Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Engine & Spare Parts Dealer Opportunities in West Africa

Engine & Spare Parts Dealer Opportunities in West Africa – We are expanding our network of suppliers, dealers and distributors in West Africa and would like to contact importers, exporters, trade buyers, import export & shipping companies, overseas distributors, dealerships, sales agents, suppliers and wholesalers of machine components and engine spare parts for trucks, plant and heavy machinery in Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea Bissau, Guinea Conakry, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, The Gambia and Togo.

Heavy Duty Generators & Power Systems – KKC supply, install and maintain heavy duty stand-by or prime power generators that provide on site electricity for industrial, residential, commercial, mining, marine and leisure operators. We also install and maintain emergency and back up power systems at critical locations such as clinics, hospitals, airports, government buildings, banks, petrol stations, telecommunications facilities, data centres, ports, refrigeration facilities, mines, refineries and factories. We specialise in heavy duty diesel engine generator sales, rentals, parts, and service.

Visit us on the following link

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Football Coach Arie Kooijman in The Gambia

Arie Kooijman said he is very impressed with G-Tech and would continue to equip them through his contact in Holland. That is music to G-Tech director Enakeno Arausi. 

“We found a great fortune in his association with us as we share the same ideas about building a football future,” Enakeno said.

He also said the object of G-Tech is to spread branches around the region from The Gambia, providing a connection from Africa to the modern world for many young Africans. 

 Follow us on this link for more information's on Football Coach Arie Kooijman in The Gambia

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Football Secret Slave Business on Africa Players

In the Ghanaian capital of Accra, football is a religion and the soccer schools offer the path to nirvana. They are also at the beginning of a dangerous production line. Young players here many barefoot are the raw material, each harbouring a dream to play in Europe.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Nigerian President Yar'Adua is Dead, says an aide

Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua is dead, a presidential aide has confirmed to the BBC.

A spokesman, who did not want to be named, said Mr Yar'Adua died on Wednesday, although there's been no official announcement yet.

Mr Yar'Adua, who became president in 2007, had been ill for some time, and had not been seen in public for months.

After much wrangling, Vice-President Goodluck Jonathan was accepted as acting president in February.

Reports from Nigeria said Mr Yar'Adua died between 2100 (2000 GMT) and 2200 (2100 GMT) on Wednesday at his presidential residence in the capital, Abuja.

In November last year, Mr Yar'Adua went to a hospital in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, for several months, during which time he was not heard from.

He returned to Nigeria, but Mr Jonathan remained as acting president.

He told the BBC by telephone in January that he was recovering and hoped with "tremendous progress" to resume his duties.

A presidential spokesman said at the time that he was being treated for acute pericarditis, an inflammation of the lining around the heart.

His long absence and the lack of detailed information about his health led to a political limbo in Nigeria that was only filled when Mr Jonathan was named acting president.

Read for more news at the news.myjoyonline

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

2010 Business and Investment Forum (BIF) Calendar

1.Business Mission to Taiwan
January, 16th – 22nd, 2010

2. Nigeria – India BIF
February, 7th – 13th, 2010

3. Nigeria – Japan
April 10th – 17th, 2010

4. Nigeria – Turkey BIF
May, 2010

5. Nigeria – Taiwan BIF
June, 2010

6. Nigeria – China BIF
June, 2010

7. Nigeria – Brazil BIF
July, 2010

8. Nigeria – Iran BIF
August, 2010

9. Nigeria – Singapore BIF
October, 2010

Friday, December 25, 2009

Patent and Designs Act

Patents
The word “patent” denotes a grant of letters acknowledging a right or monopoly in respect of an invention. When a patent is granted, the “Letters Patent” are delivered to the patentee, who is the person entered on the Register of Patents as the proprietor or grantee. A patentee is thereby granted a right in law to prevent others from making, using or dealing in his invention whether by sale, importation or hire. A patent for an invention does not confer upon a patentee any right to manufacture, which he does not already hold. What the “Letters Patent” confer is the right to exclude others from the commercial exploitation of a particular invention.

The actual procedure for application for “Letters Patent” is quite simple and straightforward. The applicant (assisted by his/its agent - usually a solicitor in Nigeria) is obliged to complete some Statutory Forms, which may be obtained from the Patents and Trademarks Registry, and to return the same accompanied by documents relating to the invention. The Application Form and relevant supporting documents are thereafter referred to an “examiner” who investigates the novelty of the invention claimed and establishes whether or not an earlier claim had been made on it. The examiner's report is not binding on the Registrar but only assists him in arriving at a decision. If the request for a patent is accepted, colour, is an industrial design if it is intended by the creator to be utilised as a model or pattern to be multiplied by industrial process and is not intended solely to obtain a technical result. Like patents and trade marks, the right of registration of an individual design is vested in the statutory creator, that is, the person who, whether or not he is the true creator, is the first to file or validly claim a priority for an application for registration of the design, unless the creator was acting on behalf of another person for good consideration in which case that other person is treated as the proprietor.

The generally accepted view is that a mere importer of a foreign design is not its creator for this purpose, though it is not clear whether a mere importer may not be a proprietor by acquisition. Registration of an industrial design confers upon the registered owner the right to preclude any other person from reproducing the design in a manufactured product; or else, in importing, selling or utilising the design for commercial purposes. Reproducing the design in any miniature way is also prohibited by law. The protection provided by the Nigerian law is effective in the first instance for 5 years from the date of application for registration and two subsequent periods of 5-year renewals making a total of 15 years.

“Letters Patent” are granted to the applicant or joint-applicants and sealed with the seal of the Registrar of Patents upon payment of the prescribed fees.

Industrial Designs

The word “design” as used in this context means or refers to features of shape, configuration, pattern or ornament applied to an article by any industrial process or means, being features which in the finished article appear to and are judged solely by the eye, but does not include a method or principle of construction or features of shape or configuration which the article made in that shape or configuration has to perform.

The law in Nigeria as regards designs now goes further to provide that any combination of lines or colours or both and any three dimensional form, whether or not associated with Copyright Act

The Copyright Act

Promulgated in 1988 makes provisions for the definition, protection, transfer, penalty for infringement of the copyright in literary works, musical works, artistic works, cinematograph films, sound recordings, broadcast and other ancillary matters. In theory, a copyright registration prevents the copying or reproduction of physical material existing in the fields of literature and the arts. Its objective is to protect the writer or artist from the unlawful exploitation of their creation but does not give a monopoly to the reproduction of ideas or to any particular form of words or design.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Development of National Technology Capability (Manpower and Training)

Clauses should therefore be provided in Technology Agreement to ensure the employment, exposure and training of the appropriate and right caliber of Nigerian staff.
In all technology transfer agreement, NOTAP insists that due attention should be placed on the employment of Nigerians with relevant scientific and technological background to understudy the foreign experts with a view to taking over such responsibilities within the shortest possible time. It is therefore mandatory for overseas investors to submit a comprehensive Training Programme Management Succession Programme for Nigerians whilst processing their technology transfer agreements.

Consultancy Services

As a matter of deliberate policy, Government is of the view that consultancy services required to execute local projects should be obtained from Nigeria Consultancy firms. However, where the necessary expertise is not available, foreign consultancy firm may be invited to work together with a Nigerian consultancy firm in a subordinate capacity. Under current regulations, Consultancy Agreements should spell out the following details:

- Definite objectives of the contract;

- Detailed description of the scope of the work programme to be accomplished;

- The time table and targets;

- Time estimates for each task in the programme including training;

- A description of the project teams;

- A description of the management team;

- The fee estimates, usually based on man/hours;

- The billing procedure.

Technical Assistance

Payments for technical assistance would normally be covered through “know-how fees” which are themselves broadly determined as follows:

In situations when the subject matter of a contract covers technical know-how that can be assimilated by the recipient company over a short period of time; e.g. use of formulae, drawings, specifications, etc; payments on a continuous basis would not be accepted. Also not acceptable are limitations that may be imposed pertaining to their use except those pertaining to confidentiality.

As regards the use of non-patented know-how, NOTAP does not accept any restriction on the use of the said know-how after termination of the technology transfer contract:

For practical purposes, the evaluation of the amounts to be paid for technical assistance is the aggregate of the various sums of money that may be determined as adequate compensation for the following components of such assistance.

(a) Pre-Operational Phase

- Pre-investment studies.

- Technical assistance for the purchase of equipment.

- Design, fabrication, and supply of equipment and machinery.

- Technical assistance in the erection and installation of plant.

- Plant start up.

- Training of technical personnel in the above areas.

(b) Operational Phase

• Assistance in the purchase of equipment, spares, raw materials, etc.

• Quality control.

• Assistance in the operation of the plant including repair and maintenance, efficient production, etc.

• Technical improvements of processes and products.

• Technical services to clients.

• Training of technicians in licensor's or licensee's plants

Managerial Assistance

The kind and scope of these services would depend largely on the sophistication and size of the local enterprise. The expectation is that these services would be obtained over a specific period of time, covering the following matters amongst others:

- Planning and programming;

- Research and development activities;

- Inventory control and accounting;

- Financing and purchase;

- Promotion and marketing.

Managerial assistance services are evaluated having regard to the following:

a) A definition of the different kinds of services to be provided.

b) The provision of a training programme in the contract in order to ensure that the various functions of the enterprise can gradually be taken over by the licensee's staff.

c) Payments for these services are usually examined in relation to the economic benefits to the recipient company and the nation in general.

d) The responsibility and functions of the licensor must be well articulated in the contract.