Une structure organisationnelle rigide inhibe la croissance plutôt que d'encourager des interactions significatives. Les connexions sont essentielles, à la fois au sein et au-delà de votre organisation, pour catalyser la croissance. Tirez parti de vos réseaux actuels pour développer une culture d'entreprise améliorée; permettre aux membres de l'organisation d'agir en tant qu'ambassadeurs de la marque dans la sphère publique et au-delà de la ligne de commande.
Sunday, 10 February 2019
Christine Logbo-Kossi, première femme Directrice d'une chambre des mines en Afrique de l'Ouest
Côte d'Ivoire: Christine Logbo-Kossi, première femme Directrice d'une chambre des mines en Afrique de l'Ouest
Depuis 2014, Christine Logbo-Kossi est la directrice exécutive du gproupement professionnel des miniers de Côte d’Ivoire (Chambre des mines). Elle a fait partie de la liste du « Top 100 Global Inspirational Women in Mining », publié par l'organisation internationale « Women in Mining » en novembre 2018. La chambre des mines représente les intérêts des différentes compagnies minières du secteur privé en Côte d’Ivoire. Recrutée comme secrétaire exécutif de cette organisation et dans un secteur qu'elle découvrait, trois ans plus tard, elle a été nommée Directrice exécutive. Christine Logbo-Kossi est détentrice d'un doctorat en coopération et solidarité internationale de l'université d’Evry (France), d'un master en communication spécialité relations publiques et événementiel de l'Essec en France et d'un diplôme en administration des affaires de l'université canadienne d’Abidjan. Mariée et mère de deux enfants, elle a aussi fondé et préside le réseau des femmes minières de Côte d’Ivoire ( FEMICI).
Aminata Namasia, 25 ans, la plus jeune députée élue de la RDC.
Aminata Namasia, 25 ans, la plus jeune députée élue de la RDC.
Elle a été élue députée lors des élections législatives du 30 décembre dernier dans la circonscription électorale de Bambesa dans la province du Haut-Uélé (Nord-est). Cette circonscription électorale n’avait qu’un seul siège à pourvoir et comptait 21 candidats dont 16 hommes et 5 femmes.
Aminata Namasia est diplômée en économie monétaire depuis 2017 de la Faculté d’administration des affaires et sciences économiques de l’Université protestante au Congo. Elle fait partie des cinquante femmes députées élues sur les quatre cent quatre-vingt-cinq sièges pourvus.
Aminata Namasia est diplômée en économie monétaire depuis 2017 de la Faculté d’administration des affaires et sciences économiques de l’Université protestante au Congo. Elle fait partie des cinquante femmes députées élues sur les quatre cent quatre-vingt-cinq sièges pourvus.
Une nouvelle Afrique se construit progressivement...
Source : Hamed Koffi Zarour
ne réfugiée congolaise à l'air libre sous prétexte qu'elle est une malade mentale
Le HCR abandonne une réfugiée congolaise à l'air libre sous prétexte qu'elle est une malade mentale
Le Haut commissariat des Nations unies pour les réfugiés (HCR) est censé être une institution humanitaire. Où travaillent des personnes qui ont la main sur le coeur. Mais chez nous, ce n'est pas le cas. La preuve, Yvonne Buanenku, 54 ans, est une réfugiée congolaise arrivée au Cameroun il y a trois mois. Elle est abandonnée devant les services du HCR de Douala depuis trois mois, sous prétexte qu'elle est une malade mentale.
les journalistes témoignent qu'elle jouit de toutes ses facultés mentales. Il n'y a que le palu qui la ronge depuis des mois. Normal, elle passe ses nuits à l'air libre sur un carton sous une petite moustiquaire.
Je me demande où est passée notre hospitalité légendaire dans ce pays?
Sade Morgan, nouvelle Directrice "Corporate Affairs" de Nigerian Breweries.
Sade Morgan, nouvelle Directrice "Corporate Affairs" de Nigerian Breweries.
Sa nomination, comme Directrice Corporate Affairs et membre du comité exécutif de Nigerian Breweries a été annoncée le vendredi 1er février.
Créée en 1946, Nigerian Breweries Plc, est la plus grande entreprise brassicole au Nigeria .Avocate à la Cour suprême du Nigeria et membre du barreau du Nigeria, Sade Morgan a débuté sa carrière en 1993 comme avocate et a ensuite travaillé pendant 11 ans pour British American Tobacco (BAT), où elle a occupé plusieurs postes de direction en Afrique, au Moyen-Orient, au Royaume-Uni et dans d’autres régions d’Europe. Elle a notamment travaillé pour BAT au Royaume-Uni, où elle a supervisé les activités de réglementation et de marketing des 86 marchés du groupe BAT situés dans les pays d’Europe orientale, du Moyen-Orient et d’Afrique. En 2014, elle a rejoint Nigerian Bottling Company, membre du groupe CocaCola Hellenic Bottling Company ( 2e embouteilleur de Coca-Cola), comme directrice des affaires publiques et de la communication, avant d'être nommée Directrice des affaires juridiques, des affaires publiques et de la communication.
Khady Dior Ndiaye nommée Vice-Présidente et Directrice Générale
Khady Dior Ndiaye nommée Vice-Présidente et Directrice Générale pour la Côte d’Ivoire de l'entreprise pétrolière américaine Kosmos Energy
Avant sa nomination, annoncée ce mercredi 6 février, la sénégalaise était CEO pour l’Afrique de l’ouest et du centre de Citi Bank ainsi que Directrice Générale de Citibank Cote d’Ivoire SA, entreprise où elle a évolué depuis 1997 et a occupé un certain nombre de postes de responsabilités notamment celui de directrice générale de Citi Sénégal . Dans ses nouvelles fonctions, Khady Dior Ndiaye dirigera les activités de Kosmos Energy en Côte d’Ivoire, pays où la société a acquis, fin 2017, une participation dans cinq blocs offshore contigus couvrant environ 17 000 kilomètres carrés. Elle a débuté sa carrière chez Citi Côte d’Ivoire comme Trader dans la salle des marchés.
Khady D Ndiaye Ndiaye est diplômée de la School of Foreign Service de l’université de Georgetown (Washington D.C.) et est titulaire d’un executive MBA de HEC Paris.
Tuesday, 17 July 2018
Have Cameroonians lost hope in Politics?
A random sample of the opinions of Cameroonians in various forum on social media reveal a starkly pessimistic view of Cameroon politics, widespread distrust of the country’s political opposition leaders and especially their suspicious inability to compromise, ahead of the upcoming October 7,2018 presidential election. By and large, Cameroonians are frustrated not only with our country’s political system but our ability to talk about political issues in a civil manner, that is, without tribal diatribes and personal invectives. It appears the country is being divided on so many topics and on so many fronts at same time. Our politics has become what could easily be described as a “stone-throwing contest'', where Facebook is used as a platform not for constructive exchanges but a forum where opinions are amplified and angrily expressed.
It cannot be denied, that Paul Biya’s 36 years long autocratic rule appears to be a more critical factor in informing the way Cameroonians feel about the state of the country’s political institutions. More recently it is also interesting to find out that the people’s trust in our country’s electoral system is eroding. Biya’s prolonged stay in power has caused a total wariness in the electoral process, and a consensual feeling that politicians are out for themselves and beholden to special individual interests due to greed and corruption, in total disregard to the general interests of all. However, the opposition is partly to be blamed for the dysfunction of our political system as since 1991, they have adopted a reactive rather than a proactive approach towards regime change.
One has the impression that all that matters to them is the function of the Presidency of the Republic and the privileges and powers which the constitution concentrates within the hands of that individual and nothing is done at the level of grassroots politics where from sovereign power emanates. Very few opposition parties have a strong base on the ground, such that the sufferings of the people are at the heart of their political programs in order to empower the youths and motivate them to adhere to their vision.
Strong views from Cameroonians both at home and abroad believe that the political situation of the country today is a fertile ground for a popular revolution by the people as in the days of ghost towns and sit ins of 1990-1992, that is widely viewed as the only chapter in recent Cameroonian political history wherein the people had a golden opportunity to turn around the destiny of this nation. Today, there’s a different configuration in our political chess game. The regime has succeeded in large part, to divide us to its advantage, by playing on people’s fears.
Coupled with the ongoing armed conflict in the Anglophone regions, our nation’s politics have reached a dangerous low point. Underscoring the overwhelming antipathy toward this regime, a majority of Cameroonians do not believe Biya’s reelection will be legitimate to bring long lasting solutions to the various crisis the nation is currently undergoing. It is a secret to no one that our major challenge is corruption.
Endemic corruption is incapacitating this country all the way. In the last 30 years the embezzlement of public funds and overt corruption have ruined our nation, whereby crooked politicians at every level of the government betray the working class, pocketing the profits for public projects and treating the people like sheep. Consequently, the people are tired of hearing promises which they know will never be kept. Corruption is the enemy of our development, and of good governance and we must fight to get rid of it.
Both the government and the people at large, must come together to achieve this national objective. Let us never forget that government is ourselves and not an alien power over us. We should be a people who put integrity over politics. Voters should want somebody who understands their problems. Finally, it is also important to note that if the masses have to go into a revolution it must be with a prepared plan of social reconstruction, and not only with the feeling that they cannot endure the old regime. We live in very volatile times. And it is very necessary that all of us resist this move toward the militarization and establishment of a more and more authoritarian regime, not just in the Cameroon but in Africa and everywhere else.
Thursday, 12 July 2018
'Will the gamble pay off' with the ruling party?: The presidential election of 7 October 2018 in Cameroon
More important than the individual candidates who will be elected, the voter participation rate will be key to this election. This is because there are a lot of eligible voters living outside the territory as refugees in neighboring Nigeria, and others living in places besieged by the so called terrorists, and others who have died but are yet to be accounted for. Taking into account these factors, the participation rate will definitely be much lower in these regions.
Since to reenact a one and indivisible Cameroon shall not be to accomplish the impossible task of convincing all of our people to abandon violence, but to accomplish the essential task of convincing enough people to abandon the belief that violence is ever legitimate, election days will come and go but our common struggle to create a government which represents all of us and not just a privileged few - a government based on the principles of economic, social, political and environmental justice and equality - that struggle will always continue.
In the meantime, it is hard not to contemplate the timing and the opportunity of this election. The secessionist movement in Northwest and Southwest regions of Cameroon have for more than 50 years had this obsession that their Utopia of a State (Ambazonia) was supposed to be independent on the 1stOctober 1961, the date Southern Cameroons actually obtained her independence by joining the Republic of Cameroon. Hence the tradition of manifesting that desire for freedom, is perpetrated from generation to generation and we recall the unfortunate incidents of 1stOctober 2017. The police and military forces fired life ammunitions on unarmed civilians during a non-violent peaceful protest across the Northwest and Southwest regions to commemorate that symbolic ‘independence’ day. As many as 17 people were reported dead by Amnesty International and this was the turning point that marked the beginning of the cycle of violence that has led to this dreadful armed conflict which has registered several casualties both among the civilian population and the regular armed forces; caused thousands more to be displaced from their homes; and several villages and property have been consumed in flames.
Bearing this in mind it is evidently clear that the commemoration of 1stOctober 2018 by the secessionists in the Northwest and Southwest regions shall not be an exception, that is a few days to the elections of 7thOctober 2018. But this time around as compared to the previous years, the balance of power has changed. The government forces will have to deal not with unarmed innocent civilian in various the townships of the Anglophone regions of Cameroon, but they are already facing an armed rebellious militia insurgency determined to march on into Buea and declare the official independence of the Republic of Ambazonia on the 1stOctober 2018 even at the cost of their tears, blood and sweat
Therefore, the big question is by convening the electoral body on the 7thOctober 2018 how will the government exercise its authority in those key municipalities such as Mamfe, Kumba, Muyuka,Ekona, Bamemda where these groups have created porches of resistance which has strongly hampered the smooth running of the administration by the local government authorities appointed by President Biya for the past one year? How does the government guarantee the organization of credible election in a climate of heightened insecurity and serious tensions all over the national territory? How will the government protect the safety of polling agents, observers from national and international bodies who may want to scrutinize the free and fair process of this election in those high risk zones?
There never is a good time for tough decisions. There was always supposed to be an election or something else. Governance is also about taking tough, even unpopular decisions but to finalize, the purpose of an election is to hear the will of the people and not to fabricate votes. Several millions of Cameroonians will be disenfranchised during this election as a result of this conflict either because they are refugees in Nigeria; internally displaced; or are living in those zones were the secessionist warlords are imposing their reign of terror. In the end this election is a test of our resolve as a people to either continue to contribute in a politics of cynicism or a politics of hope. As Franklin D. Roosevelt said: in politics, nothing happens by accident. If it happens, you can bet it was planned that way. Organizing elections within this context is a perfect opportunity to demonstrate either the continuing confidence in the leadership of the President at a turning point in this conflict, or a total rejection of a system which many consider as the root cause of the frustrations of the majority of Cameroonians from North to South, from East to West and not just the Anglophones. It suffices therefore to say that this presidential election is defiantly called by the Biya regime as an exercise in national sovereignty, the point being to show the to the world, especially the fickle International Community and those who have waged the nearly one-year long insurrection against Cameroon, that Cameroonians are united in the belief that Cameroonians, and only Cameroonians, will decide the fate and future of Cameroon.
Let us watch and see if the gamble pays off.
Tuesday, 10 July 2018
🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲 Last Thought: Building a New Country.
Cameroonians are caught between the tyranny of the govt and the rage of the secessionist. You take side with any at your own detriment. So the situation unleashes fear and gags free speech making innocent folks and concerned citizen to live in fear and trauma and unable to lead a normal life.
As the govt fails to provide leadership while the seperatist explore all oppurtunities to be heard and gain global recognition; the carnage,casualties, misery and destruction amplifies daily leaving the population angry, helpless and thinking.
The silent majority is watching, thinking and plotting. The moment is at hand for Cameroonians to unite and take back this nation from a failed govt and forces of anarchy that have and want to keep destroying the destiny and resources of this country. From many we are one. We are all Cameroonians.
By Nchem Rudolf/ modify by Nadine
Wednesday, 27 June 2018
Wazal: AYISSI NGA Joseph-Marie aka JJ DU STYLE now author of the Comic Book “The Legend of Wazal”
AYISSI NGA Joseph-Marie aka JJ DU STYLE |
It is by Now no news to us who AYISSI NGA Joseph-Marie aka JJ DU STYLE is in the fashion industry both is Africa and international. Following the footsteps of his father talent who as a tailor, The French/Cameroonian designer whose father was a tailor, has decided to create his own clothing line called ‘WAZAL’ which was launched in 2005. His collection is inspired by a Cameroonian slang 'ova' which means bigger and noble person. And Tété which refers to chic and bourgeois. Today he is rated among the best in the industry along side pioneer Cameroonian fashion designers such as Imane Ayissi and Martial Topolo.
His first designs launched in 2006 has been worn by celebrities like SINGUILA, Alpeco, WAYNE BECKFORD, ROMARIC Koffi and Lalcko. His brand “WAZAL” is a blend of “WAZA”, the name of a natural park in the extreme north of Cameroon and the letter “L” which stands for Lion, the Cameroonian symbol of power.
Well lately Mr Ayissi expanded his horizon; Wazal is now the author of the Comic Book “The Legend of Wazal”A story by Ayissi Nga Joseph MarieTranslated by Tina Nalova Ikome-Likambi
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