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Nigeria vacates UNESCO world book capital position today

By Anote Ajeluorou
23 April 2015   |   3:20 am
AFTER one year of serving as UNESCO World Book Capital, stimulating interest in books and reading around Nigeria, Port Harcourt in Rivers State will today hand over to the city of Icheon in South Korea which will occupy the position for 2015.
UNESCO BUILDING- IMAGE SOURCE
UNESCO BUILDING- IMAGE SOURCE

AFTER one year of serving as UNESCO World Book Capital, stimulating interest in books and reading around Nigeria, Port Harcourt in Rivers State will today hand over to the city of Icheon in South Korea which will occupy the position for 2015.

The day coincides with UNESCO’s World Book and Copyright Day, with attention drawn to the need to respect and protect intellectual property rights across the world.

While transferring the position from Port Harcourt to Icheon, the Director of Rainbow Book Club and Port Harcourt World Book Capital 2014, Mrs. Koko Kalango, highlighted the many virtues of the book and why it continues to be a sort-after commodity in spite of the socio-economic problems that often militate against it.

She said: “In spite of these terrible occurrences, and the many challenges of the world in which we live, the book continues to stand out, the repository of the written word, enabling mankind pass on information, and therefore knowledge, from generation to generation.

Today the book has brought us together as a family, united by a shared thirst for knowledge, linked by the common desire to advance the written word for benefit of the individual, the society and our world”.

Kalango drew attention to the common tragedy that engulfed Nigeria and South Korea when Port Harcourt received the baton last year from Bankok, then current book capital, when over 200 Chibok schoolgirls were abducted by Boko Haram terrorists and a boat sank off the coast of South Korea, with the loss of 302 students.

According to her, “Nigeria became the World Book Capital amidst mixed feelings of joy and grief. Nine days before this historic occasion, over 200 girls were abducted from a high school in Chibok by Boko Haram, an islamist extremist group that believes western education is evil.

It seemed ironical that the book was being brought to focus, against the backdrop of a retrogressive and dangerous movement directly opposed to the ideals of the World Book Capital initiative.

Such tragedy, if anything, should challenge us to continue to work to rescue our society from the grip of those who stand against the progress and liberty education brings.

“Two days after the Chibok girls were kidnapped, 304 people, mostly students from the Danwon High School, here in South Korea lost their lives in a boat mishap when the MV Sewol sank just off your coastline”.

Kalango, who spoke on the changes that have taken place since the prestigious World Book Capital initiative began, added that “The support of our local, national and international partners was critical in enabling us actualise our objectives. Indeed today, we can see change taking place – ‘Rivers of possibilities, rippling from the city of Port Harcourt, through the country Nigeria, to the

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