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Creative Industry Can Create 1 Million Jobs In Three Years – Minister
The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has said
the creative industry, which encompasses television, music, film
production, advertising, arts and culture, is capable of creating 1
million jobs in the country in the next three years, if properly
harnessed.
The Minister made the assertion when he received a delegation from the
African Music Awards (AFRIMA), led by the Head of Culture Department at
the African Union Commission (AUC), Ms Angela Martins, in Abuja on Tuesday.
He said the migration from analogue to digital broadcasting, which
requires each of the 24 million TV households in the country to have a
Set top Box or Smart TV, will create thousands of jobs by the
companies licensed to produce the boxes.
Alhaji Mohammed said hundreds of thousands of jobs will also be
created from television production for at least 180 state channels, 30
regional channels and at least 10 National channels, catering for
local music, news, film, children programming and sports that will be
created once the country fully digitizes its broadcasting in 2017.
Other sources of job creation, according to him, are the production of
local content; the exponential increase in the production of movies,
since Nollywood will move to Push and Subscription Video On Demand on
the STB and online; the increase in the number of writers, lighting,
sound, camera and editing professionals as well as actors; the need
for wholesalers, retailers, electricians, installers to supply the
market with STBs, TV sets and dongles; the massive increase in
television and online advertising, as well as the need to create Apps
to offer goods and services and for interaction and entertainment at
every level.
The Minister said the knock-on effect of the booming production
business would grow Nigeria’s capacity to meet the quality demand for
fully indigenous content creations, which will bring back the millions
of dollars currently being exported to South Africa, Europe, USA by
Nigerian producers.
”The creative industry has turned around the fortunes of California,
India, Turkey, Brazil, United Arab Emirates, Australia, etc and can do
the same in Nigeria,” he said. ”The industry can redress the
economic malaise of Africa as a whole, and is the panacea to youth
unemployment and a tool for unity and peace.”
Alhaji Mohammed said the Ministry of Information and Culture has no
option but to support AFRIMA, since part of its (Ministry’s) mandate
is to promote and showcase the nation’s culture.
Earlier, the leader of the delegation, Ms. Martins, said the visit was to
solicit the Minister’s full support for the 2016 AFRIMA, to be hosted by
Lagos State in November.
She said the AU had been partnering with AFRIMA since 2014 because it
offers a platform to recognize talents across Africa and also to
celebrate African
values and culture through miusic