I think we can do better than providing sheds. Send some people to learn how Chinese do it and set people on the return up with government loans well monitored. I remember "borrow a leaf from India " statement we often hear when we were growing up. We really do not need to reinvent the wheel.
No, why would we need to go to Chinese people to make our own traditional clothing. That makes no sense. All you’re doing is handing the traditional over them. You want Chinese to take over because they will.
The documentary is simply on Iseyin and not Oke-Ogun. The reportage is not deep as it only concentrated on just 1 of 10 local governments in the region. Oke-Ogun is vast and one can say we are a homogeneous community or zone but we are also diverse. Next time you can also touch on places like Kisi, Igboho, Okeho, Saki etc and discover more about the real core of Oke-Ogun
Merci beaucoup
You are 100% correct. It is just like jeans. We need to brand it and market it right
I think we can do better than providing sheds. Send some people to learn how Chinese do it and set people on the return up with government loans well monitored. I remember "borrow a leaf from India " statement we often hear when we were growing up. We really do not need to reinvent the wheel.
No, why would we need to go to Chinese people to make our own traditional clothing. That makes no sense. All you’re doing is handing the traditional over them. You want Chinese to take over because they will.
The documentary is simply on Iseyin and not Oke-Ogun. The reportage is not deep as it only concentrated on just 1 of 10 local governments in the region. Oke-Ogun is vast and one can say we are a homogeneous community or zone but we are also diverse. Next time you can also touch on places like Kisi, Igboho, Okeho, Saki etc and discover more about the real core of Oke-Ogun
You are right. I think they did one on Igbeti also.
Good job, but no contact number.
All talk and no action.