…As Germany, Nigeria trade volume shrinks by €2.5bn***
Following the closure of the ports of Italy to illegal migrants, 580 Nigerians are expected to ‘voluntarily’ depart Libya, and come back into the country this week.
The spokesperson for the Lagos Airport Police Command, DSP Joseph Alabi who confirmed this, noted that the development which is coming, only three weeks after 138 Nigerians returned voluntarily from Libya, another 420 Nigerians would arrive the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos on Tuesday (today), via two chartered flights while another 160 would come in on Thursday.
Having been stranded in Libya on their way into Europe, it was learnt, the returnees were being brought back upon their expression of interest to return to Nigeria through the assistance of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).
As of those who flew in three weeks ago, aboard flight with Registration No: 5ADM which touched down at the Cargo Wing of MMIA at about 8:05pm, comprising of 65 female adults, two teenage girls and two infants (baby girls); while the male adults were 64, two teenage boys and three infants (baby boys).
Four of the returnees who had medical cases were evacuated upon arrival, for emergency treatment.
They were received by the Nigerian Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) and the Police.
In the meantime, the volume of trade between Nigeria and Germany rather than expand, actually shrank in 2016 to 3.5 billion Euros.
The German Ambassador to Nigeria, Dr Bernhard Schlagheck indicated this on Monday in Abuja, noting that the trade volume dropped by about 2.5 billion Euros, from the six billion Euros recorded in 2015.
The envoy blamed the fall on the economic downturn in Nigeria, expressing his determination to work toward increasing the volume of trade between the two countries.
He said that as part of efforts to deepen bilateral economic relations, the German Government was supporting market exploration missions by business delegations to Nigeria.
Schlagheck said that Germany had committed millions of Euros to vocational training in Nigeria and was prepared to keep promoting the programmes.
“The German Government has a whole range of activities in various states in this country and we have invested 50 million Euros in vocational training in Nigeria in a year.
“We are doing a lot of other training in Nigeria. In various states, we have projects of German enterprises with some private partners.
“So, we have whole lots of training to enhance capacity building in Nigeria.”
Schlagheck said that a training session on technical facility management through Germany Dual Vocational Training (DVT) in partnership with the Abuja Chamber of Commerce had just been concluded in Abuja.
According to him, DVT system is the commonest form of vocational training in Germany.
The envoy explained that “dual” in this context meant a combination of practical, on-the-job training and theoretical education at a vocational school to ensure proper balance of theory and practice.
The President of the Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Mr Tony Ejinkeonye, also said that the training would impact on the fortunes of member companies as well as on the Nigerian economy.
He said that the project started in March 2015, was initiated by the chamber and Giessen-Friedberg with a view to adding quality to vocational education in Nigeria.
“The apprenticeship scheme is used widely in Germany and it has over the years contributed to the success story being recorded in that country’s manufacturing sector.’’