Group photographs of delegates at the opening of a two-day Regional Workshop on UN Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework: A process to mainstream the maritime sector organised by NIMASA in conjunction IMO and UNECA) in Lagos.
The
International Maritime Organisation, IMO has reiterated commitment to
assisting member states on UN 2030 Sustainable Development Goal, SDG,
agenda.
The
Director, Technical Cooperation Division of the IMO, Mr. Juvenal
Shiundu gave the assurance at a two-day workshop for all the key players and stakeholders involved in the
Cooperation Framework process to meet, establish the necessary
contacts, which will be needed for future collaboration and for the
inclusion of maritime in the mainstream of their economic strategies
towards economic growth.
He
said, IMO’s commitment to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development is manifestly reflected in its General Assembly
Resolution (A.1126) adopted at its 30th session in
2017, which includes among others, invitation to Member States,
partner organizations to coordinate and work with the five United
Nations Regional Economic Commissions to ensure that the maritime
sector is reflected in regional programmes.
Minister
of Transportation, Rt. Hon. Chibuike Amaechi in in his keynote
address disclosed that the Federal Government of Nigeria will ensure
the maritime sector gets into the mainstream of economic strategy as
it will engender economic growth and prosperity.
The
Minister affirmed that a process to mainstream the maritime sector
organised by the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency
(NIMASA) in conjunction with the International Maritime Organisation
(IMO) and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA)
in Lagos when fully completed will also provide a robust enabling
framework for achieving Nigerian maritime objective and foster
Public, Private sector collaboration and inter-regional cooperation.
“This
workshop is an essential step in a continuing shift in strategic
thinking about the sustainable development of our nations and will no
doubt provide an opportunity for stakeholders here present to develop
the much needed cooperation framework in addressing the Sustainable
Development Goal (SDG)”, Amaechi
said.
Speaking
further, the Minister who was represented by the Director General of
NIMASA, Dr. Dakuku Peterside stated that as the African Continent
forges ahead with phase II negotiations for the creation of the
African Continental Free Trade Area (AFCFTA), the maritime sector
remains critical to seamless trade and effective economic integration
between African nations.
Accordingly,
he said “our
approach, therefore, towards the realisation of the SDG is contingent
on our joint effort and ability to put in place the much needed
cooperation framework in collaboration with critical stakeholders
using the maritime sector as a veritable tool to promote agricultural
development, food security, industrialisation and economic
transformation of our nations, the region and the entire continent”.
He
used the opportunity to commend the IMO, UNECA and NIMASA for putting
together the workshop, and expressed optimism that with the level of
participation at the workshop, the objectives of developing blueprint
and agreeing on a common approach in mainstreaming the maritime
sector into the SDG and national plan of states will be achieved.
On
his part, the NIMASA DG, in his welcome address stated there is the
need for the leaders of the various countries in the continent to
understand the workings of the maritime sector, as maritime
transportation plays an important role in a nation’s economic
development.
He
emphasised the need to help the leaders understand why it is
important to mainstream maritime sector in economic plan and economic
strategies of the various countries.
“As
a country, we align with the initiative of the IMO to mainstream
maritime transportation and the maritime sector to the economic
planning of our various nations and also in the strategic planning.
Not only are we going to mainstream maritime transport to the
economic strategies of our various countries, there is being a shift
from looking unto other countries for assistance to working with
other countries, international partners in a cooperative and
collaborative manner”, Dakuku
stated.
Also,
the NIMASA DG stated that Nigeria is currently pursuing an economic
diversification programme, with a long term plan. “We
are working from the known to a future we deserve, and we have taken
a number of steps; we have clearly identified where we want to be as
a country, we have identified pillars upon which we want to build
that glorious future we are working towards”, Dakuku
averred.
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