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Victims Explain Why Igbo Apprenticeship System Is Failing - Business - Nairaland 721l1j

Victims Explain Why Igbo Apprenticeship System Is Failing (20882 Views)

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zero8zero(m): 5:52pm On Dec 11, 2024
Jude Eze looks frail. At his Orhom Orba village in Udenu LGA of Enugu State, Jude appears to be living in anguish of wasted years of apprenticeship in Cotonou, Benin Republic. He claims that his dream of becoming a self-made man before the age of 30 is now a mirage.

I am 44,” he begins his story, with his pale hands shaking. “I served my master for nine years, from 2002. Two months to the end of my apprenticeship, my boss, Emeka Eze, took away the capital and gains in my shop to import motorcycle tubes and tyres from China. The goods turned out to be fake. That was how that business collapsed.”

Jude said his master explained to him the misfortune that befell his business. “I forgive him,” he says. “What would I have done? I returned home to learn carpentry, which is what I do now. I feel my master didn’t plan well.”

Ernest Nwabueze lives in Enugu. His apprenticeship foray took him to Gombe where he learnt selling of clothes. Ernest served his master for seven years, then the unfortunate happened. “My master claimed he was swindled by some dubious importers,” he says. “His business collapsed. We wrote an agreement before the commencement of the apprenticeship. Considering what happened, I forgave him.” Ernest is currently doing menial jobs to sustain his young family.

He raises a pertinent issue: “My master wanted to even sell some of his assets to settle me, but his family refused. I see cheating because I generated money that he invested. He could have settled me, no matter the sum, from there.”

Ernest advises the youth to learn skilled apprenticeship instead of buying and selling. “If an apprentice learns welding or mechanics, he can use the knowledge to sustain himself even if his master decides not to settle him. Trading involves capital.”

Chukwuebuka Odo, residing at Iwollo in Ezeagu LGA of Enugu State, quit secondary education for an apprenticeship. “As the first son in my family,” he gives reasons, “I chose to undergo apprenticeship in Lagos for ten years. Towards the end, my master claimed he had no money to settle me because he had issues with his wife. I looked at all these and decided to take my destiny into hands. I stayed in Lagos briefly. Someone gave me some money which I used to transport myself back home. I returned with nothing.”

One of the shortcomings of the once-thriving Igbo apprenticeship system, according to him, is that some masters take their apprentices for granted. “There should be established plans to settle apprentices; not in the dying minutes. I recall some of my colleagues that were frustrated for minor reasons, such as drinking beer, having girlfriends.”

My Friend Died Mysteriously Doing Apprenticeship – Youth

Chizoba, 25, is from Umachi in Igboeze South LGA. “I’ll never do it,” he states. He claims the mysterious death of two brothers undergoing apprenticeship informed his stance. “They were killed overseas. One has been buried; the younger one is yet to be buried. Some masters assign dangerous roles to their apprentices. No one knows why two brothers should die. They were shot differently. I will remain in my Okada business.”

The fear expressed by Chizoba is shared by Mrs Juliana Odo, from Ezimo. “I can’t entrust my child upon anyone. There are many stories of disappearance, deaths and failure to settle these apprentices.”

Some Masters Are ‘Occultic’ – Patent Medicine Dealer

Cajethan Nnadi is a veteran patent medicine dealer. “At least, ten apprentices have ed through me,” Nnadi hints. “Four of them today run their respective pharmaceutical companies. Some masters belong to cults. I won’t belong to any cult to evade settling my apprentice. I would rather inform the person to learn and be settled by his people. But if such a person agrees to serve me for the stipulated time and conducts himself ethically, I will never disappoint him.”

Nnadi, however, alleges that some apprentices are thieves. “Some apprentices have stealing traits,” says Nnadi. “No matter what, they will steal from their masters. Some build houses. In that case, don’t blame the masters for sacking them.”

Swearing An Oath A Solution!

Oliver Eze owns a thriving building materials company at 9th Mile, Udi LGA of Enugu State. “I normally assign a shop to each at a stage of the apprenticeship. I don’t expect them to be hungry or not to dress well. But they are forbidden to steal my money or embark on capital projects while under me. They swear an oath. Faithful ones receive my blessings, and they always do well. There is joy in making apprentices great.”

Igbo Boys Shun Apprenticeship For ‘Yahoo Yahoo’ – Welder

Onwuka Eze, a welder, seems fulfilled doing his job along the Enugu-Makurdi expressway. Asked the cause of the disinterestedness among Igbo youths to go into apprenticeship, Onwuka snaps, “Yahoo yahoo! They don’t want to learn skills even if you make it free. Some complain about settlement. But let them learn first. They will be looking at the incomes of their masters. I advise our youth to be patient because skills give cool money.”

Benjamin Ugwu, fashion and designer at Nsukka, shares the same opinion, “Young boys don’t want to learn skills,” he affirms. “Yahoo-yahoo is trending everywhere. How sustainable, I don’t know! When they see their age mates below 20 making millions of naira, they feel apprenticeship is a waste of time.”

On refusal of some masters to settle their apprentices, Ugwu asserts, “I can’t generalize. If the person is calm and follow the ethics of the learning, I believe most masters will happily settle their apprentices. Writing an agreement should be done.”

The Scheme Can Be Revived – Nnadi

Uchenna Nnadi, director general of Nsukka Chamber of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture, agrees that the Igbo Apprenticeship System (IAS) is a means of transmitting and creating wealth. He traces its origin to 2000 BC during the era of iron ore smelting work at Leja in Nsukka LGA. He also agrees that it was the weapon that re-launched the economy of Ndigbo after the Biafran war.

“The scheme is both an incubator and venture capital for MSMEs,” he states. “It is a self-contained system with little or no external , including government recognition. Yet it has produced globally notable ambassadors. Despite the enormous strengths and opportunities inherent in IAS, there are also challenges based on the fact that it thrives on the informal sector.”

The government neither regulates nor funds it, he says, adding that the implications include poor research and development on IAS, as well as lack of public laws and rules guiding IAS. “It is neither recognized nor integrated with Nigeria’s formal educational system,” he says. “This often leads to the master not settling the apprentice and/or the apprentice stealing the master’s money with no satisfactory arbitration system for both parties. Some masters had taken to initiating themselves and their apprentices into cults. The above challenges have made many masters rather seek sales girls and boys other than apprentices.”

To make it functional, Nnadi suggests Igbo town unions engage Southeast stakeholders, such as the South-East Chamber of Commerce, the academia, traders’ associations, lawmakers, and government, to begin to create formal rules for the Igbo Apprenticeship System. “If it is integrated into the mainstream educational system, Southeast governors should anchor fiscal incentivization of Igbo Apprenticeship System,” he added.

Nze Kanayo Chukwumezie is the founder of Maka Odimma Igbo, which is championing the revival of the Igbo apprenticeship system. “This scheme is responsible for what Igboland is today,” he narrates. “Knowing that Igbos were reduced to £20 each after the civil war irrespective of the amount you have in the bank, any system that contributed to this phantom leap is worth promoting. It is the apprenticeship scheme that did that magic.”

He regretted the abuses that had killed the scheme. “Some masters frame up accusations against their apprentices, especially towards the end of their apprenticeship to evade settling them,” says Kanayo. “Also some apprentices milk their Oga till they are caught. There was one apprentice building a duplex in his village while still serving.”

He explains that his group has pushed for the formalization of the system: “Its formalization as advocated by my group is to checkmate such abuses in line with global best practices. We advocate a central system where every apprenticeship contract shall be ed from towns to regions with clear . Because incomes can stop coming, we want the masters to deposit a certain amount into a consolidated that can only be released to the apprentice at the end of the scheme. If there be any misconduct by the apprentice, the master shall report it immediately to the body for action.

“We also want to introduce this scheme in our schools to enable our youths that cannot calculate or read and write to take classes in English and maths, even if evening or weekend classes. We plan to have a central certificate issuance system for all people that successfully complete the scheme with the master as one of the signatories with the central and regional heads.”

He recalls with joy that the apprenticeship scheme has drawn the attention of Harvard Business School which adopted it as a vibrant business model in 2021. “It is therefore today acknowledged as the world’s best business model. We the owners should take it to a higher level,” he canvasses

There Should Be Legislation To Make It Binding – Lawyer

Barr Ken Ike is a constitutional lawyer. He its that most times, the and conditions for the scheme are not secured by a written agreement.

“Due to the verbal nature of the and conditions, any mishap to the master will exonerate him from the responsibility assumed upon taking up the young adult,” Barr Ike states. “There are also incidences of abuse of the young adult either by his master or someone who was expected to coach the young adult. The young adults may suffer undue peer influence which could lead them astray, especially when the master is not prudent or meticulous.”

He proffers the solutions. “There has to be a formal agreement to guide and protect the interest of the parties. The government should intervene by raising the bar of protection available to the young adults by providing the minimum age for entry and security for their entitlement upon completion. If concerted efforts are made to make the and conditions for the scheme more transparent and secure, it will serve a very useful purpose in the empowerment of young adults, not only in Igbo land, but it will enhance the country’s gross domestic product.”

https://crossriverwatch.com/2024/12/victims-explain-why-igbo-apprenticeship-system-is-failing/?amp=1

10 Likes 4 Shares

helinues: 6:06pm On Dec 11, 2024
AfonjaEmir:
grin...

Yoruba obsession.

The apprenticeship system failed according to Yoruba hate mongers.


Atleast the skull mining, tout grooming and Propaganda training institute in the south West is growing astronomically.

Yoruba youths litter everywhere 'jobless and foolish' doing nothing but being pickpockets and armed robbers after shouting mandate foolishly.


Such a sad representation of a failed tribe called YORUBA in the South West Of NIGERIA.

RONU.

Could you show us where Yoruba was mentioned in this epistle and how the story is related to them

185 Likes 18 Shares

Okiton: 6:19pm On Dec 11, 2024
cheesy

My own them been want used hunger finish me, Na so I run away after one month.

The agreement was to settle me after five years. Omo hunger wan finish me under one month.

49 Likes

PulaPower: 6:22pm On Dec 11, 2024
Eyahh..

4 Likes 1 Share

Sp1ritHusband(m): 6:23pm On Dec 11, 2024
It is not an good system though it has favored a few in the past. You are wholly at the mercy of your master.

29 Likes

mrvitalis(m): 6:24pm On Dec 11, 2024
No system is 100% perfect... But apprenticeship system has more successful graduate than any university in Nigeria.. It has over 80% success rate

There are people who weren't settled but went learned a job made money n reopened the business

Some start by doing Oso-ahia raise money to trade

Most apprentice boys make enough money from Oso-ahia before being settled even

71 Likes 8 Shares

AmiableMosquito: 6:29pm On Dec 11, 2024
The dishonest masters who unfortunately happen to be in the majority are the ones ruining the once effective apprenticeship system.

Just last month, I was listening to one who brought his case to the popular radio programme "Brekete Family", and lamented about how his master used him for 9 years (after initially agreeing on just 6 years) and left him without any form of settlement thereafter. He narrated how his boss would ask him and the other apprentice to come and wash clothes including the boss wife's panties in his residence. He bought bathroom slippers for them which he mandated them to wear always and warned them never to wear any other footwear apart from bathroom slippers which he would still seize anytime they "misbehaved", leaving them to walk bare footed as a form of punishment. It was really heart-wrenching to hear the guy's ordeal that morning.

There is also another man who lives very close to my housee and who sells water tanks in large quantities. I see how he treats his apprentice whenever they visit and it makes me wonder if these men have any conscience at all.

Every labourer deserves his/her wages. I think it is better to sign agreements with enough witnesses and notarise it properly before embarking on the journey of apprenticeship.

44 Likes 1 Share

Softmirror: 6:29pm On Dec 11, 2024
🤔

1 Like

AmiableMosquito: 6:31pm On Dec 11, 2024
helinues:


Could you show us where Yoruba was mentioned in this epistle and how the story is related to them
You shouldn't have given him any attention. I think there must have been a security breach in some psychiatric facilities recently. The amount of lunatics roaming online and offline lately is appalling and worrisome.

64 Likes 3 Shares

Mugu44: 6:33pm On Dec 11, 2024
helinues:


Could you show us where Yoruba was mentioned in this epistle and how the story is related to them

Once you tell us where Peter Obi was mentioned here & how your rabble relates to him.
Bloody hypocrite

helinues:


No mind them. Na Peter Obi technology center Dem wan say

22 Likes 2 Shares

missjekyll: 6:40pm On Dec 11, 2024
It has got its good sides but probably needs reforms now .

3 Likes 1 Share

chiozor: 6:41pm On Dec 11, 2024
The system is very rubbish and needs to be scrapped off that is why we have many rich people that are illiterate and made to sit at home Monday shouting imaginary Biafra or at most regulated that only graduate can participate in that. Biafra issue real exposes Igbos as empty with no brain!

26 Likes 3 Shares

free2ryhme: 6:50pm On Dec 11, 2024
zero8zero:
Jude Eze looks frail. At his Orhom Orba village in Udenu LGA of Enugu State, Jude appears to be living in anguish of wasted years of apprenticeship in Cotonou, Benin Republic. He claims that his dream of becoming a self-made man before the age of 30 is now a mirage.

“I am 44,” he begins his story, with his pale hands shaking. “I served my master for nine years, from 2002. Two months to the end of my apprenticeship, my boss, Emeka Eze, took away the capital and gains in my shop to import motorcycle tubes and tyres from China. The goods turned out to be fake. That was how that business collapsed.”

Jude said his master explained to him the misfortune that befell his business. “I forgive him,” he says. “What would I have done? I returned home to learn carpentry, which is what I do now. I feel my master didn’t plan well.”

Ernest Nwabueze lives in Enugu. His apprenticeship foray took him to Gombe where he learnt selling of clothes. Ernest served his master for seven years, then the unfortunate happened. “My master claimed he was swindled by some dubious importers,” he says. “His business collapsed. We wrote an agreement before the commencement of the apprenticeship. Considering what happened, I forgave him.” Ernest is currently doing menial jobs to sustain his young family.

He raises a pertinent issue: “My master wanted to even sell some of his assets to settle me, but his family refused. I see cheating because I generated money that he invested. He could have settled me, no matter the sum, from there.”

Ernest advises the youth to learn skilled apprenticeship instead of buying and selling. “If an apprentice learns welding or mechanics, he can use the knowledge to sustain himself even if his master decides not to settle him. Trading involves capital.”

Chukwuebuka Odo, residing at Iwollo in Ezeagu LGA of Enugu State, quit secondary education for an apprenticeship. “As the first son in my family,” he gives reasons, “I chose to undergo apprenticeship in Lagos for ten years. Towards the end, my master claimed he had no money to settle me because he had issues with his wife. I looked at all these and decided to take my destiny into hands. I stayed in Lagos briefly. Someone gave me some money which I used to transport myself back home. I returned with nothing.”

One of the shortcomings of the once-thriving Igbo apprenticeship system, according to him, is that some masters take their apprentices for granted. “There should be established plans to settle apprentices; not in the dying minutes. I recall some of my colleagues that were frustrated for minor reasons, such as drinking beer, having girlfriends.”

My Friend Died Mysteriously Doing Apprenticeship – Youth
Chizoba, 25, is from Umachi in Igboeze South LGA. “I’ll never do it,” he states. He claims the mysterious death of two brothers undergoing apprenticeship informed his stance. “They were killed overseas. One has been buried; the younger one is yet to be buried. Some masters assign dangerous roles to their apprentices. No one knows why two brothers should die. They were shot differently. I will remain in my Okada business.”

The fear expressed by Chizoba is shared by Mrs Juliana Odo, from Ezimo. “I can’t entrust my child upon anyone. There are many stories of disappearance, deaths and failure to settle these apprentices.”

Some Masters Are ‘Occultic’ – Patent Medicine Dealer
Cajethan Nnadi is a veteran patent medicine dealer. “At least, ten apprentices have ed through me,” Nnadi hints. “Four of them today run their respective pharmaceutical companies. Some masters belong to cults. I won’t belong to any cult to evade settling my apprentice. I would rather inform the person to learn and be settled by his people. But if such a person agrees to serve me for the stipulated time and conducts himself ethically, I will never disappoint him.”

Nnadi, however, alleges that some apprentices are thieves. “Some apprentices have stealing traits,” says Nnadi. “No matter what, they will steal from their masters. Some build houses. In that case, don’t blame the masters for sacking them.”

Swearing An Oath A Solution!
Oliver Eze owns a thriving building materials company at 9th Mile, Udi LGA of Enugu State. “I normally assign a shop to each at a stage of the apprenticeship. I don’t expect them to be hungry or not to dress well. But they are forbidden to steal my money or embark on capital projects while under me. They swear an oath. Faithful ones receive my blessings, and they always do well. There is joy in making apprentices great.”

Igbo Boys Shun Apprenticeship For ‘Yahoo Yahoo’ – Welder
Onwuka Eze, a welder, seems fulfilled doing his job along the Enugu-Makurdi expressway. Asked the cause of the disinterestedness among Igbo youths to go into apprenticeship, Onwuka snaps, “Yahoo yahoo! They don’t want to learn skills even if you make it free. Some complain about settlement. But let them learn first. They will be looking at the incomes of their masters. I advise our youth to be patient because skills give cool money.”

Benjamin Ugwu, fashion and designer at Nsukka, shares the same opinion, “Young boys don’t want to learn skills,” he affirms. “Yahoo-yahoo is trending everywhere. How sustainable, I don’t know! When they see their age mates below 20 making millions of naira, they feel apprenticeship is a waste of time.”

On refusal of some masters to settle their apprentices, Ugwu asserts, “I can’t generalize. If the person is calm and follow the ethics of the learning, I believe most masters will happily settle their apprentices. Writing an agreement should be done.”

The Scheme Can Be Revived – Nnadi
Uchenna Nnadi, director general of Nsukka Chamber of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture, agrees that the Igbo Apprenticeship System (IAS) is a means of transmitting and creating wealth. He traces its origin to 2000 BC during the era of iron ore smelting work at Leja in Nsukka LGA. He also agrees that it was the weapon that re-launched the economy of Ndigbo after the Biafran war.

“The scheme is both an incubator and venture capital for MSMEs,” he states. “It is a self-contained system with little or no external , including government recognition. Yet it has produced globally notable ambassadors. Despite the enormous strengths and opportunities inherent in IAS, there are also challenges based on the fact that it thrives on the informal sector.”

The government neither regulates nor funds it, he says, adding that the implications include poor research and development on IAS, as well as lack of public laws and rules guiding IAS. “It is neither recognized nor integrated with Nigeria’s formal educational system,” he says. “This often leads to the master not settling the apprentice and/or the apprentice stealing the master’s money with no satisfactory arbitration system for both parties. Some masters had taken to initiating themselves and their apprentices into cults. The above challenges have made many masters rather seek sales girls and boys other than apprentices.”

To make it functional, Nnadi suggests Igbo town unions engage Southeast stakeholders, such as the South-East Chamber of Commerce, the academia, traders’ associations, lawmakers, and government, to begin to create formal rules for the Igbo Apprenticeship System. “If it is integrated into the mainstream educational system, Southeast governors should anchor fiscal incentivization of Igbo Apprenticeship System,” he added.

Nze Kanayo Chukwumezie is the founder of Maka Odimma Igbo, which is championing the revival of the Igbo apprenticeship system. “This scheme is responsible for what Igboland is today,” he narrates. “Knowing that Igbos were reduced to £20 each after the civil war irrespective of the amount you have in the bank, any system that contributed to this phantom leap is worth promoting. It is the apprenticeship scheme that did that magic.”

He regretted the abuses that had killed the scheme. “Some masters frame up accusations against their apprentices, especially towards the end of their apprenticeship to evade settling them,” says Kanayo. “Also some apprentices milk their Oga till they are caught. There was one apprentice building a duplex in his village while still serving.”

He explains that his group has pushed for the formalization of the system: “Its formalization as advocated by my group is to checkmate such abuses in line with global best practices. We advocate a central system where every apprenticeship contract shall be ed from towns to regions with clear . Because incomes can stop coming, we want the masters to deposit a certain amount into a consolidated that can only be released to the apprentice at the end of the scheme. If there be any misconduct by the apprentice, the master shall report it immediately to the body for action.

“We also want to introduce this scheme in our schools to enable our youths that cannot calculate or read and write to take classes in English and maths, even if evening or weekend classes. We plan to have a central certificate issuance system for all people that successfully complete the scheme with the master as one of the signatories with the central and regional heads.”

He recalls with joy that the apprenticeship scheme has drawn the attention of Harvard Business School which adopted it as a vibrant business model in 2021. “It is therefore today acknowledged as the world’s best business model. We the owners should take it to a higher level,” he canvasses

There Should Be Legislation To Make It Binding – Lawyer
Barr Ken Ike is a constitutional lawyer. He its that most times, the and conditions for the scheme are not secured by a written agreement.

“Due to the verbal nature of the and conditions, any mishap to the master will exonerate him from the responsibility assumed upon taking up the young adult,” Barr Ike states. “There are also incidences of abuse of the young adult either by his master or someone who was expected to coach the young adult. The young adults may suffer undue peer influence which could lead them astray, especially when the master is not prudent or meticulous.”

He proffers the solutions. “There has to be a formal agreement to guide and protect the interest of the parties. The government should intervene by raising the bar of protection available to the young adults by providing the minimum age for entry and security for their entitlement upon completion. If concerted efforts are made to make the and conditions for the scheme more transparent and secure, it will serve a very useful purpose in the empowerment of young adults, not only in Igbo land, but it will enhance the country’s gross domestic product.”



https://crossriverwatch.com/2024/12/victims-explain-why-igbo-apprenticeship-system-is-failing/


let me add the source

4 Likes

IGBOPROMISE1: 6:55pm On Dec 11, 2024
chiozor:
The system is very rubbish and needs to be scrapped off that is why we have many rich people that are illiterate and made to sit at home Monday shouting imaginary Biafra or at most regulated that only graduate can participate in that. Biafra issue real exposes Igbos as empty with no brain!

'Chiozor' my black ass!

Yoruba man, do yourself a favour and shut up! Your fear and obsession with Mazi Kanu and IPOB secession bid didn't start today.....take another look at your miserable profile!

25 Likes 2 Shares

helinues: 6:59pm On Dec 11, 2024
Mugu44:


Once you tell us where Peter Obi was mentioned here & how your rabble relates to him.
Bloody hypocrite



So that guy is a king on this thread, you can't condemn him for his incoherency bah?

38 Likes 2 Shares

Mugu44: 7:08pm On Dec 11, 2024
helinues:


So that guy is a king on this thread, you can't condemn him for his incoherency bah?

How was today's interview?

7 Likes 1 Share

SuperOnyi: 7:21pm On Dec 11, 2024
shocked



Before I read this article, I just want to let you know that despite its "success," Nwaboi apprenticeship has been used to destroy a lot of Igbo lives. Believe me, I spent years doing that rubbish and almost lost my mind.

Edit: If it is not innovated, it will die horribly... it's quite unfortunate that these evil Igbo men and youth destroyed such genius idea.

13 Likes

SuperOnyi: 8:17pm On Dec 11, 2024
AfonjaEmir:
grin...

Yoruba obsession.

The apprenticeship system failed according to Yoruba hate mongers.


Atleast the skull mining, tout grooming and Propaganda training institute in the south West is growing astronomically.

Yoruba youths litter everywhere 'jobless and foolish' doing nothing but being pickpockets and armed robbers after shouting mandate foolishly.


Such a sad representation of a failed tribe called YORUBA in the South West Of NIGERIA.

RONU.


shocked



Shut up, have you ever served anyone? If not STFU and keep yorubas out of this, fóol! Don't be like GeneralPula!

20 Likes 2 Shares

Christistruth02: 8:22pm On Dec 11, 2024
It is because of Yahoo Yahoo

5 Likes

LoveJesus87(m): 8:31pm On Dec 11, 2024
Okiton:
cheesy

My own them been want used hunger finish me, Na so I run away after one month.

The agreement was to settle me after five years. Omo hunger wan finish me under one month.
and worse, they may not settle u even after dat 5 years...no be human being again?

7 Likes

AcadaWriter0: 9:12pm On Dec 11, 2024
The untrustworthy masters, who unfortunately make up the majority, are damaging the once effective apprenticeship system. Just last month, I heard a story on the popular radio program Brekete Family about someone who shared his experience of being used by his master for 9 years, despite an initial agreement of just 6 years, and being left without any form of settlement afterward. He recounted how his boss would ask him and the other apprentices to wash clothes, including personal items, at his home. The master provided bathroom slippers for them, insisting they wear only those and threatening to take them away as punishment, leaving them to walk barefoot. It was truly heartbreaking to hear his ordeal. There is also a man who lives near me and sells water tanks in large quantities. I observe how he treats his apprentices during their visits, which makes me question whether these individuals have any sense of responsibility. Every worker deserves fair compensation. I believe it is wise to sign agreements with sufficient witnesses and have them properly notarized before starting an apprenticeship.

4 Likes

Pentagon007: 9:26pm On Dec 11, 2024
The Originator of this post is talking nonsense. The apprenticeship system is still working very fine and raising tons of Igbo billionaires.

This is just a hatchet job by the Usual Of..manu people to discredit anything that favours Ndigbo. Seeing how lazy and unsuccessful the average Yoruba youth has become. I have encouraged upto 5 youths to embark on apprenticeship and so far, they are doing wonderfully well with their various masters in their various trade.

14 Likes 1 Share

omode2(m): 9:27pm On Dec 11, 2024
The system is failing because of bad economy which is affecting trading, five years is a very long time to serve someone now. You will feed, clothe and house them, is even better to employ than having apprentices.

7 Likes

GeneralPula: 10:28pm On Dec 11, 2024
SuperOnyi:



shocked



Shut up, have you ever served anyone? If not STFU and keep yorubas out of this, fóol! Don't be like GeneralPula!
You’ve been noticed..

5 Likes

SuperOnyi: 11:01pm On Dec 11, 2024
GeneralPula:

You’ve been noticed..


shocked


You still want the Igbo people dead, huh?

4 Likes 1 Share

fortunez1(m): 12:30am On Dec 12, 2024
Ogas no longer settle

1 Like

fortunez1(m): 12:30am On Dec 12, 2024
G
fortunez1(m): 12:30am On Dec 12, 2024
K
AdolfHitlerxXx: 2:58am On Dec 12, 2024
grin grin

1 Like

Samfloxin(m): 3:48am On Dec 12, 2024
No wonder some of the boys settle themselves while in the apprentice system. The one I know bought landed properties while still serving his Oga .

7 Likes

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