Top 12 Quotes & Sayings by Obiageli Ezekwesili

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Nigerian public servant Obiageli Ezekwesili.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Obiageli Ezekwesili

Obiageli "Oby" Ezekwesili is an economic policy expert, an advocate for transparency, accountability, good governance and human capital development, a humanitarian and an activist. She is a former vice president for the World Bank's Africa region, co-founder and founding director of Transparency International, co-founder of the #BringBackOurGirls movement and has served twice as Federal Minister in Nigeria. She is also the founder of #FixPolitics Initiative, a research-based citizen-led initiative, the School of Politics Policy and Governance (SPPG), and Human Capital Africa.

The way our government handled the Chibok girls case goes beyond an election matter. This is not a one-time issue we discuss over elections. We need to have a deeper conversation about what kind of a nation we want to be.
I have always battled injustice. As a child, I used to fight on the side of my friends when boys terrorized them.
There's absolutely nothing that the God I believe in cannot do. — © Obiageli Ezekwesili
There's absolutely nothing that the God I believe in cannot do.
My mum was a quintessential businesswoman. She taught me problem-solving. She can solve any problem.
It is time for someone as powerful as Barack Obama to compare the girls of Chibok to his own daughters. These girls are a symbol of our own message to girls that they should be educated, that we would go beyond the call of duty for you.
In terms of competitiveness of new global environment, Kenya will have absolutely no choice but to tackle the most important constraint to its development: it has been corruption.
How can the cost of education be the cost of life? It is unacceptable; it is reprehensible that we have allowed it to fester.
I would like to see a lot of people more involved in practical solutions to practical problems. Women have got to the point where we can turn the world upside down.
Do our children now have to choose between getting an education and dying? Some of us cannot move on and accept that kind of society.
What would ultimately de-escalate the challenges of society would be for people to get educated, especially for more women to be educated because when more women are educated, they invest much more of their time and income in ensuring that the next generation would perform even more than they have done.
Social media is simply a tool that facilitates actions.
China, frankly, can be an opportunity for Africa based on the huge infrastructure deficit on the continent, but what needs to happen is that governments and citizens have to build internal ownership of the need of good governance, transparency, accountability, for respect for the environment.
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