Author: The Nation

  • Manager charged with stealing N5.38m

    A 37-year-old manager, Kayode Adetayo, who allegedly stole N5.38 million from his employer’s safe, on Thursday appeared at a Yaba Chief Magistrates’ Court in Lagos.

    Adetayo, who lives in Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, is charged with two counts of conspiracy and theft.

    He pleaded not guilty.

    Prosecuting Sergeant Modupe Olaluwoye said the defendant committed the offence between January and May, at Slot Systems Ltd., Ado-Ekiti.

    Read Also: Two arraigned for allegedly stealing recharge cards

    She alleged that the defendant and his accomplice, the company cashier, who is at large, stole N5.38million, being proceeds from the employer’s safe.

    The prosecutor said the company auditor, Mr. Sunday Ifenkwe, discovered the theft and financial discrepancy from the company’s branch finances, during routine checks.

    Olaluwoye alleged that the defendant could not account for the “missing” N5.38million.

    Chief Magistrate Oluwatoyin Oghere admitted the defendant to N2 million bail with two sureties in the like sum.

    Oghere said the sureties must be employed.

    The case was adjourned till September 11.

  • My plans to banish hunger among children, by beauty queen

    The newly crowned Miss Nigeria Great Britain Queen, Mary Dinah, has declared her unfolded reign would be dedicated to making life better for the girl child in Africa.

    She promised to eliminate hunger, illiteracy among others as a means of actualising the ‘Zero Hunger,’ United Nations Sustainable Development Goal.

    Speaking with journalists in Lagos, the beauty queen, who is also the chief executive officer (CEO) of Seattle Residences and Spa and Founder of Mary Dinah Foundation, an international NGO, promised to use her new elevated status to make a positive impact on enhancing the lives of the girl child in Africa.

    Dinah, who won the Miss Nigeria Great Britain Crown for 2019, in the beauty contest held at the Angle Villa Hotel Lekki, Lagos on August 10, explained her focus will be on alleviating hunger and poverty by feeding poor children in Africa with school lunches with the support of her foundation ‘Food for Thought’.

    “I have a big responsibility to use everything I have achieved to make a big impact on society. However, I have chosen zero hunger as my main area of focus.”

    On her passion to drive the vision through, she said: “Whenever I eat, I think of children who are hungry and have nothing to eat.

    “In the Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, food is identified as a basic human need together with light, air and water. Before we discuss safety or self actualisation, we have to critically analyse the issue of hunger or else we would not be alive.

    “For me, that is the most important cause and I am looking forward to ensuring that children and those in schools have food and not go hungry.”

    Before being crowned a beauty pageant, she had identified two key areas of the nation’s economy that needs urgent attention, namely, unemployment and gender inequality.

    She hinted she has been working on finding solutions to these challenges in the past.

    Speaking of commitment to solving these societal problems, she said: “I started my charity five years ago with Job-Link Foundation and based on that I always analyse the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics report on unemployment when it’s released three times a year and I have often been invited to CNBC to speak on it regularly for three years now.

    “The unemployment rate in Nigeria is in a dire state. We have total unemployment at about 23 percent with youth unemployment heading towards 50 percent and female unemployment which people barely look at is edging towards 50 percent as well.

    “That is to say in every 10 women you meet, five are unemployed. It is a very critical situation and has to be given urgent attention.”

    On gender inequality, she said: “In the northeast we have young girls being kidnapped from school as well as stopped altogether from going to schools, a position we must continue to fight against.

    Read Also: Expert urges FG to prioritise girl child empowerment

    “I believe there are five million girls out of school, a figure much higher than anywhere else in the world. Honestly, there is something we are not doing right.”

    “I strongly believe that our solution to this problem begins when we all come together as one Nigeria without tribal or religious segmentation to solve this problem nationally.

    “Currently what we see is fragments of regions in the country that are moving forward and others that are lacking behind.”

    She noted that Nigeria in general and Lagos, in particular, has a huge potential for tourism.

    She pledged to support the development of the sector.

    “I believe Lagos is a beautiful state and should be seen as a megacity.

    “It has not yet gotten a global frontier like Miami, London, and Paris. I have visited those cities and thought they are nice Lagos has a beauty and uniqueness like now where else.

    ” On her background and how it helped her win the beauty pageant, Dinah said: “I grew up partly in Nigeria and in the United Kingdom but had always said if I would participate in a beauty pageant it would be Miss Nigeria because this is where I was born and my parents are from here.

    “I definitely was proud to represent my state – Lagos state. The night of the award was beautiful and magical as I was graced with friends and family and the audience cheering for me while on stage.

    “We had various categories such as casual wear and traditional wear to showcase.

    “However, I had designed my traditional outfit. My mom’s family is from Niger State and I wanted an outfit that would be a fusion between the South West and the North Central.

    “I designed an ‘Ashoke’ outfit with a short skirt and crop top, mixed with some beads and carried a calabash which made it more colourful and the perfect fusion between Fulani and Yoruba style. I was very happy.”

    She explained her passion to support humanity dated back to her childhood but got serious expression in 2014 when she established, The Mary Dinah Foundation.

    The foundation, she said, has been successful in other youth benevolence programs including Job-Link which was Nigeria’s first every jobcentre and connected over 10,000 people to work.

    Mary Dinah has received numerous awards for her contribution to society including the Vice Chancellors Award at University of Surrey, Governors Award in Lagos State, Social Impact Award (2017) and Future Leaders Award (2018) with the British Council.

    Speaking more on her background, she added: “Prior the foundation, I have acquired over 15 years of hospitality experience with luxury hotel brands such as Hilton, Marriott, Four Seasons, Le Meridien and Sheraton.

    “I am the founder of M.A.D hospitality which manages five star boutique hotels including Seattle Residences and Spa, she stated.

    “My academic profile is extensive and includes BSc Computer Science from University of Nottingham, MSc International Hotel Management from University of Surrey (Distinction), Post Graduate Degree in Global Business from University of Oxford (Distinction) and post graduate certificate in entrepreneurship form Harvard University (Distinction).

    “I am also a United Nations Fellow and acquired a post graduate degree from the United Nations Institute of Training and Research (UNITAR) in Geneva, Switzerland

    “However, I enjoy horse riding, clay pigeon shooting, squash and traveling the world.”

  • Benefits of CBD oil, by Momoh

    Princess Lami’ah Momoh, a lawyer and entrepreneur, has introduced the first indigenous brand of CBD oil to Nigeria.

    In the US, retailers are vying to be the next Saks fifth avenue of the rapidly growing market for wellness products made with cannabidiol, commonly known as CBD.

    Nigerian consumers have been slower to embrace the CBD OIL.

    At the launch of The Sterling Herbal CBD OIL range of products in Lagos, Momoh said: “We realised CBD oil was not really used as it is in other countries, so we decided to partner with producers of high quality CBD OIL in the USA, to deliver the most pure, potent and effective CBD oil ever created.”

    Read Also: Health benefit of locust beans

    Momoh urged Nigerians to embrace the oil because of its amazing health benefits.

    She said: “Sterling Herbal CBD oil is extracted from the HEMP Plant and will not make anyone high or give the psychoactive effect associated with marijuana. Children take the Sterling Herbal CBD OIL with no side effects.

    “Sterling Herbal CBD Brand consists of the Sterling Herbal CBD OIL 750MG, Sterling Herbal CBD OIL 2400MG, which is the true strongest strength ever to be seen in Nigeria.

    “It is three times the strength of the 750MG and recommended by doctors and medical practitioners.

    “One of the numerous testimonials on the vape pen is that it stops pain within five minutes of taking it.

    “Sterling Colon cleanser is the most effective oxygen colon cleanse ever created. It will help remove all the fecal matter and toxin waste in the body, whilst giving energy, and a great sense of well-being. People are using it as a weight loss supplement.”

  • Swiss govt lauds Edo on reforms, investment

    The Swiss Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Georg Steiner, has said Edo State will attract the Swiss business community in Nigeria with reforms initiated by Governor Godwin Obaseki.

    He spoke with state officials at the Government House in Benin during a visit.

    They are Commissioner for Minerals, Oil and Gas Joseph Ikpea; Commissioner for Wealth Creation and Cooperatives Felix Akhabue; and Senior Special Assistant on Investment Promotion and Head of Edo State Investment Promotion Office (ESIPO) Kelvin Uwaibi.

    Others include the Focal Person, Ease of Doing Business, Kenny Aliu and Focal Person, Benin Enterprise Park Deborah Okunbor.

    The ambassador noted that the Swiss government had a large investment in Lagos, where its business community and the Consulate-General are situated.

    Read Also: 100 youths complete Edo’s Young Engineers Programme

    He added that Edo’s proximity to Lagos and the economic transformation by Obaseki showed the potential of the state to attract Swiss investors.

    Steiner, who initiated a meeting of state officials with the Consulate-General and the Switzerland-Nigerian Business Community in Lagos to showcase investment opportunities in the state, noted that the government’s efforts to drive development, power reforms, urban renewal, housing and other relevant information to investors were impressive.

    He said: “We have a consulate in Lagos with so many businesses. From the point of view of Switzerland, we have a keen focus on what makes Nigeria interesting. Many of us are in the field of machinery, pharmaceuticals, nutrition and others. There is a huge market in Nigeria. I think the position of Edo State is good, and I think it is good to see that the positioning of the state can be strengthened even better.

    “Being relatively close to the fifth largest economy in Africa, there is a great opportunity for the economy to grow. At your disposal, feel free to request our consulate in Lagos, and the Switzerland Nigeria Business Community, which is about 50 in number to identify common grounds of benefits for both sides.”

    Uwaibi noted that Edo State boasts of opportunities in petrochemicals, natural gas, oil palm, cocoa, rubber, tourism, among others.

  • Dickson swears in council chiefs today

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson will today swear in the  local government chairmen.

    A statement on Tuesday by his Special Adviser on Public Affairs, Daniel Alabrah, said the chairmen would be sworn in with their vice chairmen.

    Read Also: Bayelsa guber: Dickson tightens grip on PDP ticket

    The ceremony will hold in the Exco Chambers of the Government House in Yenagoa at noon, with guests expected to be seated by 11.30am.

    Alabrah added that after the swearing in, the chairmen would inaugurate their legislative councils tomorrow.

    The chairmen, all candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), defeated candidates of about 30 other parties.

  • Oyibode greets Omo-Agege at 56

    Peace Ambassador Chief Gabriel Chukwuma Oyibode has described the Deputy Senate President Ovie Omo-Agege as a man with unusual leadership qualities.

    He hoped the senator would use his office to ensure peace and unity of the country.

    Oyibode, in his birthday message to celebrate Omo-Agege at 56, noted that the deputy Senate president was anointed with leadership capabilities, and hoped he would use his “good office to bring succour to Nigerians.”

    Read Also: Wase congratulates Omo-Agege at 56

    The statement reads: “Let me congratulate you once again on your emergence as the deputy Senate president. Your ascendance to the apex of Nigeria’s decision-making system was no mean feat. Today marks the very beginning of that sojourn to greater heights. I seize this moment to congratulate you on your 56th birthday anniversary. There is no doubt you’ll be of great asset to our nation in service and commitment to a greater indivisible entity as well as use your good office to bring succour to Nigerians.

    “At 56, you have distinguished yourself in Delta State and the nation…”

    The Odogwu of Ezionum kingdom also prayed God to grant Omo-Agege wisdom to deliver on the daunting mandate of his new office.

  • Let us begin to build bridges

    My concern here is not about physical infrastructure but about social infrastructure. Accordingly, my focus is not on physical bridges, like the first or second Niger Bridge or the Third Mainland Bridge, although such bridges are necessary. Rather, I am concerned about social and political bridges, which are necessary to sew together the multilayered fabrics of our society. Until we carefully build such bridges, we will continue to talk glibly about unity as if it were a kind of garment we all could just put on and suddenly become transformed into one people.

    The United States attempted to do just that by declaring itself “One Nation under God”, despite her multiple nationalities. Yet it continues to be torn by racial, gender, political, and other divisions. For over two hundred years, it failed to build necessary bridges across these divisions. We are witnessing the consequences of this failure on a daily basis.

    True, the US did attempt to build some bridges by legislation, such as the Civil Rights Act and Affirmative Action. Nevertheless, the divisions remain in the people’s attitude and actions. The best lesson we can take from the American failure is to start the process of avoiding it, by beginning to build necessary bridges today and to start acting on them.

    Let me begin with a recent case of a glaring division. It is between the youths and the political class. Put quite simply, there is a generational gap here between young (say under 50s) and old (say over 60s). Standing for the under 50s is Omoyele Sowore, the publisher of Sahara Reporters, while the over 60s (better still, over 70s) is represented by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Recently, Sowore attempted to lead his #RevolutionNow protest against Buhari’s government and the political class in general. It is naive to think that Sowore believed he could win, when he ran for President and lost very badly. His candidacy was merely to galvanize the youths in a symbolic protest against the political class. For him, #Revolution Now was a continuation of that protest.

    However, the timing and the naming of the protest were dead wrong. On timing, the Presidential Election Tribunal is still sitting as I write, looking into at least two distinct petitions against Buhari, the All Progressives Congress, and the Independent National Electoral Commission. Besides, Buhari had just received the approval of  Senate for his cabinet nominees and he is set to inaugurate them soon. No sane leader or government will not see a protest at this time as an irritant, if not as a threat.

    Why select “revolution” as the name of the protest, when you know that you are dealing with military personnel in civilian clothes? Besides, why use such an irritating term like that at a time the most vociferous criticism of Buhari’s government is the perceived poor handling of insecurity, typified by the Boko Haram insurgency and rampant kidnappings? Did Sowore forget that the military and the police have been put on high alert in the last two months or so and are, therefore, more likely than not to react negatively to protests, not least one that is titled #RevolutionNow?

    You may blame the military, police, and the presidency all you want. I don’t excuse them either for their highhandedness and for the request to delay Sowore for treason. Treason? That’s baloney.

    At the same time, however, Sowore must learn the rules of appropriateness and political sensitivity. He knows full well that the Arab Spring started rather innocuously, with the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi, a street vendor, in response to the confiscation of his wares and humiliation by a municipal official in Tunisia. His lone protest quickly spread as a series of antigovernment protests and uprisings across North Africa and the Middle East. At the end of the day, regimes were toppled and over 61,000 protesters lost their lives.

    The Arab Spring was named retroactively just as the recent popular protest in France was named retroactively by the press as Yellow Vest protest, in recognition of the colour of the protesters’ T-shirts. The ongoing protest in Hong Kong has come to be known as pro-democracy protest, although the protesters did not give it a name as such.

    As a linguist and a social scientist, I am familiar with a myriad of meanings and connotations of the word revolution. Whichever meaning you choose, the word cannot sit well with any government in the circumstances (described above) in which the Nigerian presidency finds itself now. Sam Omatseye apparently contradicted himself the other day by recognizing the relatively innocuous events that have led to major revolutions in the past, while, in the same breath, wondering why the Department of State Security acted swiftly to forestall Sowore’s protest, red-alerted, as it were, by the term revolution (Revolution When?, The Nation, August 12, 2019).

    However, we must not miss the big lessons from the event. First, we must recognize the political and cultural ecology of Nigeria at this time as a highly controversial and volatile context for protests. Nnamdi Kanu was stopped from leading the Indigenous People of Biafra to whatever land he promised the people of the Southeast. It is within this context that some Northerners, led by the Coalition of Nordic Groups, interpreted Sowore’s #RevolutionNow as a Southwestern revolt because he is from the region.

    Of course, the CNG betrayed its ignorance of Sowore’s right to express himself however he wished, and that no Yoruba leader, educated as they are, would stop him from doing so. In any case, they have no such power anymore than Igbo leaders could stop Kanu or Northern leaders, including CNG, could stop the destructive protests in the North that followed Buhari’s electoral defeat in 2011, which killed an estimated 800 people.

    Second, Sowore’s botched protest points to several bridges we must seek to build across regional, religious, ethnic, class, gender, and age divisions. Given the teeming youth population and high rate of youth unemployment, we must begin now to bridge the generational divide through investment in education, healthcare, and the creation of gainful employment for the youths. We cannot just call them tomorrow’s leaders without training them to be leaders or even equipping them to make a living. Symbolic gestures, such as N-Power, is certainly not enough. Sustainable policies and programmes must be embarked upon in order to reverse the downward slide in educational standards and the high rates of unemployment and poverty.

    Sowore’s #RevolutionNow shows that the youths cannot sit idle, while continuing to read about corruption in high places and to experience decaying infrastructure, inadequate educational facilities, and substandard hospitals.

    True, Sowore should learn to modify the platform of his protest in consonance with prevailing social and political realities, while the government should learn to respect the freedom of expression. He could use the platform of his online publication to express his opinion and even seek audience with the President. Alternatively, the President could send for him once it became known that he was planning a protest. It is this kind of proactive negotiation that has so badly eluded the Buhari administration.

    To be sure, President Buhari is not solely responsible for the prevailing social, economic, and political malaise. His government inherited an economy already in recession as well as the Boko Haram insurgency. Fuel and power subsidy were also already ongoing. You could blame Buhari for taciturnity and tardiness as well as his government’s inability to effectively communicate its handicaps and what he has been doing to overcome them.

    Surely, the media have not helped the situation, given their power to make or unmake the image of the government. By taking criticism of the government as its major role, the press in particular has almost neglected its role to inform and educate the public. Accordingly, many columnists tend to write about what the government has done wrong rather than highlight what it has done right or could do. This has to change if the gap between the press and the government is to be bridged. Yet, this bridge is needed in order to grow our democracy.

  • Invoking Gibran in a troubled time

    At first, it could be mistaken for a pornographic studio. The walls are sculpted with assorted portraits of nudity, sensuous imageries, certain to trigger the testosterone, if not stoke the loins.

    With illumination made dim by a syncopation of delicately angled recess lights and the antique windows shaded by sparse curtains, the air around the four-floor covent hewn from ancient cave literally reeks of erotica this sunny afternoon.

    But this is no America’s Heff Hefna’s sybaritic lair; it is the lofty shrine, the museum sheltering not only the remains of Gibran Khalil Gibran (arguably one of Lebanon’s greatest philosophers ever), but also the cream of his paintings and literary oeuvres that redefined universal thought in the 20th century.

    Predictably, camera is forbidden.

    Unquestionably a commercial success long before death, Gibran is today regarded the next bestseller of all times after China’s Lao Tzu and Europe’s William Shakespeare, with his writings already translated into 108 languages and his prodigious paintings also displayed in museum in the United States and Mexico.

    If he spoke to the depth of the human condition, it was probably because of the crushing experiences he suffered at a tender age. Son of a father described as an alcoholic, he was led away at tender age of 12 from Lebanon by his strong-willed mother, Kamleh, in pursuit of a better life in Boston, United States. Only for him to lose his mother, sister and half-brother within fifteen months, seven years later.

    He would begin his artistic odyssey as a painter before becoming a writer and poet. What a million words could not describe he captured graphically with a few strokes of the brush. He died at age 48 in 1931 and had willed his body be flown from Boston and buried in the monastery he bought in his native Bsharri in the north of Lebanon.

    Inside the basement, a hidden projector telegraphs on the wall a rather haunting quotation from Gibran’s verses: “I am alive like you and I am beside you.”

    Further down is his simple bed and austere writing table. In another corner is a fireplace-like enclosure through which the iron casket bearing his embalmed body can be glimpsed.

    The curator, Joseph Geagea, would simplistically reply an inquisitive member of the mission from Nigeria (Fejiro Adesida) that the perceived obsession with nudity was only Gibran’s expression of a preference for intimacy with nature, if not a yearning to, in fact, break loose from sartorial captivity. Those naked may not be self-aware, Geagea added, but those in the nude are aware of their nakedness.

    Well, a broader appreciation of Gibran’s stated naturalism would be a cry to man to walk the straight path: keep life simple, relationships true, promises real and the environment clean.

    Today, with his native Lebanon, West Asia region and the world at large roiling in a turmoil that is both ethical and political in texture, the words of the sage from Bsharri could indeed not be more prophetic. In combating the political establishment, he denounces “the nation that places wealth above values”. As for worship, he emphasizes spirituality above religiosity. No wonder a tension often simmered between him and the religious entrepreneurs of the era.

    Today, such values and virtues are, sadly, in greater deficit not only in Lebanon but the world over and the human condition increasingly gets desperate despite supposedly phenomenal leaps in knowledge and advance in technology.

    For instance, as we gathered for barbecue and drinks in the icily cold night on the Ceedar height on the fourth day of our arrival in Lebanon on a cultural exchange programme facilitated by the Wole Soyinka Foundation and hosted by the CEDAR Institute of the Norte Dame University, Beirut, one of the faculty members of the retreat, Professor Edward Alam, had to excuse himself abruptly from the gathering, following a distress call from home in Beirut.

    Israeli fighter jets were reported to be flying menacingly low above Alam’s penthouse apartment, apparently on yet another bombing mission to neighbouring Syria now reduced to utter rubble by the seven-year civil war sparked by the Arab Spring, inflicting one of the worst human tolls and refugee crises in human history.

    It is a frightening spectacle the children of a lesser military god trapped in West Asia have learnt to endure daily as “almighty” Israel strives to impose her supremacy in the region since her unilateral declaration of statehood in 1948.

    Worse still, in Lebanon, local politics remains poisoned today by ethnic suspicion. Oil and gas have for long been discovered in commercial quantity offshore of the country’s shelf of the Mediterranean Sea. But that resource cannot be explored yet for the benefit of the people because the politicians are unable to agree on the sharing formula of the expected fortune!

    Leaders of various religious faiths, in turn, prosper from spreading the message of hate and division. Religion is exploited to advance narrow political agenda.

    So, Professor Joseph Rahme is sure Gibran would today be turning in great pains in his tomb at the sorry turn of events.

    Interestingly, Rahme, an expert in World history and one of the key drivers of the yearly cultural conversation between Lebanon and Nigeria, is a relation of the legendary Gibran maternally. (The philosopher’s mother, Kamleh, belonged to the Rahme clan.)

    We see the ethical atrophy Gibran laments about the new world also finding expression in small bad social habits here. While criss-crossing Lebanon in a caravan bus, we saw that in the road rage. We saw that in the recklessness of drivers unwilling to use seat belts or some texting furiously in slow-moving traffic, without fear of reprisal. In Nigeria, the roving FRSC operatives would almost certainly pounce on you.

    In many public spaces toured, we also saw selfishness in smokers freely puffing cigarette smoke, without regards for non-smokers.

    Lebanon is hardly immune to the corrosive influence of the social media culture and the attendant obsession with the ostentation and addiction to its enablers, either. It is an emerging universal malaise, by the way. For instance, at accident scene nowadays, we are now more inclined to approach those in distress with the cameras of our smart phones instead of helping hands, to feed the mostly callous curiosity of the waiting blogosphere. At home, precious family time is stolen as members are distracted by their i-Phones.

    So, slowly, the river of shared humanity is drying up.

    But so acute has the situation become in Lebanon that it formed the basis for a presentation at the Founder’s Day celebration at the prestigious Notre Dame University on the eleventh day of our visit with octogenarian President Michel Aoun seated.

    Targeted at the youth population, the new message is an urgent call for moderation to curb the danger increasingly posed to family values and social health. Since it has been identified as a youth affliction, it is felt that only the youth themselves can help the nation champion the crusade for caution.

    Needless to mention that even as the youths were being challenged with stirring words to rise to a new national call against social media abuse while the ceremony lasted in the university’s commodious auditorium, a military helicopter hovered overhead throughout, perhaps underscoring a greater sense of anxiety – if not insecurity – gripping the nation itself at large.

    In the midst of all this, there are a few who appear to find fulfillment in fidelity to the Gibran way, however. To Rahme, maintaining a strictly organic lifestyle is keeping faith with the memory of his great grand uncle. A scholar who has traversed the United States, Brussels, Paris, Instanbu, Cairo and London in his career, the balding scholar now prefers to live in the pristine Cedar height where he was born, a great distance from the Notre Dame University where he works.

    He prides himself on eating home-made meals prepared from fresh produce harvested from the garden behind his bungalow home. To force family members into a situation they cannot but communicate, he banishes television from his Cedar redoubt.

    However, there is one virtue generations of Lebanese forever share with Gibran regardless of where they reside – never forgetting their cradle. It perhaps explains huge remittance of estimated $8b annually from those in Diaspora and a certain inclination to maintain a presence at home even while being physically absent. The big men would erect wonderous villas, even when they probably visit home only once in a blue moon.

    We saw the universalism Gibran preaches in the naming space after the Nigerian nation and figures in Mizyara, a relatively more swanky community with even more stunning castles, built with fortune made largely in Nigeria.

    This is the ancestral home of the Chagourys, the Chidiacs in Nigeria. Driving past Gilbert Chagoury Boulevard, you see Nigeria Avenue, then Abuja street, then Lagos street, then Herbert Wigwe street. (Well, we never might be able to tell what new usuring trick the Access Bank czar taught the Lebanese businessmen.)

    It is the country of Habib Jafar, the promoter of the Nigeria-Lebanon conversation.

    Regardless of the scare by the flying Israeli bomber jets four days earlier, Alams would open the doors of his high-rise home in Beirut to us on the ninth night for a sumptuous dinner. As his beautiful wife walked in regally soon afterwards, it became easy to understand why the man with Kenny Rogers-beard had to abandon the seminary midway and surrender to wife’s insistence that the family relocated from the United States to their native Lebanon.

    While seated in the terrace, you savoured a stunning aerial view of the city at night. The affable scholar, with a romantic voice and more than passable command of the guitar, later treated us to rendition of classics by the likes of Carol King on his hand-made Spanish guitar.

    Of course, our own sweet-voiced “Mr. Shakomended” (Lanre Fakeye) swiftly “retaliated” with a newly composed potential chart-buster entitled “Cedars”, inspired by our four-day immersion in the fabled ancient community hosting the biblical grove of prized trees. Guitar sound flowed from gifted Osamudiamen Ivbanikaro-Isaac and back-up voices by the troika of multi-lingual Norbert Olisakwe, Yinka Olatunbosun and Aseobong Larry-Ettah. While journalists Tayo Abodunrin and Kazeem Ugbodaga kept reportorial silence. Of course, novelist Razinatu Mohammed was the cheer-leader.

    Truly, Gibran is not dead; the echo of his deep words still surely haunts his beleaguered homeland today.

  • Edo modular refinery operational soon

    The Edo Refinery and Petrochemicals Limited, a project partly sponsored by the Governor Godwin Obaseki-led administration in Edo State and being developed by AIPCC Energy Limited at Ologbo, Ikpoba Okha Local Government Area of Edo State, will commence operation before the end of the year.

    The fabrication of the 6,000 barrels per day (bpd) modular refinery has been completed and will be inspected by officials of the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) before it will be shipped to Nigeria.

    In a statement, Special Adviser to the Governor on Media and Communication Strategy, Mr Crusoe Osagie, said the project is part of the state government’s efforts to transform Edo from a civil service state to an investment and industrial enclave.

    He said the modular refinery project joins the growing list of ongoing legacy projects, which also includes the CCTEC Ossiomo Power Plant; the Benin Enterprise and Industrial Park and the Benin River Port.

    Read Also: Rehabilitation in PH refinery still ongoing – NNPC

    “We are making progress on a number of projects aimed at transforming the state into an industrial hub. At the moment, work has reached advanced stage on the modular refinery project, which benefits from the governor’s smart investment acumen, through which he mobilised seed fund for the project,”  the statement read.

    The project’s Technical Director, Mr. Tim Tian, said the refinery will get its feedstock (crude) from the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company’s (NPDC) facility – oil mining lease (OML) 111, near Benin City.

    He added that when operational, the refinery will produce from its feedstock 50 per cent of diesel (500,000 liters), 25 per cent of naphta (300,000 liters) and 20 per cent of fuel oil (200,000) liters.

    Recall that the state Executive Council  had approved the release of N700 million as redeemable preference shares (investment) in the refinery and petrochemical project.

    The statement added that the venture “will create legitimate employment opportunities thereby reducing poverty, provide job opportunities for teeming youths in the communities, facilitate the establishment of a fabrication yard as proposed by the promoters, and create basis for expertise, professionalism and further training in the oil and gas industry.”

    ply of gas, agro-allied products, petroleum and petrochemical products and other related businesses.

  • Akeredolu’s wife assures girls of better exposure

    Wife of Ondo State Governor Arabinrin Betty Anyanwu-Akeredolu has said the year 2019 BEMORE Summer Boot Camp would expose participants to an unending world of opportunities where their capacities would be enhanced to conveniently contribute their own quota to the development of their society.

    At the opening of the Camp yesterday at the Public Service Training Institute (PSTI), Ilara Mokin, Mrs. Akeredolu noted that girls have become preys in the society and as such there is need to build their capacity by broadening their intellectual, emotional and societal quotients to develop a strong self-worth that gives them a conviction that they are in no way lesser than men.

    According to her, the situation of the girl-child is becoming deplorable daily, as they are left bare and exposed without protection.

    The First Lady, who said it’s time the world knew women are not fools, said 250 girls will partake in the 2019 BEMORE SUMMER BOOT Camp, thus, adding to the 750 girls already trained through the programme in the last two years.

    Read Also: Rape: Akeredolu’s wife trains girls on taekwondo for self defence

    She noted that through the training, the narratives of the girl-child has since changed, thereby complementing stakeholders’ efforts to bring balance to the gender world.

    She said: “We are sailing on troubled waters. The captain of the ship seems to have taken their hands off the wheel. The girl folk is being hunted in every way. First, we should not speak; we must not stand eyeball to eyeball with the men. We are being molested as though we are lesser beings, but we know what we have to do to protect ourselves and that is why we are here today.

    “For two years, we have trained 750 girls, thus changing the narratives of the girl-child; that will bring that balance to the gender world; that will ensure that no girl is looked down upon because girls do amazing things.”

    Mrs. Akeredolu urged the girls to take advantage of the two-week training and aspire to greatness. She also said this year’s training will include self-defence (taekwando) for girls, to provide shield against the backdrop of rising cases of rape, as women and girls have become an endangered species in Nigeria.

    A BEMORE Ambassador, Ms. Ehimosan, shared her experience and opportunities with participants, stressing that BEMORE has strengthened the interest of girls in Science and Technology, Mathematics among others.

    Two other participants, Miss Oretan Inioluwa and Oyetan Omotolani Joy, also thanked Mrs. Akeredolu for giving them the opportunity to be part of the programme, while promising to put in their best and make the best use of the opportunity.