NACCIMA President Calls on Youth to Rewrite Nigeria’s Story Through Enterprise
For years, the story of Nigerian youth has been told through the lens of crisis—fraud, flight, and frustration. But that narrative is shifting.
At a landmark event in Abuja, the National President of NACCIMA, Engineer Jani Ibrahim, sounded a bold new message: Nigerian youth are not just part of the conversation—they are the force that will drive Africa’s next economic breakthrough.
“You are not just the hope of tomorrow,” Ibrahim said, addressing a charged room during a pre-event briefing ahead of the Pan-African Youth Investment Forum. “You are the architects of now. We must graduate from hustle culture into institution building.”
The forum, scheduled for August 30–31 at NACCIMA Headquarters, is spearheaded by the NACCIMA Youth Entrepreneurs (NYE) and will host 20 influential youth leaders from across the continent. It runs parallel to the African Union’s Youth Connect Conference, strategically positioning Nigeria’s youth as key players in reshaping Africa’s economy.
More than just another conference, this is the unveiling of a new economic doctrine led by the young, for the continent. Newly appointed NYE National Coordinator, Ambassador Dr. Samira Bokar Abdullahi, unveiled a bold two-year roadmap that signals a shift from chaotic entrepreneurship to coordinated power.
“We are no longer the problem,” Dr. Samira said. “We are the plan. From the streets of Lagos to the plains of Kano, young people are building solutions. Now, we’re scaling them.”
She laid out NYE 2025–2027 strategic plan to include, a National Youth Chamber of Commerce; ₦25 million Youth Microfinance Program; “Entrepreneur Clinics” curated by successful young business owners; Zonal innovation hubs—from agribusiness in the North to digital tech in the South-West; and a “One Region, One Program” blueprint that ties each zone’s identity to a unique export-oriented value chain.
“This is not about handouts,” said NYE Deputy Coordinator Chinedu Aniabosu. “It’s about building real, export-ready value. Our youth are no longer waiting. We’re delivering.”
Engineer Ibrahim underscored the need to hold ministries and public agencies accountable for the funds and opportunities supposedly earmarked for youth development.
“We talk about youth funding but can’t access €20,000 because no one showed up to claim it,” he said, referencing a recent missed D-8 youth grant. “That’s the cost of poor structure. Let’s fix that—permanently.”
Beyond internal fixes, Ibrahim challenged youth to seize the global stage and change the dominant narrative about Nigerians abroad.
“For every scam headline, there are a hundred untold stories of brilliance,” he said. “It’s time to replace fraud with innovation and reputation with structure.”
He revealed that partners like ECOWAS, UNDP, GIZ, and various embassies are already in talks with NYE to co-develop programs on entrepreneurship, sports, and tech. ECOWAS has even offered NYE the mandate to coordinate youth development across the region—pending evidence of solid internal governance.
In a moment of levity, the NACCIMA President urged youth to harness Nigeria’s cultural influence—music, sports, fashion—as tools for nation-building.
“Want Rema or Burna Boy at your launch? Why not? These guys are looking for purpose too,” he said. “Package your ideas right, and the world will follow.”
But his final message was one of continuity and responsibility.
“This can’t end with your tenure. Build something that lives longer than you. Six years from now, let’s look back and say this wasn’t a youth event. It was a youth movement.”
With that, a new torch has been lit—one that seeks to redefine how Nigerian youth are seen not just at home, but across the continent and beyond.
The hustle may have started it, but now, structure will carry it forward.