directive, led to the historic January 2012 mass street protests in Nigeria in which a number of people were killed.    Today, Madam Lagarde is the President    of the European    Central Bank, and    Madam Okonjo-Iweala, after dumping her Nigerian citizenship for an American one, is the Director General of the WTO. The racketeering goes on amongst the Europeans and Americans while the lives of the poor, continue to be devalued.

    By the way, that was not the first time the IMF was giving clear instructions to Nigerian governments. The IMF in the late 1980s    visited then military ruler, General Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida in Dodan Barracks. In 1983, the dollar had exchanged for about 72 Kobo, but the World Bank had in 1986 insisted the Naira was “overvalued” and the military in compliance had devalued it      N9 to the dollar. But the IMF told Babangida the Naira was too strong, so in compliance, Babangida announced an immediate    devaluation of the Naira from N9 to N18. In 2000, it was N85 to the dollar, ten years later, it was N150, another ten years down the line, it was N360. As at Wednesday, December 20, 2023, the Naira was N1,230 to the dollar. Anybody arguing that this conscious and wilful devaluation of the Naira is economics, must be engaged in witchcraft; that is the white and black magic of ruining an economy      and presenting it as junk that can be privatized as scrap.

    Have Nigerians forgotten how we got here? Let me tell the new generation.    It fully began    in  1986 when the Babangida regime imposed the IMF-contraption called Structural Adjustment Programme, SAP. It    was deceptively presented as restructuring    and diversifying    the economy, attracting    Foreign Direct Investment, stimulating    growth, reducing    the cost of governance, allowing    free trade by dismantling the commodity and agriculture boards, and     enhancing the Naira by allowing it   float freely with other currencies. But in practice, SAP destroyed the Nigerian economy; inflation   rose from 5.4 per-cent in July    1986 to 40 per-cent   in 1989! Rather than job creation, the local industries collapsed, social spending was   drastically cut, the cost of production rose drastically and   the Naira was drowned.     To repress protests against this wilful    destruction of the economy, the military regime decreed    that ‘There Is No Alternative’   to SAP.    Those who disagreed like Michael Imoudu, Wahab Goodluck and Gani Fawehinmi , were detained without trial, and many were shot dead in    street protests.

    Today, inflation runs at 28.20 per-cent and      the government continues to dig deeper into Hades. Development will come only after we throw off the shackles of the World Bank, IMF, WTO and other vampire organisations.

  • Pope Francis appoints Nigerian Archbishop as Vatican’s Permanent Observer at UN, WTO, IOM

    Pope Francis appoints Nigerian Archbishop as Vatican’s Permanent Observer at UN, WTO, IOM

    Pope Francis has appointed Nigerian prelate and the Apostolic Nuncio to the Antilles, Archbishop Fortunatus Nwachukwu, as the new Permanent Observer of the Holy See to the United Nations Office and Specialized Institutions in Geneva.

    Archbishop Nwachukwu was also appointed the Permanent Observer to the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the Representative of the Holy See to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

    The 61-year-old Nwachukwu replaces Bishop Ivan Jurkovic, previously appointed nuncio in Canada.

    The appointment was contained in a press release from the Office of the Secretariat of the Episcopal Conference of the Antilles dated Friday, December 17, 2021, where Archbishop Nwachukwu is currently serving as Nuncio.

    “The Holy Father has appointed Archbishop Fortunatus Nwachukwu, titular of Acquaviva and until now apostolic nuncio in Trinidad and Tobago, Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Jamaica, Grenada, the Cooperative Republic of Guyana, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Santa Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Suriname, and apostolic delegate in the Antilles; and Holy See Plenipotentiary Representative at the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), as Holy See Permanent Observer to the United Nations and Specialised Institutions in Geneva and at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and Holy See Representative at the International Organisation for Migration (IOM),” the communique read.

    The statement from the Episcopal Conference of the Antilles continued, “He sincerely appreciates your support during his mission in this region and requests that you accompany him with your prayers and friendship as he prepares to assume the new responsibilities.”

    Archbishop Nwachukwu has previously been assigned as Apostolic Nuncio to Saint Lucia, Grenada, and the Bahamas on 27 February 2018; and Apostolic Nuncio to Suriname on 9 March 2018; and Apostolic Nuncio to Belize on 8 September 2018.

  • Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala warns against misuse of her name

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala warns against misuse of her name

    Former Minister of Finance and now Director General (DG) of World Trade Organisation (WTO), Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has warned against the misuse of her name.

    This is contained in a statement released by Paul C Nwabuikwu, Media Adviser to the WTO DG.

    Recall that recently Dr Okonjo-Iweala’s name has been used to advertise some public events, which Nwabuikwu has said are without prior knowledge of the WTO DG.

    These have been part of a longstanding pattern of misusing Dr Okonjo-Iweala’s name in most times viral messages, which has increased in recent times.

    The messages, including comments on political and other issues falsely attributed to Okonjo-Iweala, are usually circulated via WhatsApp, Facebook and other social media platforms.

    According to the statement, the WTO DG will not hesitate taking legal actions if the pattern of abuse of her name does not stop.

    The statement reads: “It has come to our attention that invented comments on political and other issues falsely attributed to the former Minister of Finance, now DG, World Trade Organisation, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala are being disseminated on online platforms as well as on WhatsApp, Facebook and other social media.

    “These efforts are obviously directed at mischief making as the faceless people behind them are seeking to make Dr Okonjo-Iweala a tool of whatever agenda they are pursuing.

    “The fake comments are part of a longstanding pattern of misusing Dr Okonjo-Iweala’s which has increased in recent times.

    “For instance, her name has recently been used to advertise all kinds of public events without any prior discussion or permission.

    “These actions are clearly wrong and her office has had to respond to enquiries on issues and events that she knows nothing about.

    “We urge the persons or groups responsible to desist from their unethical and illegal activities as Dr Okonjo-Iweala may be forced to explore legal options to stop the misuse of her name”.

  • Buhari appoints Abdulahmid as new Envoy to WTO

    Buhari appoints Abdulahmid as new Envoy to WTO

    President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the appointment of Dr Adamu Abdulahmid as the new Nigeria’s Ambassador to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Geneva, Switzerland, for a period of four years.

    The appointment is contained in a letter to the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Otunba Adeniyi Adebayo, from the office of the Chief of Staff to the President, Prof. Ibrahim Gambari.

    Adebayo, in a statement by Dr Nasir Sani-Gwarzo, ministry’s Permanent Secretary on Wednesday charged the new Ambassador to cooperate with Director-General of WTO, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and members of international organisations to enhance Nigeria’s trade.

    Until his appointment, Abdulahmid was the Acting Head/Charge d’ Affaires of Nigeria Trade Office to the WTO, Geneva, Switzerland.

    He is a holder of Msc. Economics and International Development, Masters in Business Management and Leadership, Doctorate of International Relations and Economic Diplomacy.

    He has acquired 28 years of working experience on World Trade matters and Trade Negotiations.