Senate President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki has said all
arms of government have a duty to ensure the success of indigenous
manufacturers as a way of rebuilding the economy and putting Nigerian youth to
work.
Saraki while receiving a delegation from the Innoson Motor
Manufacturing Company, Nnewi, led by Chief Innocent Chukwuma, the Chairman and
founder of the company, in his office said government should use legislative
actions and policy initiatives to protect the local industries as a deliberate
way of reviving the economy.
Innoson Motors is the only Nigerian company manufacturing
automobile of different ranges and it is based in Nnewi, Anambra State.
He said one of the actions government should quickly
introduce is to ensure that local industries are patronised by government
agencies so that Nigerian manufacturers can enjoy the advantages accruing from
the big market that her population offers.
“That is why this eighth Senate is determined to amend the
Procurement Law to ensure that government agencies patronise Made in Nigeria
products. I am sure the House of Representatives is in support of this. It is
our joint responsibility to ensure that you succeed. If you are successful, a lot
more small and medium scale enterprises will draw inspiration from you and they
will become successful.
“That will help to create jobs, which is one of the mandate
presented to us by the youths of this country during the last elections. We in
the legislature will look at all laws and help to create an enabling
environment for local businesses to thrive in Nigeria”, he said.
The Senate President said using laws to protect locally made
goods is not peculiar to the country as it has been done in the United States
under President Herbert Hoover in 1933 while India and China have also enacted
similar laws in the past.
He lamented a situation where a company like Innoson only
sold about 3,000 vehicles in 2015 when Nigerians buy about a million vehicles
annually, adding that If Nigerians patronise Made in Nigeria cars it will force
foreign manufacturers to set up plants here.
In his remarks, Mr Alfred Nwosu, said the Innoson Group
started from manufacturing of motor cycles and graduated to tricycle and now it
produces different range of utility and luxury vehicles.
He said the Group has 7,000 Nigerians on its pay roll while
there are 300 youths from the Niger Delta area undergoing training that were
hitherto held abroad.
Nwosu commended Saraki and the Senate leadership for their
prompt response to the request for audience sent by the company, an opportunity
that had eluded the company in the past.
“In less than 48 hours of contacting the Senate President, we
were told to come over. We are encouraged by your views on Made in Nigeria
goods. What we need is the support, encouragement and inspiration from decision
makers like you”, he said.
Made in Nigeria
Also yesterday, the Senate President urged the South East
Amalgamated Market Traders Association (SEAMATA) to look inwards in view of the
present economic challenges facing the country.
He specifically charged members of the executive of the
association who visited him in Abuja that it is time for them to find ways of
producing locally most of the goods they have been importing into the country.
Earlier, the President-General of SEAMATA, Chief Okwudili
Ezenwankwo had called for urgent measures by the Federal Government to ease
their access to foreign exchange that is used to import the goods they sell.
Ezenwankwo said that 70 per cent of traders in the South East
would be thrown into the labour market if nothing urgent is done to enable the
traders access forex. He lamented a situation where goods imported by the
traders since December 2015 are still lying at the ports accumulating demurrage
simply because the clearing authorities are yet to receive confirmation from
the countries of origin of the consignments.
He called on the Federal Government to fix an exchange rate
for the Naira rather than leaving it at the mercy of market forces.
He added: “The $10,000.00 limit of what one can take across
our borders is another major constraint to our business.”
Credit: VON

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