Director General of
Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, (NIMASA), Dakuku Adol Peterside,
has stressed the need for the establishment of a national maritime policy to
help actualise the nation's strategies in the maritime sector.
r-l: Executive
Director, Operations of the Nigerian
MaritimeAdministration
and Safety Agency (NIMASA) and the
representative
of NIMASA DG, Engr. Rotimi Fashakin,
Chairman, of the Inter-Ministerial Committee for the
Implementation of Africa’s Integrated Maritime Strategy
(AIMS) 2050, Hajia Amina Yusuf, Air Vice Marshal, O.R.
Philip from the Nigerian Air Force and Director,
Special
Duties of NIMASA, Hajia Lami Tumaka at the opening
of
the meeting of the Inter-Ministerial Committee for
the
Implementation of AIMS 2050 held in Lagos.
|
Disclosing this at the
meeting of the Inter-Ministerial Committee for the Implementation of Africa’s
Integrated Maritime Strategy (AIMS) 2050, Peterside noted that a maritime
policy for Nigeria will provide a platform to implement the framework for the
protection and sustainable exploitation of Africa’s Maritime Domain (AMD).
The NIMASA boss who
was represented at the meeting by the Agency’s Executive Director, Operations,
Engr. Rotimi Fashakin, urged the committee to take cognizance of the current
maritime security architecture in Nigeria that has been structured in line with
international best standards and practices.
He also stated that in
order to realise the dream of a blue economy, strategies must be put in place,
and that security and capacity building amongst other initiatives are key areas
to unlocking the opportunities that abound in the blue economy.
In his words, “When
you talk about the security issues, you talk about the actual and the
perceived; and in the real sense of business, perception matters a lot. The
Gulf of Guinea (GoG) is being perceived as not being quite safe because of few
attempts we have in the GoG, but I can assure you that the Nigerian Navy and
NIMASA are working hand in hand to secure the Gulf of Guinea”.
The NIMASA DG also
used the opportunity to applaud the Committee for involving Ship owners in the
AIMS 2050 implementation process, noting that the blue economy cannot be
realized without them as they are the major assets owners. He also gave the
assurance that the interest and concerns of the ship owners will also be
addressed.
Earlier in her
remarks, the Chairman of the Committee, Hajia Amina Yusuf disclosed that the
AIM Strategy was developed as a response to the high volume of illegal
activities that have been in occurrence in Africa’s Maritime Domain (AMD),
amounting to huge losses in revenue and lives amongst other issues militating
against the development of the AMD.
The Inter-Ministerial
Committee for the Implementation of the African Integrated Maritime Strategy
(AIMS) 2050 came about as the outcome of the meeting of the African Union on
AIMS 2050 which took place in Addis Ababa on 24th – 25th July,
2015. Among the resolutions arrived at during the course of the meeting was the
position that Nigeria should constitute an Inter-Ministerial Committee to
enhance its efforts at fulfilling its obligation towards the adoption and
implementation of the Strategy.
The Inter-Ministerial
Committee constitutes of eleven members, drawn from NIMASA, Nigerian Navy,
Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) and National
Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) amongst others, all with the sole aim of
articulating positions towards the enhancement of AIMS 2050 and ECOWAS
Integrated Maritime Strategy, EIMS activities for a robust maritime domain in
Nigeria and by extension Africa.
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