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Why Information Ministry needs restructuring

By Margaret Mwantok
02 October 2018   |   2:05 am
Marketing Communications expert and Managing Director, Prima Garnet Africa, Mr. Lolu Akinwunmi, has advised the Federal Government to urgently restructure the Nigerian Ministry of Information in order to ensure maximum value in the areas of nation building and public information management.

Managing Director, Prima Garnet Africa, Mr. Lolu Akinwunmi

Marketing Communications expert and Managing Director, Prima Garnet Africa, Mr. Lolu Akinwunmi, has advised the Federal Government to urgently restructure the Nigerian Ministry of Information in order to ensure maximum value in the areas of nation building and public information management. Akinwunmi, who spoke at the launch of his book, Skin for Skin: The Prima Garnet Story, in Lagos said the nature and structure of the current Ministry of Information is more of a colonial relic and cannot cater to the robust and interactive communications needs of a developing country in the 21st century.

The advertising guru, who once headed FG’s rebranding project, said there was no good reason the Ministry of Information should be different from the Ministry of Communications, insisting that the two should be merged into a single ministry to be known as the Ministry of Public Communications.He said the arrangement would enable strategic approach to positively managing the perception of government and its leaders while at the same time ensuring a stronger engagement between the government and the people by exploring technology and all other interfaces needed to effectively communicate with the people and engage the international community.

According to Akinwunmi stated, “We do not need a Ministry of Information that is separate from the Ministry of Communications because the two are so intertwined there is no need to separate them in this modern time. There is urgent need for the redesign and refocus of the information ministry to enable it properly serve as the communications engine of the country, instead of just being the mouthpiece of the Federal Government.”

The book launch, which coincided with the 60th birthday of the former Chairman of Advertising Practitioners Council of Nigeria (APCON), also witnessed the launch of Lolu Akinwunmi Family Foundation (LAFF), a platform through which he and members of his family give back to society.

Also speaking at the event, Vice President of Nigeria, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, who was the special guest of honour, commended Akinwunmi’s contributions to the growth and development of advertising and marketing communications in the country, saying his virtue of honesty has become critical, especially in Nigeria of today. Osinbajo, who noted that living to certain standards of uprightness has become difficult in Nigeria, also advised leaders and professionals to help in sustaining the conversations that will ensure Nigeria is lifted to its deserved place as a leader in Africa and the world.

“A lot of us have chosen to live by certain ideals,” Osinbajo said. “But how do we sustain our ideals when those ideals are facing the marketplace that runs against those ideals? We wake up everyday with the intention to do our best. But such are almost impossible without dependence on Jesus for daily inspiration.”He called on the author and all Nigerians to continue to pray and work towards the growth of the country, believing that such was the only way the country would be placed on the path of sustainable growth, adding, “We cannot get tired of working for the growth of the country. We cannot also say because yesterday’s efforts were fruitless, we’d stop working today. There’s no success until we breathe our last.”

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