Twitter Email Google+ LinkedIn Facebook The video begins with a young Caucasian woman walking up a flight of stairs. “Nice bag,” a voice says. “Thank you,” she replies. “Where are your shoes made?” the voice asks another person, a young man this time around. “I think they’re Italian, hey,” he says. Another woman says they are “definitely from Europe.” The voice questions her, “are you sure?” She replies, “Yes, it’s got a European feel.” And then a voice in the background breaks the news to her that her bag is made in Aba, Nigeria. Those words accompany the opening sequence to a series of videos created by the Proudly Made in Aba campaign team and is also featured on their website. The first video, titled ‘Where are your shoes made?’, discusses the huge market that leather shoes, bags, belts and purses made in Aba already have in Nigeria, Africa and the world over. Craftsmen and businessmen based in Aba describe what the market means to them and how they have contributed to building it. For many of the traders and craftsmen in Aba, making leather products is all they’ve known all their lives. One of the craftsmen, Austin Emmanuel, says he learned bag making from his “master” and he used it to sponsor himself to the university. Another businessman featured in the video, Mazi Okechukwu Williams, says that “the finished leather goods sector in Abia state (where Aba is) produces over 800,000 pairs of shoes per day.” However, as prosperous as the leather products industry in Aba has been, the craftsmen are now faced with the problem of globalisation and the speed at which technology is evolving. With the rising cost of materials and, consequently, the cost of production combined with the receding collective purchasing power of the public, the craftsmen and traders now realise the need to embrace new technology that will ultimately drive down these costs. They are appealing for more investors to come to their aid. So, the video series serves as a visual aid for said investors, to help them better understand what is going on in Aba. In April 2017, the Abia state government signed a $1.5 billion deal with Huajian Shoe Industry to bolster the growth of Aba’s shoe industry. The expectation is that the deal will bring about 10,000 direct jobs and 50,000 indirect jobs. The Made in Aba campaign is a vital cog in the wheel of President Buhari’s administration’s drive to encourage the patronage of made in Nigeria products as well as the development of local industries. Watch the other videos in the series below: Comments Author David I. Adeleke Published May 24, 2017 Direct Link Twitter Email Google+ LinkedIn Facebook
The video begins with a young Caucasian woman walking up a flight of stairs. “Nice bag,” a voice says. “Thank you,” she replies. “Where are your shoes made?” the voice asks another person, a young man this time around. “I think they’re Italian, hey,” he says. Another woman says they are “definitely from Europe.” The voice questions her, “are you sure?” She replies, “Yes, it’s got a European feel.” And then a voice in the background breaks the news to her that her bag is made in Aba, Nigeria.
The video begins with a young Caucasian woman walking up a flight of stairs. “Nice bag,” a voice says. “Thank you,” she replies. “Where are your shoes made?” the voice asks another person, a young man this time around. “I think they’re Italian, hey,” he says. Another woman says they are “definitely from Europe.” The voice questions her, “are you sure?” She replies, “Yes, it’s got a European feel.” And then a voice in the background breaks the news to her that her bag is made in Aba, Nigeria.
Those words accompany the opening sequence to a series of videos created by the Proudly Made in Aba campaign team and is also featured on their website. The first video, titled ‘Where are your shoes made?’, discusses the huge market that leather shoes, bags, belts and purses made in Aba already have in Nigeria, Africa and the world over. Craftsmen and businessmen based in Aba describe what the market means to them and how they have contributed to building it.
For many of the traders and craftsmen in Aba, making leather products is all they’ve known all their lives. One of the craftsmen, Austin Emmanuel, says he learned bag making from his “master” and he used it to sponsor himself to the university. Another businessman featured in the video, Mazi Okechukwu Williams, says that “the finished leather goods sector in Abia state (where Aba is) produces over 800,000 pairs of shoes per day.”
However, as prosperous as the leather products industry in Aba has been, the craftsmen are now faced with the problem of globalisation and the speed at which technology is evolving. With the rising cost of materials and, consequently, the cost of production combined with the receding collective purchasing power of the public, the craftsmen and traders now realise the need to embrace new technology that will ultimately drive down these costs. They are appealing for more investors to come to their aid. So, the video series serves as a visual aid for said investors, to help them better understand what is going on in Aba.
In April 2017, the Abia state government signed a $1.5 billion deal with Huajian Shoe Industry to boost the growth of Aba shoe industry. The expectation is that the deal will bring about 10,000 direct jobs and 50,000 indirect jobs.
The Made in Aba campaign is a vital cog in the wheel of President Buhari’s administration’s drive to encourage the patronage of made in Nigeria products as well as the development of local industries.
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