Presidential Jet Disappears from London

Wed, Aug 2, 2017 | By publisher


Politics

THERE was an anxiety in Nigeria on Wednesday, August 2, as the Presidential jet in London departed without any inkling of its whereabouts.

The media team of President Muhammadu Buhari denied knowledge of departure of the aircraft or whether the president was on his way back to Nigeria. The president’s spokesmen said the disappearance of the Presidential jet should be taken as rumour as there was no information available to them suggesting that the president had left London where he is on medical vacation.

President Buhari has been in London since May 7, to continue medical treatment and had handed over the leadership of the country to the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, who is now acting president.

In the past few days there have been comments among those who visited him in London that the president’s health had improved tremendously to suggest that he would soon return to the country.

The speculation about the President’s return was rife Tuesday, August 1, when some sources in London claimed that the Presidential aircraft had taken off from there for Abuja.

But both Femi Adesina, special senior adviser and Garba Shehu, senior special assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, said they were not aware that the president was on his way home.

Adeshina said: “BBC also called me and said the president’s aircraft had taken off, I should confirm it. I said the tradition is that if the president is coming, we will be asked to issue a statement but there has been no such instruction.”

THE Nigerian Postal Service, NIPOST, on Wednesday, August 2, announced its adoption of the innovative global addressing system what3words. Nigeria is the seventh country to adopt what3words, and the third in Africa. The system is already being used for mail deliveries in Mongolia, Sint Maarten, Côte d’Ivoire, Djibouti, Tonga and Solomon Islands. Nigeria is Africa’s largest economy and its most populous country with approximately 184 million inhabitants. It has the seventh largest population in the world.

Nigeria’s poor addressing system means that only 20% of its inhabitants receive mail at home. Seventy-nine percent of homes and businesses cannot receive deliveries to the door, and the remaining one percent receives mails using one of the 478,000 P.O. boxes throughout the country. A postcode system does exist, but only five percent of mail gets properly addressed with the postcode, hampering the efforts of NIPOST to improve its quality of service.

Determined to improve the situation, the NIPOST has set itself the ambitious target of increasing home delivery to 70% within the next two years and 90% by 2020 through the Mail for Every House Initiative, MEHI, and has adopted what3words to help it achieve these goals. The innovative global addressing system has divided the world into 57 trillion 3m x 3m squares, each with a unique 3 word address. It means that every home and business in Nigeria has a simple and accurate address that is easy to remember and to use. For example ///bracelets.hesitations.mutes refers to the exact 3m x 3m square at the entrance to the main post office in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja.

Available in 14 languages, with many more currently in development, what3words is used in over 170 countries by governments, postal services, logistics companies, emergency services and NGOs, as well as individuals. It is more accurate than traditional street addresses, simpler than landmark-based directions, and easier to remember and communicate than GPS coordinates. The system has built-in error detection and is available through a free mobile app and API integration. The system even works offline, without a data connection.

“We are very pleased to be collaborating with what3words as an addressing solution with huge potential to unlock opportunities” Bisi Adegbuyi, Nigeria’s postmaster general, said. “Better addressing is a key to NIPOST’s agenda, which aims to transform, innovate, and deliver more services to more people all over the country.”

Young people make up 62% of Nigeria’s population, and this is reflected in the significant increase in cross border e-commerce in the country; 53,612 parcels and packets were handled in 2016 (approx. 200 per day) which is up 70% since 2014. The e-commerce market is currently worth $12 billion, but there is still huge potential for growth. With improvements to infrastructure, innovation around payment systems and a reliable addressing system, Nigerian e-commerce could be set to take off at an incredible scale.

“With a rapidly growing ecommerce ecosystem, Nigeria is a very exciting country to be working with,” Chris Sheldrick, CEO and Co-founder of what3words, said. “Postal services have a critical role in building a strong economy and NIPOST are firmly focused on the future, and are taking steps to modernise and grow their capacity and range of services.”

Aug 2, 2017 @ 18:30 GMT

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