2, July 2018
African Development Bank ranked 4th best company to work for in Africa 0
The 2018 Careers in Africa Employer of Choice Survey has ranked the African Development Bank (www.AfDB.org) the fourth best company to work with in Africa. Of 100 companies listed, the top four include the World Bank Group, Chevron, Exxon Mobil and the African Development Bank.
Over 20,000 African professionals answered questions about employee engagement and employment conditions. Opportunities to learn new skills, quality of healthcare provisions, leadership and opportunities for advancement emerged as key indicators of great employers.
Commenting on the African Development Bank ranking, Alex Mugan, Managing Director of the Global Career Company and co-author of the survey with UK-based firm Willis Towers Watson said: “The importance of making a positive impact came through strongly in responses to the Study. This, together with the on-going organisational transformation at the African Development Bank, explains the continued high esteem in which the Bank (as an employer) is viewed by many African professionals worldwide.”
Trust in senior leadership, especially leaders that listen, those who set a good ethical example, and who deliver the values of the business, emerged as the top three most important factors in choosing an employer in Africa. “Employees are interested in leaders that push a good mission. Brands whose leaders are very visible doing those things have tended to do well,” Mugan further indicated.
According to Akinwunmi Adesina, President of the Bank, “the ranking is further validation of the work of the Board and Management to accelerate critically needed institutional changes and efforts to attract the best and the brightest to help implement the Bank’s High-5 agenda to Power Africa, Feed Africa, Industrialize Africa, Integrate Africa, and Improve the quality of life of Africans.”
The Bank scored high in attracting top talents from across all Africa. It also retained its position in the top 5 of established corporate and multilateral organizations. The report highlights a shift in the talent landscape with an increased interest in investment finance from job seekers and a quest for digital savvy experts from employers.
Overall, the survey revealed that job security is considered one of the main reasons to remain in an organization. In addition to attraction drivers for men, including skills development, the Report suggests that female professionals have a greater interest in healthcare opportunities, flexible working conditions, work-life balance, and ethics.
More than just a listing, the report seeks to shape the conversation around what makes a great employer in Africa, and through that positively change employee experience across the continent.The 100-list includes banks, oil companies, FMCG brands and mobile phone operators.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Development Bank Group (AfDB).
2, July 2018
Ambazonian Secretary for Economic Affairs says Southern Cameroons situation is a humanitarian nightmare 0
The Ambazonia Secretary of the Economy, Hon. Tabenyang Brado has told Cameroon Concord News Group that he heard unimaginable accounts of French Cameroun army atrocities as he paid a visit to a Southern Cameroonian family that arrived Italy fleeing away from the French Cameroun state-sponsored military campaign at home in Ambazonia.
Tabenyang described the Southern Cameroons situation as a humanitarian nightmare after meeting with our London Bureau Chief, Sesesskou Asu Isong during a recent trip to the UK and Italy. The Ambazonian cabinet minister further pointed out that the United Nations and the African Union have abandoned the people of the Federal Republic of Ambazonia.
Ever since the Interim President of the Federal Republic of Ambazonia, Sisiku Ayuk Tabe declared Southern Cameroons independence from French Cameroun, Southern Cameroonians have been subjected to a campaign of killings, rape and arson attacks by the Francophone dominated army backed by French military advisers from Paris.
Many of the displaced Southern Cameroonians are either living in squalid camps in the Federal Republic of Nigeria or in the forest. Human rights group Amnesty International released a comprehensive report on the crisis in Southern Cameroons observing that it has a mountain of evidence that French Cameroun government military onslaught against the Ambazonian population was a perfectly orchestrated, systematic attack teleguided by President Biya. The regime in Yaoundé dismissed the Amnesty International report as baseless.
By Chi Prudence Asong in London