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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Power: Presidency takes on Christiane Amanpour, CNN

…Christiane Amanpour and our Stockholm Syndrome



As we approach 2014, the year in which Nigeria attains her centenary, it may probably begin to enter the consciousness of Nigerians that this nation has been in existence for much longer than many had previously thought. Alongside this realization, would be a dawning that many of the issues we need to address, as a nation, have been decades in the making and common reasoning would make it obvious that there’s no magic fix for problems that took decades to create.

You don’t go to the gym from the first time at age 40 – unfit and completely out of shape – do a set of bench presses and expect to walk out with muscles. There’s a law of process in nature and you either learn to harness it or you break yourself trying to bypass it.

And it is in recognition of this law that Nigeria’s literary icon, Professor Chinua Achebe, a man who has lived through 83 of the 99 years of which Nigeria has been in existence advised in his most recent best seller, There was a Country, that “we must learn patience and not expect instant miracles”.

We live in a world that spins on its axis, but we remain unaware of this movement of the earth, conditioned by our relative minuteness to remain unconscious of this scientific fact. However, there are those committed to the specific knowledge of this force of nature, who are continually in observation of this phenomenon. Once in a while, those ignorant of the scientific facts attempt to argue with the scientists, calling them liars. These arguments don’t make the scientists liars. Disagreeing with facts doesn’t turn them to lies. Facts remain unmoved by disbelief or cynicism.

This ignorant and loud approach to disagreeing with facts is the unfortunate trend I have observed in the Nigerian social media space where an extremely loud minority hold the preconceived mindset that ‘if it is not happening to me, it is not happening in Nigeria’. This is an extremely shallow and narcissistic view.

Responsible self-leadership requires that if one decides to assume the position of a public commentator, as so many on social media wish to be, there is also a responsibility of widening one’s world view, so as not to mislead the people whom you desire as followers. A true leader is a fact seeker and follows the facts wherever they may lead. A true leader makes research based conclusions.

For example, you can’t sit in your home and conclude that since the power situation in the country has not improved where you live, that it hasn’t improved at all for others in the country. That in itself betrays a selfishness and a corruption of the narrative because you have reduced Nigeria to your locality and give off the impression that you are speaking of Nigeria as a nationality.

A still of the interview.
A still of the interview.
Celebrated CNN anchor, Christiane Amanpour did a show on the Super Bowl power failure in America and decided to ask CNN’s correspondent in Nigeria to do some OpenMicinterviews on the power situation in our country. What happened? Vladimir Duthiers found a location in Lagos where he asked Nigerians to appraise the power situation in their country. Some people said it was terrible, some said it had improved. But CNN, for the purpose of sensationalism decided to edit out the voices that projected a positive report and only reported those who painted a sorry picture. By shutting down voices that she didn’t want to hear, Amanpour misled the world in her report and that’s very sad.

Why did Amanpour do this? Her show was a calculated attempt to cover the national embarrassment of the Super Bowl outage by ridiculing Nigeria and video testimonials of Nigerians affirming that power in their country had improved would not fit into her pre-conceived narrative of selling the misery of African nations to the world, hence they were not used in her report.

I am saying this with all seriousness and those who would accuse me of spinning the truth may want to listen to the audio of the unedited interviews here (http://tinyurl.com/9wthgaq) And compare with what Ms. Amanpour presented to the world here (http://tinyurl.com/bxnquvz)

On the issue of the power situation in Nigeria, there are some who may disagree that the power situation in Nigeria is improving but it is a fact. Nigeria in the last three years has increased from 2800 MWs to 4500 MWs.

Obviously, in a nation of 170 million people this is grossly insufficient, however, Nigerians ought to remember that between 1980 and 1999 no new investments were made in the power sector. In fact, the Egbin power station that was commissioned in the very early 80′s was the last power plant that was built in Nigeria before the launch of the National Integrated Power Project (NIPP) and the contract for that plant was awarded in the 70′s.

So how can we have a situation where our population increased for 20 years and no investments were made in building new power plants and Nigerians who remained silent all that time want to heap all the blame on the administration that is finally doing what ought to have been done? As Lord Denning said in the celebrated case of UAC vs Mcfoy, “you can’t place something on nothing and expect it to stand”!

It used to be back in the day that activists were people passionate about their nation, but accidental activists of today are passionate about power. They criticize ferociously using the foulest language but are themselves so intolerant of criticism and have a horde of impressionable youngsters who would unleash a torrent of insults on any one who dares criticize them.

And the reason these men masquerading as activities are able to hoodwink many in the theater of Social Media is because they have clued on to the psyche of the Nigerian netizen which is that cynicism is celebrated as intelligence.

For example, it is a natural and spiritual law that what you appreciate increases in value and occurrence. So for instance if a child shows good manners and you celebrate him or her, the child is likely to display good manners more often, not because he/she necessarily wants to be good mannered but because the child likes to be celebrated.

Now imagine that two children lived in a home and there was darkness and the first child who was eight years of age was given N16 and then sent on an errand to buy batteries for a rechargeable lamp. Imagine that he bought just one battery and this was not sufficient. And so the second child who was three was given N4 and went to the same store and instead of buying just one battery, he bought two which was still insufficient. Under what scenario would the older child who was given more money have the audacity to criticize the younger child who wasgiven less money but bought more batteries for the house?

It would be tempting to say that no scenario could exist for such an eventuality. But, then you don’t know this house. The inhabitants of this house are so present-minded. They remember not the N16 and the one battery. It is in the past, and after all the 8-year-old has explained his frustrations with the battery buying system, and even gave a half-hearted apology and though he never brought back change, he was forgiven. In this house, the fault must be that of the 3-year-old, he’s the problem. Why? He managed to buy twice the number of batteries his 8-year-old bought with one-forth of what his elder was given. Unfair, you may scream.

But that is the exact situation we find ourselves in Nigeria. A social media user expressed anger at me for celebrating the revival of Nigeria’s previously moribund railway networks and asked me if that was what obtained in America where I lived for many years. Apparently this fellow wasn’t taught that in making comparisons you should first compare what is with what was and only then can you appreciate progress.

Before the American rail system got to where it is, there was a consistent investment by several administrations who kept building on what they met, till they went from A to B to C all the way to Z.

Nigeria’s railways had been moribund for over a decade and rather than applaud the leadership that removed the shame of a nation some people expect that we can go from moribund to fast speed trains, which is akin to asking a child to move from crawling to running.

James Russell Lovell once wrote that “No one can produce great things who is not thoroughly sincere in dealing with himself”. As Nigerians, we have to be sincere with ourselves. We cannot allow our narrative to be hijacked by tragic heroes, who have written epistles to rubbish all those whose backs they have climbed on to success and praise those whose backs they still need to climb.

Is it not said that a slave who has seen his fellow slave buried in a shallow grave must know that he too will be so buried when his own time comes? Social Media is now the ladder on which bitter people who served in government and left under a cloud of disgrace want to climb to power. One only has to look back at what these disgruntled elements did to the people who helped them rise to power, to know exactly what the future holds for the people they are presently using.

I appeal to Nigerians, to resist this tendency to display the symptoms of Stockholm Syndrome where victims of abuse end up having sympathy for their abusers. Even if you believe there is nothing you can do to make Nigeria great, at least believe that Nigeria can be great. Don’t let bitter persons sap away your faith in your nation. Of course, there are a lot of challenges but things are getting better!

Disgruntled persons may tell you that our economy is not doing well, but the facts don’t support them. Let me present some of the facts to you. Only last year, the Clinton Foundation identified Nigeria as one of the ten fastest growing economies in the world.

On the 10th of October 2012 while addressing the Annual Conservative Party Conference, David Cameron said “We’ve been hearing about China and India for years but it’s hard to believe what’s happening in Brazil, in Indonesia, in Nigeria.”

His Undersecretary of State for Africa, Mr. Henry Bellingham said of Nigeria, “Nigeria has averaged growth of 8.9 per cent which is really stunning. Nigeria is the world’s fourth fastest growing economy with solid growth in the next five years and beyond; this is truly remarkable.”

When the papers reported that President Barack Obama had declared Nigeria the “world’s next economic success story” on August 26th 2012, I tweeted about it and somebody actually tweeted back in response saying, “what does he know of economics?!”

Some may disagree that poverty is reducing but it’s not a lie. According to the World Bank, poverty in Nigeria reduced from 48 to 46%. I did not make this up and the Federal Government has no control over these foreign individuals and institutions. They cheer for no team in the contest, so why would they lie?

Only this morning I woke up to the cheery news that Nigeria’s inflation had reduced to 9% the first time it has hit single digit in four years!

We can invest so much intellectual and emotional energy on painting a negative image of our country on Social Media andcelebrate when Miss Amanpour makes Nigeria the butt of her jokes to a worldwide audience, but not everyone will be laughing in scorn. Some will actually be laughing all the way to the bank. And I know some of those who will be among this lot. Only three days ago Leadership Newspapers ran as its front headline the story “Exodus, The Movement of British-Born Nigerians… Back to Nigeria”.

While some Nigerians resident at home are getting carried away by the gospel of negativity being peddled by tainted persons, Nigeria is seeing a reverse brain drain of highly skilled Nigerians born in Europe and the Americas who know that in a world where many nations struggle with negative GDP growth there must be many things right about a nation with consistent 7% GDP growth.








Source - Vanguard News

Whither Nigeria in the goal of HIV prevention, elimination?

ONE of the international goals and strategies related to elimination and prevention of HIV infection in infants and young children as set by the United Nations General Assembly Special Session, UNGASS, in 1996, was reduction of infant and child mortality rate by at least one-third by 2010.

Specifically, the UNGASS mandate was reduction of the proportion of infants infected with HIV by 20 per cent by 2005, and 50 per cent by 2010.

Towards achieving these goals, it was recognised that prevention of HIV infection in pregnant women should be part of a comprehensive approach both to HIV prevention and care for women and children on one hand, and to maternal and child reproductive health services on the other. Also recognised was the reduction of HIV transmission during breastfeeding.

Breastfeeding is normally the best way to feed an infant, but it isfact that HIV transmission can occur through breastfeeding.

An HIV positive mother can transmit the virus to her baby during pregnancy, labour or after delivery. Data show that maternal- foetal HIV infection varies between 15 to 30 per cent in the absence of any intervention and breastfeeding, but increases by another 15-30 per cent if such babies are breastfed without intervention.

HIV5
Research show that prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV is a public health responsibility especially in a country like Nigeria where there is a relatively high rate of HIV infection among pregnant women. Hence, the recognition of supporting optimal breastfeeding approaches.

Nevertheless, a major challenge of HIV prevention, control and management is the issue of infant feeding. To put issues of general guidance on HIV and infant feeding into practice, the World Heath Organisation, WHO, the UN and other stakeholders, designed the Revised Guidelines for HIV and Infant Feeding.

Policy decision

When it was released, this document aimed to provide information on issues to be considered in relation to infant and young child feeding in the context of HIV, and to highlight areas of special concern on which policy decision needed to be made.

Targeted at policy and decision makers, the guidelines in question contain an overview of international policy, goals and guidelines as well as background on HIV and infant feeding and the current recommendations for HIV positive women.

Among other major considerations related to different feeding options, was the strategic approach towards development or revision of national policies on infant and young child feeding, with and incorporation of HIV component. Issues to be highlighted include the provision of free or low-cost infant formulae; suggestions for protection, promotion and support of appropriate infant feeding in the community particularly at the grass roots and other key issues supporting HIV -positive women in their infant feeding decision.

Worldwide, increasing evidence indicate that strategies and intervention for the prevention and elimination of mother to -child transmission of HIV are effective.

The prevention and elimination of mother to -child transmission of HIV, comprises the primary prevention of HIV infection and unwanted pregnancy as well as transmission of HIV from an HIV positive mother to her baby.

Research shows these are achievable through voluntary counseling, testing and administration of Nevirapine – an anti Retroviral drug. Provision of infant feeding options including breast milk substitutes as well as follow-up counseling, top the list.

Nigeria has been part of this historic movement and essentially, the goal of the PMTCT and eMTCT project is to generate information for formation of a national policy and implementation of guidelines for a comprehensive PMTCT intervention.

True, not all children born of HIV positive mothers become infected with the virus. Estimates show that about 85 per cent of infants and children living with HIV get infected throughtheir mothers.

But one of the reasons why children living in Sub-Sahara, Africa are particularly more vulnerable to HIV infection is because African women are more likely to transmit the virus to their children than their European counterparts, probably as a result of differences in the way of management of pregnancies.

In the country today, HIV transmission still constitutes a threat to gains of immunisation and improved child survival, regardless of integration of the components of HIV Counselling and Testing,

Mother-to-child transmission yet accounts for most HIV infections in children under the age of 15 years. Nigeria with a national HIV seroprevalence rate of 4.1 percent has the second highest HIV burden in the world after South Africa and is the country with the largest number of unprevented childhood HIV infection.

Worse still, less than 20 percent HIV-infected pregnant women have been reached with PMTCT interventions. Evidently, there is an unmet need for PMTCT services in Nigeria. What this entails is the need for universal incorporation of voluntary HCT antibody testing and counseling into routine antenatal care services, while providing prophylactic antiretroviral drugs such as Nevirapine to HIV-positive pregnant women and their babies.

The global message is that ensuring availability of safer obstetric practices in public and private health institutions and provisions for counseling and support services for informed decisions on feeding for mothers and their babies remains crucial.

So also is the promotion of exclusive breastfeeding upwards of one year in HIV-positive women and women of unknown HIV status and comprehensive follow-up care and support to HIV -positive women, their infants and families.

By developing policies and programmes to reduce vulnerability to HIV infection, as well as providing information about HIV infection in infants and young children, and addressing cultural and social factors that condone risk of HIV transmission. Nigeria would be well and truly on the path towards achieving the UNGASS objective.









Source - Vanguard News

Most Nigerian billionaires are corrupt – Akinyemi


Former Minister of External Affairs, Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi
A former Minister of External Affairs, Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi, on Saturday said it was not possible for any Nigerian to be a billionaire without being corrupt.

Akinyemi stated this in Akure, the Ondo State capital while delivering the second term inauguration lecture of Governor Olusegun Mimiko.

The professor of International Relations and Diplomacy spoke on the topic, ‘Leadership, Democracy, and Development.’

He said at the event chaired by a former Nigerian High Commissioner to United Kingdom, Dr. Christopher Kolade, that “being a billionaire in Nigeria today without corruption is impossible.”

Akinyemi said, “No one can be a billionaire in Nigeria today without being corrupt. If you are a businessman, you would have evaded tax or other levies like import duties with the active connivance of those in charge.

“Your entire income as a political office holder, either elected or appointed, cannot make you a billionaire without indulging in corrupt practices. It is also not possible for you to work and retire as a civil servant in whatever capacity and become a billionaire without being corrupt.

“I know I am stepping on sensitive toes but I can handle that. Unless our leaders tackle the issue of corruption and offer selfless service to the people, our democracy may not produce the desired development we are all expecting.”

Akinyemi lamented that Nigerians had sacrificed value systems on the altar of greed, indiscipline, selfishness and insatiable craze for material wealth acquisition.

He said, “There are no more values to hold on to. Parents not only encourage their children to cheat in order to beat the system but also aid and abet them in their nefarious activities. No one believes anymore in the concept of society.

“Nigerians have created their own God in their own image. In my youth, to be accused of theft or any other criminal offence was tantamount to being banished from the society while to be convicted was tantamount to suicide.

“However, today, no one asks for the source of wealth. People in jail, accused of murder run for, and win elections.

“More than a score of members of the Senate have EFCC court cases hanging against them. Only in Nigeria do you steal billions and escape with less than a million naira fine.”

Akinyemi noted that Nigeria problem, which invariably led to its backwardness in all ramifications, started after the military coup which displaced the first civilian generation of Nigerian leaders.

“Only three years after independence, whatever system existed was shattered by the thoughtless overthrow of the western regional government and from then on, politics of development was replaced by politics of looting,” he stated.

He also blamed the judiciary both at the bar and bench, for the upsurge in corrupt practices in the country by granting frivoulous bails to those indicted for corruption.

He suggested that for the country to move forward, “the political elite must make a conscious effort to arrive at a consensus that will be outcome of negotiation, give and take and compromises.”

The occasion was attended by seasoned diplomats, senior citizens, politicians, former governors, traditional rulers and religious leaders from within and outside the country.










Source - Punch News

Boyfriends cause emotional disturbance — 20-year-old First Class graduate


Wande-Kayode
Adetutu Wande-Kayode’s father died when she was four but this was not enough to kill her quest for academic excellence. She tells LEKE BAIYEWU how she broke the Department of Mass Communication’s record to graduate with a first class from the University of Lagos

How difficult was it for you to step out of the shadows of disappointment early in life?

I am the last child in a family of six. My father had a degree in demography from the then University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University), while my mother studied Mathematics and Statistics at the Kwara State Polytechnic.

Significant to my growing up experience was my dad’s death while I was four years old. My mother was very strong through those years and through her, I learnt to trust in God from childhood. My mother, out of her caring attitude resigned from her banking job before my dad’s death, when she noticed we were not doing so well in school.

After my father’s death, rather than returning to her banking job, she felt we needed her more than ever before. Even though it appeared to be one of the most ridiculous things to do at that time, God really used her to ensure that we all had a very good upbringing. She chose to be her own boss in order to spend more time with her children.

She is 50 now and her happiness is that we are all graduates of various universities.

When did it dawn on you that you have special academic talent?

Learning comes naturally to me although there is a reason for that. I went through three primary schools in Ilorin and Lagos States before completing my primary education at Fun Bell Nursery and Primary School, Iyana-Ipaja, Lagos. I can remember that almost everything learnt was through songs and we had to sing so many of them on the assembly ground each morning.

I was not comfortable with it because it was different from the background I had in Ilorin but I adjusted in a short time. Those things actually helped because all the formulas I had to remember in examinations were the lyrics of the songs, so I only had to recall the songs to get the formulas. Soon, they started coming naturally whenever I wanted to remember anything learnt in the classroom.

At Government Junior College, Agege, Lagos State, I was the assistant senior prefect and became the senior prefect during my senior secondary schooldays. These were public schools and there I learnt to hold my own in the midst of different people with different family backgrounds. It was quite an experience!

What were the challenges you experienced when you got to university before you clocked 16?

My journey to the university was not difficult because I prepared for the transition. I had seven distinctions and two credits while I was in SS2 and scored 271 in the University Matriculation Examination (now Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination) while in my final secondary class. I also scored 80 per cent in the UNILAG’s post-UME test.

Apart from personal effort, my siblings, who had been in UNILAG shared their experiences with me and their encouragement made my admission process faster. My name came out on the merit list for the 2008/2009 academic session. I was barely 16.

I faced tougher competition at the university because I was no longer a ‘local champion’ as I used to be. Every secondary school’s bests were well represented and I faded fast into the background. I had no hostel accommodation and was living with fellow coursemates in them. There were various social groups but I had no interest. There were many things going on in the school that I considered as distractions, so I kept to my studies and it helped me regain my confidence that I could be the best again.

How did you handle pressure from your friends to join them in social activities?

As a child, I was trained to be independent. So despite my young age, I knew how to take decisions on my own and maintain my position. At UNILAG, many ladies received more telephone calls between 7pm and 11pm and to which the common response was, “Are you downstairs? Okay, I’m coming.” From there, they went out with some guys and only return around midnight when the gates to the hostels were about to be closed.

The fresh students were particularly more willing to explore freedom but I was not, in the least, swayed. Eventually, by the time first semester results were out, I topped my class and by then many others learnt their lessons. Of course, I learnt so many new things too. The importance of networking was one of them.

Did you have a boyfriend on campus or anywhere?

No, I did not have a boyfriend on campus or anywhere else.

But you must have noticed some interest from some guys in the school?

I saw nothing wrong in having a boyfriend anyway, but I thought I was too young for serious relationship. I knew I still had enough time on my hands. So, there was really no need to rush into it. I believed that having one, especially in the early years of my education, might have being a source of distraction.

It would mean obligatory outings; constant communication and probably emotional disturbance; being in the library for six hours and concentrating for only two hours; reading at the pace of two pages per hour and all the other hindrances. It would have had a negative effect on my effectiveness as a student, especially as it would mean I would have to share my time; time that was ever fleeting.

Did you actually study hard for the purpose of leaving as the best student?

I wanted to be the best and I worked towards it but more importantly, I did not want to disappoint my mother who told me that I would graduate with the best result in my department.

I did the most important thing, which was to pray. I can still remember one heart-felt prayer I said, just before resumption, while studying and God was faithful.

I chose Mass Communication because I wanted to affect the world by my write-ups. I particularly want to write and change lives.

Actually, my sister also studied Mass Communication in UNILAG and she once came home to inform everyone that there had been no full-time student with a First Class in 30 years or thereabout in the department. Knowing my intention to study Mass Communication in the same university, my mother said with an air of confidence, “Tutu will go and break the record.” My elder brother had also told everyone who cared to listen and I did not want to disappoint them.

By faith, I knew God really answers the effective, heartfelt prayer of righteous men. Hence, I knew I was going to graduate with a first class. Many other people before me were excellent too but they did not come out with a first class. I graduated with a cumulative grade point average of 4.69 and I was also the best graduating student in the department.

How do you feel attaining such academic feat and what is your plan for the future?

I am really elated and grateful to God for He is the lifter of my head. Much more, I’m grateful because I didn’t just come out with good grades. Since I love to teach and write, I plan to lecture after my studies and to blog along with it as well. The educational sector needs fresh hands and the blogosphere needs to be cleared of what I term ‘vanity blogging.’

Who is your role model?

I have more of mentors than role models. My mentors are my mother; Ebimoboere Agbiki of Fotizo Ministry; and Pastor Isaac Idowu of the Great Light Ministry. My mother, because she is such a beauty inside out; I remember the assistance she offered when I had very poor grades in mathematics in Junior Secondary School. She took it upon herself to teach me personally after school. And then, I went on to have A1 in SSCE, despite the fact that I was in arts department.

From her, I have learnt about sacrifice and I think parents do not have to work so hard or pay huge school fees for their children in order to make them academically excellent, if only they can sacrifice their time and be available for their children and wards.









Source - Punch News

Scramble for Nations Cup hero, Mba rages

As player denies Warri Wolves


Super Eagles’ hero at the 2013 Nations Cup, Sunday Mba has balked at claims by Warri Wolves officials that he is their bonafide player.

There are conflicting claims by Rangers of Enugu and Warri Wolves on the where the player’s affirnity lies. But the Mba who scored the only goal that earned the Nations Cup for Nigeria at South Africa 2013 stated that he has fulfilled his contractual pact with the Wolves and wondered why all the noise about his affiliation with the club.

“We were four players that left Warri Wolves before the Nations Cup. Why is it that I am the only one they are bothering. The truth of the matter is that I have no contract with Wolves,” the player said.

Following his impressive run at the Nations Cup scoring two winners against Cote’d Ivoire in the semi-final and Burkina Faso in the final, Mba is primed for a move to Europe. And both clubs are laying claims in order to benefit from the imminent transfer of the player.
Enugu state FA boss Chidi Ofor Okenwa said Mba has always been a player of Rangers. He argued that the player was loaned to Dolphins of Port Harcourt who in turn loaned him to Warri Wolves.

Nigeria's forward Sunday Mba kicks the ball during the African Cup of Nation 2013 quarter final football match Ivory Coast vs Nigeria, on February 3, 2013 in Rustenburg.    AFP PHOTO
Nigeria’s forward Sunday Mba kicks the ball during the African Cup of Nation 2013 quarter final football match Ivory Coast vs Nigeria, on February 3, 2013 in Rustenburg. AFP PHOTO
“We don’t have to start joining issues with Warri Wolves on who owns Sunday Mba. Any contractual agreement of a player is with the state FA, and that is Delta state F A. Like when Mba joined Rangers from Enyimba, he was duly registered in Enugu F A and his papers are still on my table,” said Okenwa.

“Even his loan deal to Dolphin was duly documented.”

However, Warri Wolves spokesman Moses Etu stated that: “ Mba signed a two year contract with us. But last December he told us that he wanted to go back to Rangers. And we let him go, because we didn’t want to hinder any player’s ambition.

“As I am talking to you, I have a letter from the NPL signed by Tunji Babalola which states that the player belongs to Warri Wolves. Foreign clubs are already talking to us concerning his signature. We have all his documents concerning his contractual agreement right with us.”










Source - Vanguard News

UNILAG remains MAULAG – Ministry


UNILAG main entrance
The Federal Ministry of Education has refuted reports that President Goodluck Jonathan had made a U-turn on the change of name of the University of Lagos.

It said on Friday that it had yet to receive any categorical statement from the Federal Government on such a decision.

Reports had quoted the new Chairman of the Governing Council, University of Lagos, Prof. Jerry Gana, as saying President Goodluck Jonathan had changed his mind about renaming the institution after the late Chief Moshood Abiola.

But the Director of Press, Federal Ministry of Education, Mr. Olu Lipede, told our correspondent in Abuja on Friday that the President had yet to issue any statement on the matter, noting that the position of the government about the name change remains.

He said, “The reports that the government has made a U-turn on the renaming of UNILAG are untrue and misleading; what Prof. Jerry Gana said was that the President was observing the rule of law by not forcing his decision to change the name of the university on the people, but followed the due process by allowing the court to decide the matter.

“The President has not issued any categorical statement on the matter and the ministry of education has not received any directive either; so, the directive of the President on the school remains the same.”










Source - Punch News

Getting married to Arese was best thing in my life –Walter Carrington


Walter Carrington
Former United States Ambassador to Nigeria, Walter Carrington, speaks with BOSEDE OLUSOLA-OBASA on his personal life and devotion to advancement of human rights in America and Africa

Can you relive your first visit to Nigeria?

Yes, when I first came to Nigeria in 1959, the year before independence, I came with a group of students on a programme called the Experiment in International Living. We lived with families all around the country. We lived with a family in Lagos, Ibadan, Port Harcourt, Enugu and Kaduna. I remember that in Ibadan we went out to see this new university. I was absolutely impressed with it and was so proud to see such in an African country. It was such a modern structure and it impressed me very much. It was such a beautiful place. But when I returned about 40 years later, I remembered going off to Ibadan and driving on to the campus, and just seeing the place, I could not believe my eyes. Everything seemed to have fallen apart. Upkeep was poor, repairs not done. It disturbed me so much that this university that had been a source of joy was in great disrepair. Then I went to visit the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture in Ibadan, very close to the university. There the grounds were well kept, it was just beautiful, and it looked like what the University of Ibadan should have looked like. There was no reason why there should have been that kind of mismanagement. It is just a waste of resources; I was very, very disappointed that I wept.

Isn’t it a coincidence that your wife studied at the same university?

Yes, she graduated from the University of Ibadan in the 80s. When we met and got married, I told her about what I saw before I met her. I usually teased her about what her university had become. In fact, we discuss it often. But I think that what happened to the university at that time was a metaphor of what was happening in the country generally. There was no culture of maintenance. A lot of money was being spent on all kinds of things, all kinds of structures but then, these were ill-maintained.

You served in the US Army, and studied law, which of those fueled the activism in you?

The United States Army enlistment was not a voluntary thing for me; I must clarify that. At that time in the US, they had to draft every able-bodied person into the Army including me. So when I finished from the law school, I was drafted into the army and I was there for two years. Then I started my law practice and was appointed by the governor as the commissioner of the Commission Against Discrimination, Massachusetts. By that appointment, I became the youngest commissioner the state ever had. I was 27 years old then. At the commission, we were in charge of enforcing laws against discrimination in housing, planning, education, and so on. It made me step on the toes of many powerful people. It was a very challenging but interesting duty for me.

So your activism started there

No, it started long before that. I began to exercise activism when I was in Harvard University in the 1950s. My mother was also involved in labour activities. My parents were divorced when I was very young but my mother kept in touch. Then my father was out on the West Coast and I was in California. My dad was an activist at that time, during the Second World War, while I was in junior high school, he was working at a ship building plant and he was disturbed by the fact that the blacks were being discriminated against. So he organised activities that caused the company to change its policy. He brought the case before the federal commission in charge of employment issues, in Washington. It was charged with seeing that blacks were not discriminated against in the plant. Years later, when I became commissioner against discrimination, I attended the yearly conference that brought such commissions from all states together, and remember meeting someone there. When I introduced myself saying, ‘I am Walter Carrington,’ he said, ‘No. you can’t be Walter Carrington,’ and ‘I say why not?’ He said, ‘Because when I worked at the federal commission, one of my first cases was brought by Walter Carrington,’ and I said, ‘that was my father.’ It was an interesting thing that my father had been so vibrant in activism and now I am here too. But my activism began when I was an undergraduate. We formed a chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People, I was the founding president. It was the leading civilisation movement in America that contributed to deliberations over the historic school desegregation cases. I was upset by the fact that they separated the black students from the white. Besides, the blacks in my class were so few. So we fought against the discrimination policy, to advocate against the non admission of more blacks. We were very active and that got me involved in other things such as political clubbing. I headed the largest political club at that time at Harvard University. I was also made one of the class marshals being the greatest honour that the class could give anyone. They actually elected three to be in charge of the affairs of the class. I earned prominent positions in all of the groups that I worked with as an activist so I came out of school with a real strong activist background. It became a platform for me nationally and internationally. As a result of my involvement with the NAACP, I became a representative of a national student organisation which brought together the heads of the various student organisations all over the country. That organisation was the American chapter of the World Assembly of Youth. It held its first conference in Africa in 1952 and I was elected as a member of the American delegation. We went to Senegal; that was two weeks after I graduated from Harvard University. So, I was off to Africa only two weeks after I completed my degree programme. That really began my activitism on the international platform.

Since activism runs in your blood, are your children in it too?

Our kids – a boy and a girl are also activists at heart in that they believe in the ultimate principle of service to humanity. They believe that whatever they are doing must be doing some good to mankind. Our son coaches younger people, while our daughter is into economic development; watching their parents’ life of service has been an inspiration for them. They believe that the satisfaction of service is greater than financial gains.

Why do you exhibit such great interest in Africa?

My African interest came earlier when I went to Senegal in 1980 as US Ambassador. I had an Uncle who worked with the Nigerian Railway Corporation; he returned to the State at the outset of the Second World War. He was living in New York those days and I would go and visit him and he would tell me scary tales about living in Nigeria. How that tigers were on the streets, but I later found out that there were no tigers on the streets in Africa except in the zoos. Shortly after the war, a lot of Nigerians were coming to the state to make pleas for independence. And some of them would come to my Uncle’s house and I would stay at the background and listen to their conversations. That really got me interested in Nigeria; that was the very first African country that I had interest in. Much later in life, the Peace Corp came along, I recall meeting President John Kennedy at a reception held for him in Washington; he was then head of the Peace Corp. He had heard about me, that I had been to Africa twice – to Senegal and Nigeria. He drafted me into the programme for African Peace Corps. I started as an Overseas Director for the Peace Corps in Sierra Leone. I lived in Africa for about 10 years – in Senegal for two years, in Tunisia for two years, in Sierra Leone for two years. After those six years, I went back to Washington. I was later asked to come and see how the Peace Corp members were doing during the civil war. As a matter of fact, when the civil war broke out, we had volunteers in the Mid West and there was concern that the Biafran Army was advancing towards the Mid West and so I was sent to evacuate our volunteers in that area. Interestingly, as I later learnt from her, at the very time that that was happening, my wife and her family were also trying to get out of the Mid West during the war. After we met and got married, we sometimes relive memories of the civil war and she often teased me asking why I didn’t evacuate her and her family when I came to evacuate the US volunteers. We just laughed over it; you know she was just a child then. Even after the Peace Corps, I became the Executive Vice President of the African American Institute. It was the major private organisation dealing with Africa; it was also handling the US government‘s graduate scholarship programme. So, I had cause to visit some universities in Nigeria to talk with people who wanted to come to the US for education. I also got involved with the likes of Nelson Mandela in trying to get American policies to accept African change especially with the Gen Sanni Abacha government.

Was Abacha’s regime challenging for you as Ambassador?

Oh yes, it was a big challenge. Firstly, when President Bill Clinton announced my appointment as ambassador, MKO Abiola had just won an election. I had met Abiola a couple of times; I had arranged a visit for him to the US. We had met at a conference that he organised about Africa, so I was excited to come to Nigeria. I thought I was going to have a good time because of my relationship with Abiola. But before I came here, Gen. Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida decided to annul the election. So, the question was ‘who would be taking over,’ there was a lot of concern in the US whether I should still come or not. It was finally decided that I should go ahead. When I came around in 1993, Ernest Sonekan was the interim president. As a result of the delay I had, I became the last ambassador to present my credentials to him. Just two weeks after I presented my credentials to him, Abacha took over government. I remember that I was the first ambassador to meet with him after he took over the office. He was in Lagos here and so I went to see him. That day, he wasn’t dressed in military uniform, he was wearing a Babanriga dress. He looked and sounded very humble and promised me while we spoke that he would not stay long in office. He said that he was going to hand over to Olusegun Obasanjo. I was optimistic hearing his words, I thought change would come. And of course change came, Abacha stayed on in office despite his promise to quit soon. Our relationship became worse and worse as time went by. For the last three years that I was here, my relationship with Abacha and his regime was strained.

What really upset you about his government?

The most traumatic one was the killing of Ken Saro Wiwa. We had made appeal to the Abacha government to spare his life. I was told to go to Abuja to make one last appeal on his behalf and as it turned out, I was in mid air when they were shooting. As I landed there I was told that Saro Wiwa had been killed. That was typical of the kind of stupid things that the Abacha government did. At that very time the Commonwealth conference was holding in London. At that conference, a lot of people were calling for strong sanctions against Nigeria because of Abacha. Mandela was at the conference, but he asked for one more chance for Nigeria, but when they learnt that Abacha had just killed Saro Wiwa despite entreaties, even Mandela said the sanction should be upheld. As a result of that killing, I was recalled to Washington and about 28 other ambassadors were recalled. That was the most traumatic; of course there were also constant shutting of newspaper houses and arresting of journalists. The second most traumatic experience was the killing of Abiola’s wife – Kudirat. That happened late in the period that I was here, it was a very traumatic incident.

How is it being the only surviving child of your parents?

It has been very touching. My parents had a boy and a girl. So I had a younger sister, but she is no more. I miss her very much. She was the person I have known all my life. I am her older brother by two years and she was always very supportive, she was an activist especially in the health field. She tried to fight for equality of health services, so that black people could get quality. She was very active in that and she stayed in our home town. I left her there and was gone for a long time. It is a great loss that she is no longer here with me.

You still keep tight schedule at 83

I am very fortunate that I have my wife (pointing at Dr. Arese Carrington) here who has kept me healthy. She is a Medical Doctor and Public Health Consultant. She is currently the Vice President of Africana Consultants. She previously worked as the Associate Director of the Harvard School of Public Health’s AIDS Prevention Initiative in Nigeria. This is a woman who has done more for Nigeria than most people know about. From the Abacha days and always, she ensures that I do the right and healthy things to keep fit. When we were here as ambassador, she proved to be indispensable in my being able to do the things I did, for which people applaud me today. She was always encouraging me to go on. Those Abacha days, when some Nigerian activists were thrown in the prisons, she went to visit their families, she was very outspoken and deserves a lot of credit for everything. I wouldn’t have been able to do all that I did without her.

How did you get hooked to your wife?

That is the most fortunate thing that happened to me. I met her during the very first diplomatic function that I attended when I came in as ambassador to Nigeria. Because when you arrive in a country as an ambassador, you are firstly restricted to your community until you present your credentials. So after I presented my credentials, I went to attend my first diplomatic function and saw this beautiful woman. I had gone there with a friend and I said to him, ‘did you see that girl.’ And the rest is history. It is true in my case, that most black Americans come to Africa to seek their heritage. I came and found my destiny.

Has anything about her ever turned you off?

No. Except that she is Nigerian and Nigerians are known for what they call ‘African Time’ but we black Americans also have what we call ‘Coloured People’s Time or CPT.’ Although, I don’t think it is as late as the African Time syndrome (speaking cynically). So that’s it.

What’s a typical day like for you?

I have a tread miller back home and I try to walk out on that three or four times a week. I do some lecturing. I am currently an associate with Harvard University’s W.E.B. DuBois Institute and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. At my age, I am still as busy as ever.

How do you relax?

As a kid, I loved to watch horseracing and got very enthused whenever my mother took me to watch the race. I am still very interested in horses and that was my attraction to the Race Course here in Lagos in the 1950s. Talking about how I relax, I must say that I have never really felt stressed. For some people, travelling could be stressful, but I can relax with it, I love travelling. We watch movies, we read books, especially now, I read a lot of eBooks. I try to live as stress free as I can, even when something bad happens. It is one of my guiding principles in life. I don’t allow things that are disturbing to stay on my mind. I insist on going to bed with a free mind, no troubles of any kind. That is a principle that I has kept all my life and that is why I can sleep anywhere and at anytime. I can sleep on the plane, on the train, anywhere. I can relax.

Looking back, do you feel fulfilled?

Yes, but I don’t think anyone has ever achieved all they wanted to. But you do what you can although the challenges are enormous. However, I feel fulfilled about the end of apartheid in South Africa, I feel fulfilled about the return of democracy to Nigeria, but there are still so many things that I wish I could still change around the world. So I am not going to sit back and watch. I am going to remain an activist for as long as I am physically able to. Youths must develop a sense of purpose early in life; they must stay guided by it so that eventually, it will give them a sense of fulfillment when they look back later in life.

Your current visit is in connection with the Carrington Youth Fellowship Initiative, what about it?

It is great to be back home, and I mean every sense of the word – home. I and my wife Arese have many treasured memories of Nigeria. I am honoured and humbled that the US Consulate General, Lagos attached my name to this most worthy initiative – CYFI. It is a programme to empower the Nigerian youth to make impact in their world. I am impressed and encouraged about the future of Nigeria seeing the projects implemented in the past one year by the outgoing CYFI fellows in sectors such as public health, education, civil liberties, university outreach and vocational training. My visit has afforded me the opportunity of meeting the awardees and I have spoken to them as well as to all youth in Nigeria that no one will come and build Nigeria for them. Now you have democracy, make use of it to make the country what you dream of. You may not end your days wealthy in gold but rather affluent in spirit with that satisfaction that when you had the opportunity to make a difference you took it. I am optimistic about Nigeria.









Source - Punch News

Goldie’s death generating too many dramas – Manager

TV personality, and bosom friend of late Goldie Harvey, Denrele Edun is still mourning the demise of his friend and pal, Goldie Harvey.

Denrele reportedly witnessed the sudden demise of Goldie at Reddington Hospital in Victoria Island, Lagos, last Thursday. Since her demise, former Sound City VJ has been out of reach as he switched off his cell phones.

Showtime however managed to contact him on phone during the week. But unlike Denrele, he declined comment on the death of his close friend and pal.

*Late Goldie and Denrele
*Late Goldie and Denrele
“I don’t want to answer any question please,” he snapped. All attempt by showtime to get his comment on Goldie’s last moments on earth met a brick wall, as he suddenly handed over the cell-phone to the late songstress’ manager who muttered, “Right now, we don’t want to say anything at the moment because there are too many dramas already, and journalists won’t allow us rest.”

Asked why the decision to keep mum on Goldie’s death, the late singer’s manager replied; “We don’t want anymore drama about her demise. Her family members would appreciate it, if you all allow things to be. Already, a lot of stories have gone viral on the internet and newspapers.”

However, before her sudden demise, Goldie and Denrele had planned to debut with own reality TV show this February called – Goldie and Denrele: True Friendship.

The show, which is being produced by Tee Jay Star, is about two friends in the volatile Naija entertainment industry, and how they supported each other, had disagreements, their quiet moments, and their day to day struggles. They had already shot some episodes.

Beside this, Goldie was also billed to make a special appearance on the set of Nollywood actress, Lizzy Anjorin. Her death has generated a lot of controversies. First, the uploading of their wedding pictures online by her Malaysian based husband, Andrew Harvey, the emergence of a woman who accused the late songstress of snatching her husband from her and of course, the Kenyan rapper and former BBA housemate, Prezzo who has been accused of causing the bereaved family a lot of pain.










Source - Vanguard News

Nollywood pays tribute

He was a figure to me—Segun Arinze

It is so bad. Uncle Justus Esiri was a figure and a great motivator to us. He left a legacy that need to be sustained. Justus Esiri contributed his quota to the growth of the industry. It is a very bad news, we will miss him.

esiri-2
Justus Esiri mentored me—Joke Silver

What do you want me to say about the death of uncle Justus Esiri? I am really confused and devastated. I started career with him. It is so depressing. He lived a fulfilled life, he loved his job and he was also a gentleman. We thank God that he achieved what he supposed to have achieved in life. At least, he has a son who is a superstar. I acted with him in the early 80’s though I cannot remember the title of the movie now. It is all about how well he has lived.

Our veterans are not catered for–Foluke Daramola

I am feeling very sad about what is happening to us. I have been on set with Justus Esiri in movies like “Everyday People” where he was my father. I am not happy the way our veteran actors are dying. It is a great lost to the movie industry. I strongly believe that our veteran actors are not catered for properly. I want to create an avenue, in collaboration with some of my colleagues where we can run a programme that will be beneficial to our surviving veteran actors.

A legend has left us – Nigga Raw

I don’t know what to say because I just saw it this morning on my phone and I asked what happened , they told me Justus Esiri is dead .So it really pained me because we have lost another great Nollywood veteran actor and what I have to tell the family is that they should take heart also may his soul rest in peace.








Source - Vanguard News

Brazil to boost ties with Nigeria

ABUJA - (AFP) – Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff said Saturday that her government will seek to boost energy ties with Nigeria after meeting President Goodluck Jonathan in Abuja.
 
Nigeria is Brazil’s main commercial partner in Africa, with bilateral trade soaring from $1.5 billion (1.1 billion euros) in 2002 to $9 billion last year.

Brazil’s state-owned oil company Petrobras has invested hundreds of millions of dollars in Nigeria’s coal, oil, natural gas and alternative energy sectors.

“Petrobras… has its intention to further expand involvement in Nigeria,” Rousseff said after her meeting with Jonathan.

“We also want to establish (a) partnership covering hydroelectricity,” she continued.

Experts say that Brazil, an emerging economic powerhouse, is looking to resource-rich countries like Nigeria to help sustain growth.

Nigeria is also anxious to develop new energy trading partners because growing oil and gas production in the United States, brought about through new technologies like fracking, has begun affecting the market for Nigerian exports, Oil Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke said this week.

The International Energy Agency has said the United States could become the world’s biggest oil producer by around 2020, possibly further curbing its need for Nigerian crude.

After meeting Rousseff, Jonathan announced that a bilateral commission had been formed to focus on expanding cooperation in a range of sectors, including energy, mining, infrastructure, food security and finance.

“These are the areas that if we work together we will… create jobs for unemployed young men and woman,” Jonathan said.

Despite producing about 2 million barrels of oil per day, Nigeria remains deeply impoverished.

Many analysts have said that along with endemic corruption an excessive focus on oil production at the expense of job generating sectors like agriculture is a key reason why poverty levels have remained so high here.

Rousseff said that Brazil will seek to share “agriculture technology research” with Africa’s most populous nation.

“Our two countries hold very key and important positions respectively in our two regions,” she said. “Therefore closer ties between Nigeria and Brazil will mean a proper and greater positioning in the international scene.”

Rousseff arrived in Nigeria after attending the Africa-South America summit in Equatorial Guinea, also a significant west African oil producer.

Brazil’s push into Africa has been characterised by some as part of an effort to solidify its position as emerging power by seeking greater influence in the developing world.

The South American nation is also home to millions of people of African descent.

Old students rally to rescue their Alma Mater

In the wake of the neglect and under-funding of education sector by the government, some old students have come in to restore the decaying infrastructure in their Alma Mater, writes SAMUEL AWOYINFA

Worried by neglect of their hitherto vibrant schools, old students’ associations of some prominent institutions across the country recently started rallying round to uplift their schools from the abyss of decay and academic degradation. Investigations carried out by our correspondent from schools in Lagos to Ibadan, Abeokuta to Warri, Zaria to Enugu and Osogbo to Ilorin have shown that the efforts of the old pupils are now yielding fruits as life is returning to some of the institutions.

Before this new development, public schools, including famous ones, had become the shadow of their glorious past due to neglect, underfunding and politicisation of the education sector by governments across the land.

Consequently, these institutions that had produced past presidents, governors, a Nobel laureate, engineers, legal gurus, renowned academics, well-bred civil servants, medical doctors, surgeons, scientists and actuarial scientists were all begging for attention. However, the old boys and girls have woken from their slumber and are now contributing immensely to the rebuilding of their schools.

Critics have always blamed the government for the state of disrepair of these schools. But the old students’ associations have come in to fill this void. So, old pupils of Barewa College, Kaduna, King’s College, Lagos, Queen’s School, Ilorin, Federal Government College, Ughelli, Government College, Ibadan are now at the forefront of people rebuilding these schools.

Others, including Loyola College, Ibadan, St. Finbarr’s College, Akoka, Lagos, Queen’s College, Lagos, Fatima College, Ikire, Christ The King College,Onitsha, Queen’s School, Apata, Ibadan, St. Gregory College, Lagos and St. Charles College, Osogbo, are also some of the popular schools that are receiving help from their old pupils.

At King’s College, Lagos, the old boys have not only contributed to the physical and academic development of their school, they have also donated a sports complex to the school’s main campus. Another astro-turf football pitch has also been provided for the college annexe on Victoria Island by the old boys. One of the school old boys, who is now the Central Bank Governor, Dr. Lamido Sanusi, was said to have facilitated the renovation of all the college hostels.

The college old Boys Association has done an extensive work on the rehabilitation and construction of infrastructural facilities in their alma mater. They approached it in a dynamic way, with a family or a corporate institution taking up some of the projects. Some others were done through the general pool of resources of the association.

Other facilities which had received facelift include the school library, track field, assembly hall/masters’ quarters, refuse dump and the power plant. They have also reconstructed the administrative complex of the college.

The Principal, King’s College, Lagos, Mr. Dele Olapeju, agrees that the intervention by the old boys has really rekindled the good old days, because they have carried out extensive renovation and even added new facilities to the school.

“The CBN governor carried out an extensive renovation of all the hostels in the school. We now have an astro-turf for a five-a-side field in our annexe in Victoria Island. The old students have also restored the exchange programme the school had with Achimota College in Ghana,” he said.

Olapeju, who commended the old boys for the transformation, suggested that it should be made compulsory for pupils to sign a bond which compels them to give back to their alma mater.

“I will advise other old students’ associations to emulate our old boys,” he said.

The President, KCIOBA, Mr. Hakeem Bello-Osagie, had pledged to build on the successes achieved by the immediate-past President of the association, Dr. Sunny Kuku.

The old boys of Government College, Ibadan have also contributed immensely to the development of their school. They have done an extensive work on restoring and maintaining the infrastructure which served them years ago.

Among the projects executed by individuals, class sets, and branches of the association, as listed by the Administrative Secretary of the old boys’ association, Mr. Samuel Iseniyi, are renovation of Agriculture laboratory by the class of 1961 at the cost of N2.5m, renovation of ‘A’ Section of Biology Block at the cost of N2m by the class of 1981, while the ‘D’ Section of the same block was renovated at the cost of N2.8m by Ibadan branch of the association.

Others include the renovation of the English Theatre/Hall by the class of 1964, with the sum of N2m; the Lagos and Abuja branches renovated Mathematics department and SS 2 block of six classrooms at the sums of N2.5m and N2m respectively.

“The Abuja branch paid another N300, 000 for the repainting of the SS 2 block last year,” Iseniyi added.

Besides, he stated that the U.S branch of the association renovated SS 3 Block of six classrooms four years ago, while another old pupil, Kunle Onajin, of class of 1968, renovated the administrative block in 2012 at the cost of N3m.

“There are many other projects done by the old boys’ association. What we do is to give these projects to those who have done renovation on them as their pet projects, and whenever we felt they are due for another renovation we write them,” Iseniyi said.

Observers are not surprised with these great endeavours because of the calibre of old pupils the school had produced. Some of these include the Oba of Benin, Omo N’Oba N’Edo, Erediauwa, first Chief Justice of Botswana, the late Dr. Akinola Aguda; first actuary scientist in Nigeria and former chairman, Punch Nigeria Limited, Chief Ajibola Ogunshola; first African literary Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka; Chairman, University Press Plc, Dr Lekan Are, who was also a former president of the Alumni Association and former Nigerian Ambassador to the United Kingdom, Dr. Christopher Kolade.

The principal, Government College, Ibadan, Mr. Simeon Oladele, said apart from renovating the infrastructure in the school, the old boys have also contributed to both physical and academic development of the pupils.

He stated, “The old boys have been so kind and they have assisted the school in so many ways. They have refurbished most of the laboratories, most especially those of Agriculture and Biology. Some sets of old boys supplied the school furniture for use by the teachers.

“Some of them come to the school to guide the pupils on career choice. And in the area of the traditional game of the school, which is Cricket, they have employed a coach to teach the pupils how to play, and some of them come around to play the game with them.”

Oladele noted that all hands must be on deck to salvage the nation educationally. According to him, the community, old students, teachers and the government must join hands to revamp the nation’s education sector.

The old Boys’ Association of the St. Gregory College, Lagos, has also inaugurated some projects undertaken by them in the school.

These include a modern two-storey block containing 15-Junior Secondary (JS) classrooms, junior staff room and quarters, lawn tennis/basketball courts, tuck shops, a renovated jubilee hall and old boys’ secretariat.

As part of ongoing physical development in the college, a total of N800m has been estimated for the construction of a new junior 400-bed hostel, expansion of the college chapel, Olympic standard tracks and the reconstruction of catering/laundry departments.

The National President, St. Gregory College Old Students’ Association, Dr. John Abebe, promised that the old boys would do more as a lot of projects are still underway to celebrate the founder’s day of the institution next year.

In the same vein, the old girls of Queen’s School, Apata, Ibadan, Oyo State also recently rehabilitated some structures within the school, saving it from dilapidation. Apart from that joint effort, another ‘old girl’, who is a former minister of Trade and Industries, Chief Onikepo Akande, has also facilitated the donation of an administrative block to the school by PZ Cussons Foundation on July 11, 2012.

The project has been described as the fruit of Akande’s love for her alma mater and an act of corporate social responsibility by the foundation.

For the old boys of Federal Government College, Ughelli, apart from restoring the physical structures, they also impact the pupils by volunteering to teach, most especially in the areas of science subjects.

Among others, they encourage part-time teaching by distinguished, brilliant old boys to stimulate enthusiasm for the physical sciences. They also provide scholarship for the pupil with the best result in the West African Senior School Certificate Examination. The association has also developed a college website and established an e-library for the college to give them access to academic resources of international public schools.

The FGC, Ughelli, Old Boy’s Association also motivates pupils by bringing successful members to lecture pupils on career choices and those factors that could enhance their educational performance.

Also, feelers from Barewa College, which has produced five former Nigeria’s presidents, including Alhaji Shehu Shagari and General Yakubu Gowon (retd), top administrators, and academics, show that the school’s fortunes have changed positively because of the activities of its old boys.

The same thing is said to be happening at CKC, Onitsha, Queen’s College, Ilorin and other prominent schools across the country.

This trend is not however limited to secondary schools alone as some old pupils are also going back to their primary schools and higher institutions to lend a helping hand.

For instance, the current Super Eagles Coach, Stephen Keshi; ex-internationals, Paul Okoku and Godwin Odiye, donated five sets of computer and two laptops to their alma mater, St. Paul Catholic Primary School, Ebute Meta, Lagos last year.

Okoku had said, “We cannot leave everything to government. We decided to give back to where we came from. We hope others will emulate this and assist.”

Jonathan writes school, says old pupils should help Alma Mater


President Goodluck Jonathan
President Goodluck Jonathan has said that improvement of the country’s education sector will galvanise the transformation agenda of his administration.

The President stated this in a letter he wrote to the Ebekun Secondary Commercial Grammar School, Iresi, Osun State where he participated in the mandatory one-year National Youth Service Corps scheme 31 years ago.

The letter, which he personally signed, was read on his behalf by the Chairman, Federal Road Maintenance Agency, Dr Jide Adeniji, during the 40th anniversary of the school, on Wednesday.

Jonathan recalled with nostalgia the period he served in the Osun community, saying Iresi remained his second home after Otuoke.

He charged Nigerian pupils to show commitment to their studies and take advantage of the improvement in the country’s education sector.

The letter partly read, “Our administration has institutionalised the needed framework that has enhanced qualitative education at different levels.

“Old students should always remember their schools and involve themselves in developing such schools and the students. I recall the hospitality of the people of Iresi during my service year.”

The National President of the school’s Old Students’ Association, Alhaji Ibrahim Morounfolu, said nine old students came together in 1997 to form the association.

He said the association had rehabilitated two classrooms, donated books worth N100, 000, computer printer and generating sets to the school.










Source - Punch News

Odi invasion: Court orders FG to pay N37.6bn compensation

A Federal High Court, sitting in Port Harcourt Tuesday ordered the Federal Government to pay N37.6b compensation to the people of Odi community in Kolokuma/Opokuma Local Government Area of Bayelsa State over the invasion of their community by armed soldiers during the administration of President Olusegun Obasanjo.

Justice Lambi Akanbi of the Federal High Court, Port Harcourt, who gave the order while delivering judgment in a N100 billion suit filed by the people of Odi community against the Federal Government also ordered that the compensation should be paid within three weeks.

court480
They prayed the court to award them the amount as damages for the destruction of lives and property in Odi. The judge however awarded a total sum of N37.618 billion compensation in favour of the community for the wanton destruction of the place by Nigeria soldiers.

The community asked for N17.618billion as general damages and N20billion for special damages. They also demanded public apology and the re-building of Odi community by the FG.

The Judge however granted two of their prayers and rejected the other two.

Delivering the judgement; which lasted for two hours, Akanbi held that the Federal Government was economical with the truth by pleading in their counter affidavits that no inhabitant of the community was killed apart from some armed militant youths who engaged the military in gun battle; and that no property was destroyed by the soldiers.

Relying on various statements by the government, National Assembly, and inscriptions left on the soils of Odi by the Soldiers, as well as video clips on the invasion which was watched in the open court at the January 17th, 2013 session, the judge described their claims and counter affidavits ‘as worthless’.

Said he: “The destruction of Odi was comprehensive and complete; no aspect of the community was spared by what I saw in the pictures showed here. The respondents violated the fundamental Human Rights of the People of Odi, by the massacre. The people are entitled to fundamental rights to life, dignity and fair play, the destruction of Odi was not as a result of gun battle but clear bombardment, the destruction was malicious.

The judge also quoted President Goodluck Jonathan as saying in a media chat on the National Television Authority (NTA), on November 18, 2010 that “only innocent people, including women, children and the very weak that could not run escape were killed in Odi”.

According to him, the then Senate President, late Chuka Okadigbo was also quoted to have said, the facts speaks for themselves, no need to speak again, as there are nobody to speak.”

He equally reviewed the exhibit tendered quoting the soldiers who carried out the destruction as saying “we go kill all the Ijaw people with our guns, come to Odi and learn a lesson, Ijaw face, Monkey face, Government has given us power to kill, Odi is for Soldiers not for Ijaws, Bayelsa will remain sorrowful for ever.” among others.

The 1st and 2nd respondents (FG and Attorney General of the Federation) were represented by Mrs. Nkoli Awa Esq. The 2nd and 3rd respondents (Minister of Defence and Chief of Defence staff), did not make any formal appearance throughout the proceedings.

They however showed up yesterday, through one Mallam Jimoh Abdukadreen Adamu, with an application to delay judgement until they state their case.

They denied receiving any of the court invitations urging them to come and defend the allegation against them, including the hearing notice and the originating process.

The court records however showed that they received all the invitations but ignored them.

The records showed that they were served through substituted service via the office of the Attorney- General of the Federation as directed by the former judge in the case, Justice Abdullahi Mustapha.

Awarding the cost against the Federal Government, the judge held that no amount could be adequate enough to compensate for the pains and trauma of the people of the community, but said the cost for the damages given them was as valued by their valuers.

Reacting on the judgement the lead Lawyer for the community, Mr. Lucius Nwosu (SAN), described the judgement as “a victory for an aggressive Nigerian Bar, and more a victory for Nigerian Judiciary, particularly the Federal High Court. It’s a reflection of courage, erudition and consideration for justice governed by conscience, truth and good faith.”

On the two other prayers that were rejected he said, “it would have been double compensation if the prayer for re-building of the community was granted, having already granted them general damages. “The judgement was very sound and considered with truth and common sense.” He said.

Three Senior Advocates of Nigeria including, Ayo Adedipe, and Rafin.Lawal Rabana,(SANS), and seven other lawyers appeared for the applicants.

Former President Obasanjo in November 20 1999 deployed troops in Odi and authorised the use of force to deal with militants who were accused of killing some soldiers the state.

After the Odi invasion, the indigenes brought a N100 billion suit against the President, the Chief of Army Staff and the Chief of Defence Staff.

When the matter came up on Thursday, January 17, 2013 in the suit, during the proceedings, DVD and projectors were used to show military operations in Odi, and how the various machine guns, bombs and helicopter gunships were used to destroy lives and property in Odi.

The lead counsel to the plaintiffs, Nwosu (SAN), said: “The President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, had responsibly stated that no militant was killed in the military invasion.

“It was only old men, women and children, who could not run, that were massacred in that military operation.

“A situation where you turn guns and artillery purchased with taxpayers’ money against the taxpayers, is a call for sober reflection and a matter of serious concern.

“It calls for atonement for the dead and compensation for the living, for the trauma and loss they have been made to suffer as refugees and loss of their precious homes, loved ones, friends and objects of reverence.”







Source - Vanguard News

NSC reiterates support to Flying Eagles

Lagos – The Ministry of Sports has re-iterated its resolve to provide all logistic support for the Flying Eagles to excel in the forthcoming 2013 Africa Youth Championship (AYC).

Julius Ogunro, the Special Assistant on Media to the Minister of sports, said on Saturday in Lagos that the team would be sufficiently motivated for the task.

“The Super Eagles have set a high standard and we expect the Flying Eagles to continue in that tradition of excellence; the NSC will therefore give them all the support that they need.

“As defending champions, we have to maintain that stance, we are hopeful that the Flying Eagles will do us proud just as their senior counterparts have done.

“We want to show the world that our AFCON triumph was not a fluke and it was achieved through a conscious effort to build an enduring system of football,’’ Ogunro said.

The tournament will hold from March 16 to 30 in Morocco.

The Flying Eagles are currently on a playing tour of Egypt, en route Morocco, and have been grouped alongside Mali, DR Congo, and Gabon in Group B. (NAN)

FCT records fresh outbreak of type one wild polio


polio--kidsAbuja – Three months after a reported case of wild polio in Jahi village, a community in the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC), another case has been confirmed in Kabusa, Lugbe, FCT, an official said.

Dr. Rilwanu Mohammed, the Executive Secretary of the FCT Primary Health Care Development Board, said in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday in Abuja, that the case of two and a half-year old Abubakar Usman was reported to the board two weeks ago during the immunisation plus days.

Mohammed told NAN that Usman had a case weakness of the limbs and samples were taken to Ibadan for test, a confirmation of the result was out on Feb. 18.

“In December, we had the first case of polio positive and the second case was also positive, so we have three cases in three months.

“That means we need to do more so as to curtail the transmission of polio in the FCT, so that it doesn’t move to other states.

“Two weeks ago, when we were doing our immunisation, the child was reported to have weakness of the limbs.

“The first thing that we do when we have a child that has reported with the weakness of the limbs is to take the stool sample for investigation in Ibadan.

“We have taken the sample and it came out on the 18, the child is having wild polio virus type one.

“The whole of this year in the whole of this country, this is the first case of the virus; it’s unfortunate that the father refused immunisation for all his children.

“He has a zero dose; that means he has not been immunised before, and unfortunately this child now has polio.

“The tendency of transmitting to other children around him, it is like an epidemic now; over 200 children are at risk of getting this polio.

“So, what we are going to do now is to carry out a mop-up campaign, to see that we curtail the whole of Kabusa ward.’’

He observed that cases of polio in the FCT were from people who migrated to the territory from other places.

According to Mohammed, once a child has paralysis it is irreversible.

Mohammed said the board would carry out a mop up campaign in the area and its environs, to curtail the spread of the virus to neighbouring communities.

He said more health workers would be involved in the mop up campaign, while traditional and religious leader would also collaborate to address the situation.

He noted that there was only one primary health centre in the area but assured that another centre would be established to boost routine immunisation.

Mohammed complained of cases of rejection by some residents.

He said that out of 12 wards of AMAC, there were about nine high-risk wards because of influx of people to those areas.

He said the board had a meeting with the WHO, UNICEF, AMAC, National Primary Health Care Development Agency, to discuss how the polio outbreak in the FCT could be addressed.

He identified paucity of fund and inadequate vaccinators as some of the major problems affecting smooth immunisation coverage in the area.

Mohammed noted that Nigeria had 96 per cent burden of polio in the whole world, with Afghanistan and Pakistan having only 4 per cent.

He commended government for making the vaccines available, and urged residents to accept immunisation, saying, “prevention is better than cure”.

Mohammed urged the Polio Emergency Operation Centre to collaborate with the board to address the issue. (NAN)

Copyright infringement Paul Play drags MTN, Ultima to court

RnB crooner, Paul Play Dairo has dragged mobile telecommunications giant, MTN and Ultima Limited to court for the unlawful use of his smash song, “Angel of my life” in the popular reality TV show, MTN Project Fame West Africa.

The music star was faraway in the United States of America last year when the song was used without proper licensing.

Speaking on the matter, Paul Play confirmed that his management was hiring the legal services of Festus Keyamo chambers to serve both organisations the suit. “Yes, it is very true that I am suing MTN and Ultima Limited for the unlawful use of my song. I have contacted my lawyers and they are on it” he said.

Paul Play - Relationship has to be about love and commitment.....
Paul Play
According to reports, the Rn B crooner is demanding a huge sum of N500 million as compensation from both organisation.

Meanwhile, in a reaction posted online, Ultima Limited (Ultima) which has produced the reality show for the last five years, claimed that it has annually made the statutory payments due and required for the use of musical works for both local and international artistes used on the Project Fame show.

“In the first two years, Ultima paid the Performing and Mechanical Rights Society Ltd/Gte (PMRS) – which was the government approved collecting agency at the time, for all musical works that Ultima used; and from the third year when PMRS became Copyrights Society of Nigeria (COSON), Ultima paid COSON for all the songs used in those years.

For the past five seasons of Project Fame therefore, Ultima has annually made the statutory payments due and required for the use of musical works for both local and international artistes used on the Project Fame show. Ultima duly paid COSON for use of such music and as such if Paul Play has any issue with payment of royalties for the use of his musical works, it should be worked out with COSON and not Ultima nor MTN,” Ultima management stated.








Source - Vanguard News