Friday 16 December 2016

Presidency Reacts: UN S-G APPOINTMENT OF DEPUTY SECRETARY GENERAL

His Excellency, President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR
 
I have just read online, one of your spokesmen this morning reaction says Minister  Amina Mohammed will be leaving office in March 2017.
 The UN Secretary General Guterras starts work in January 2017 and yesterday we read the glorious news of  3 or 4 major appointments across continents, ALL WOMEN in whose competences the Great Secretary General relies. In line with his pledge to #EmpowerWomen.   His administration will focus on “gender parity” he enthused.
 
March 2017 exit date for Amina Mohammed could be your prerogative perhaps  but the intent of this note Sir is not to question it.   Nigerians recall that in March 2016 we lost a Gem, James Ocholi SAN. He was Minister of State for Labour represented North – Kogi State.

 Amina Mohammed new Deputy Secretary General, UN,  represented North in your cabinet Sir  given the Nigerian Constitution compels at least one Minister per State.  Please Sir do not wait until March 2017 to nominate Ms Mohammed’s replacement. Afterall Donald Trump has started naming his cabinet members president-elect assigning porfolios to them preparatory to assuming office in Jan 20th 2017 much more one sworn-in and in the saddle  since May 2015. Please your Excellency  nominate one or two of  the Northern women as  there are two slots to be filled in your cabinet right now.  If you gave a great country Nigeria 52% female population with a national gender policy of 30-35% two more Northern women we still would be short-changed when you did in presidential campaigns pledged principles of gender parity please.

This is not a veiled note to dis-promote Southern Women.
As Global Champion for Change, we promote ALL WOMEN!
Respectfully
C N AJIE

On Thu, Dec 15, 2016 at 10:17 PM, Carol Ajie <carolajie@gmail.com> wrote:
 MAY PRESIDENT BUHARI REPLACE MINISTER AMINA MOHAMMED WITH ANOTHER WOMAN FROM  THE NORTHERN REGION SHE HAD REPRESENTED.   EVEN SO THE NUMBER OF WOMEN IN PMB'S CABINET WOULD STILL FALL FAR SHORT OF THE REQUIREMENT OF THE NATIONAL GENDER POLICY PLEASE MR PRESIDENT
#EMPOWER WOMEN
CONGRATULATIONS MA'AM
REGARDS
CN AJIE
alt Minister of the Environment, Hajia Amina Mohammed
The New UN Secretary-General, António Guterres, on Thursday announced Nigeria’s Environment minister, Amina Mohammed, as his Deputy Secretary-General.
Guterres made the announcement through the spokesman of the Secretary-General, Mr. Stephane Dujarric.
Guterres also announced the duo of Ms. Maria Viotti of Brazil and Ms. Kyung-wha Kang of the Republic of Korea into high-profile positions at the UN.
He said, “I am pleased to announce that I will be appointing Ms. Amina J. Mohammed of Nigeria as my Deputy Secretary-General, and Ms. Maria Luiza Ribeiro Viotti of Brazil as my Chef De Cabinet.
“I also intend to create the position of Special Advisor on Policy, and to appoint Ms. Kyung-wha Kang of the Republic of Korea to this new role.
“I am happy to count on the efforts of these three highly competent women, whom I have chosen for their strong backgrounds in global affairs, development, diplomacy, human rights and humanitarian action.
“These appointments are the foundations of my team, which I will continue to build, respecting my pledges on gender parity and geographical diversity.”
Mohammed, the current Nigeria’s Minister of Environment, served as UN Under-Secretary-General and Special Adviser to outgoing Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Post-2015 Development Planning.
She was instrumental in bringing about the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, including the Sustainable Development Goals.
Before joining the UN, Mohammed worked for three successive administrations in Nigeria, serving as Special Adviser on the Millennium Development Goals.
She provided advice on issues including poverty, public sector reform and sustainable development, and coordinating poverty reduction interventions.
She is also an Adjunct Professor in Development Practice at Columbia University, and serves on numerous international advisory boards and panels, including the UN Secretary-General’s High-level Panel on Post-2015 Development Agenda.
Others include the Independent Expert Advisory Group on the Data Revolution for Sustainable Development, and the Global Development Program of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
She is also the UN Secretary-General’s Global Sustainability Panel, the African Women’s Millennium Initiative, Girl Effect and the ActionAid International Right to Education Project.
Born in 1961, and educated in Nigeria and the UK, Mohammed is married and has six children.
Guterres had hinted on Monday after he took the oath of office that gender parity would be top of his agenda as the UN scribe.
He said, “I think that one very important element of the agenda would be to give a clear signal that gender parity is a must and so in the appointments I will be making.
“And the first ones would be announced soon. You’ll see that gender parity will become a clear priority from top to bottom in the UN and it will have to be respected by all.”
“This is a very ambitious agenda, an agenda that must be for both woman and man, and that is why parity is so important in our reform perspectives.
“That is also why the empowerment of women is so important in everything the UN will be doing around the world.”
Guterres, succeeds outgoing secretary-general Ban, who bows out on Dec. 31, 2016 after a decade of two terms, while the new secretary-general assumes office on Jan. 1, 2017, for the next five years.
NAN

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