Author: The Nation

  • Downsides of being an influencer, by Jenni O

    Downsides of being an influencer, by Jenni O

    Reality TV star Jenni O has stated that many influencers incur debts to live up to public expectations.

    In  a lengthy Instagram post, she wrote on the downside of being a public figure.

    She claimed that in an effort to live up to the high expectations their supporters have for them, some influencers have now gone into debts.

    According to her: “Nigerian Influencing consists of fake a*s life. Everything is so fake. Post a real picture it’s an issue

    Read Also: BBTitans: Mmeli, Jenni O evicted from show

    “Can’t dress a certain way outside because you don’t want to appear somehow. Some of your faves are in debt trying to keep up with this high as* expectation you all have put for them.

    “Nothing is real. It’s only in Lagos I knew you could rent anything to look a certain way.

    “Being an influencer is being able to influence every day PEOPLE.

    I’m annoyed. Everyday people are not doing photoshoots every second, everyday people are not wearing full beats to the gym, everyday people are not overdressing to the grocery store.. I can actually go on and on and on.

    “Lmao I don’t know what kind of unrealistic expectations you all set

    Or are you all not seeing your mates abroad. For a country that already seems like it’s fictional must the industry be a fantasy land as well?”

  • 26 and ready, says Phyna, flaunts wedding gown

    26 and ready, says Phyna, flaunts wedding gown

    Ex-BBNaija winner Phyna has hinted that she’s finally ready for marriage.

    The reality TV star and brand influencer, who turned 26 on Friday, gave this hint in a post on her official Twitter page.

    Read Also: Big Brother too toxic, says season 7 winner Phyna

    Sharing photos of herself wearing a wedding gown, Phyna wrote: “Me practicing in my wedding gown. 26 and ready.”

    Phyna
  • Why I can’t marry a mummy’s boy- Angela Eguavoen

    Why I can’t marry a mummy’s boy- Angela Eguavoen

    Actress Angela Eguavoen has said she cannot date let alone marry a mummy’s boy.

    In an interview with Saturday Beat, Angela noted that she wants a partner who respects and listens to someone in his family but  wouldn’t marry a mummy’s boy.

    She said,: “I cannot marry a mummy’s boy. He has to be a man of himself. Of course, I want a man that has someone in his family that he respects and listens to. He has to be someone who keeps to his words, and cannot be easily swayed.”

    Read Also: My PVC not printed after much stress, actress Angela Eguaveon wails 

    She also noted that she won’t allow any relatives in her home.

    She said: “No family member will live with me and my husband unless she (mother-in-law) is sick and is in need of attention. I am a busy woman and not the type that would sit at home to take care of anybody. I am of the opinion that in-laws living permanently with a newly-wed couple is not good.”

  • Electrician electrocuted to death in Minna

    Electrician electrocuted to death in Minna

    A young electrician identified as Alhaji has been electrocuted to death in Soje B area of Minna metropolis in Niger State.

    According to sources, Alhaji, who was a specialist in repairing home electrical systems, diee while carrying out repairs on an electric pole.

    Read Also: Minna residents groan over 100% increase in electricity bill

     It remains unclear what caused the accident but eyewitnesses reported that he was electrocuted before passersby could save him. 

    The tragic incident has left family members, friends, and the community in shock and mourning. 

    Residents called on the authorities to investigate the circumstances leading to the tragic incidence and to improve safety measures to prevent such accidents in the future. 

  • Ondo Assembly elects Oladiji as Speaker

    Ondo Assembly elects Oladiji as Speaker

    Ondo lawmakers have elected Hon Oladiji Olamide representing Ondo East Constituency as Speaker of the Assembly.

    The All Progressives Congress(APC) dominated the Assembly having won 23 seats while the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) won three seats.

    Moreover, 12 lawmakers in the 10th Assembly are aged between 30 and 45.

    The youngest Ondo lawmaker, Moyinolorun Ogunwumiju, is 33, while the oldest is Witherspoon Morenike at 63.

    Besides Witherspoon representing Owo II, other female lawmakers are Fayemi Annah representing Ilaje II and Ogunlowo Oluwatosin representing Idanre.

    Read Also: Anxiety as Ondo Assembly elects new Speaker

    Oladiji was elected as Speaker after a proclamation letter from Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu was read by
    Clerk of the House, Benjamin Jaiyeola.

    Jaiyeola, who read the Governor’s letter proclaiming the 10th Assembly to hold its first session, said it was in line with Sub section 3 of section 105 of the Nigeria Constitution.

    The lawmakers also elected Hon Abayomi Akinruntan representing Ilaje 1, as Deputy Speaker.

    The Speaker said the
    10th Assembly would not be accused of not doing its best to reposition the state.

    Olajidi promised a smooth relationship between the legislature and the executive.

  • Tinubu’s emergence, will of God – APC Chieftain

    Tinubu’s emergence, will of God – APC Chieftain

    Pastor Reuben Wilson, a  Chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Bayelsa, says the emergency of Bola Ahmed Tinubu as Nigeria’s President is the handiwork of God.

    Wilson, who is also the South-South Coordinator of The Asiwaju Group (TAG), made this known in a statement he issued on Saturday in Yenagoa.

    According to him, the emergency of Tinubu as the APC flag bearer when most people never gave him any chance of winning the election is an indication that God is at work.

    He noted that with the expertise and experience of the president, as well as the crop of competent technocrats he has groomed, the nation was bound to witness prosperity.

    Read Also: Marafa: Tinubu will strengthen reward system in APC

    Wilson said that Tinubu, a leader endorsed by God, has come to transform Nigeria and put the nation on the path of progress.

    Wilson said he had implicit confidence in Tinubu’s ability  to deliver on the dividends of democracy and to restore Nigeria to the glorious path of peace, unity and prosperity.

    “The victory was well deserved. We worked for it. What we saw afterwards will remain indelible in the hearts of Nigerians.

    “If you can flash back from the primaries to the campaigns to the election and successful take-off of Tinubu’s administration, God has been there for this country.

    “My advice to Nigerians is for them to have faith and be expectant of improved quality of life and grow their love for our fatherland and expect better days ahead after the initial challenges,” Wilson said.

    The APC support group leader noted that the smooth transition and take-off of the Tinubu-led administration signalled a new dawn in Nigeria’s democracy.

    He pointed out that Tinubu was destined to salvage the country.

    (NAN)

  • Exam Malpractice: Proprietor advocates use of technology

    Exam Malpractice: Proprietor advocates use of technology

    The Proprietor of a private school in Ilorin, Mr Moses Adeoye, has advocated the need to adopt modern technology to tackle exam malpractices in the education system of the country.

    Adeoye, who made the call in Ilorin on Saturday in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), said examination malpractice must be stopped by technology for Nigeria to enjoy quality education.

    According to him, examination malpractice has reduced the quality of number of graduates produced in the country.

    Read Also: UI DLC to hold screening, entrance exam

    “We need to actively use facial recognition technology, biometric system and CCTV cameras to halt the menace of examination malpractices.

    “We need to kill exam malpractice via technology if we truly want to rescue education system in the country.

    “It is becoming worrisome at all levels. Both internal and external exams must be strictly monitored.

    “Manual approach is not enough. Government and education stakeholders should help provide enough technology and hire technology experts to tackle examination malpractice,” he said.

    The educationist also advised school proprietors, teachers and parents to stop encouraging examination malpractices, and encourage discipline and hardwork among students.

    (NAN)

  • Tinubu deserves support on fuel subsidy removal- Okumagba

    Tinubu deserves support on fuel subsidy removal- Okumagba

    A member of the Governing Board of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) Olorogun Bernard Okumagba has stated that the end of the petrol subsidy regime is in Nigeria’s interest.

    He appealed to all Nigerians to support President Tinubu’s commitment to rebuild the economy for the benefit of all Nigerians.

    In a statement dated June 1, Olorogun Okumagba, a former Commissioner of Finance in Delta State, supported President Bola Tinubu’s position in his inaugural address where he stated that “we commend the decision of the outgoing administration in phasing out the petrol subsidy regime which has increasingly favoured the rich more than the poor. Subsidy can no longer justify its ever-increasing costs in the wake of drying resources. We shall instead re-channel the funds into better investment in public infrastructure, education, health care and jobs that will materially improve the lives of millions.”

    Read Also: Tinubu’s biopic, “Last Man Standing”, to premiere June 12 in Lagos

    According to Okumagba, the 2023 Budget only made provisions for Petrol subsidy up till June 2023. In effect, there is no appropriation for fuel subsidy beyond June 2023. Accordingly, subsidy on petrol has already been phased out by the previous administration.

    Okumagba commended Tinubu for implementing the policy as part of the government’s overall agenda to re-boot the economy and make it productive for the benefit of all Nigerians.

    According to the NDDC Board member, “the truth is that the fuel subsidy regime has been a drainpipe on our resources and commonwealth. The subsidy regime created a class of corruptly wealthy businessmen and women and some public officers with whom they collude to inflate consumption figures that determine the rates of subsidy payments.”

    The former Delta Commissioner of Finance observed that under the subsidy regime, “Official” petroleum consumption figures in Nigeria have been significantly inflated because it is the basis on which subsidy payments are calculated and paid to petrol importers / marketers. The result is that public funds are going into private pockets with no value received for those funds.

    Okumagba stated that it makes more economic sense to subsidize production and productivity than to subsidize individual consumption – which is what we have been doing with petrol subsidy. However, where consumption is subsidized, it is better to do so for essential services such as public transportation with buses, waterways and railways.

    He further stated that the petrol subsidy regime has over the years encouraged the smuggling of our subsidized petrol across our borders with West African neighbours where petrol is more expensive because it sells at market prices. Marketers who can make double profits in cross-border markets as opposed to the internal Nigerian market where the petrol price is fixed do so to the great disadvantage of Nigeria and Nigerians – depleting our country’s hard earned resources and creating petrol scarcity in our country.

    According to Okumagba, opportunities for rent seeking and unproductive arbitrage need to be reduced in our Nation. With subsidy removal, petrol supply (via importation or domestic refining), will become more available and competitive, thereby driving down costs over time.

    He regretted that Nigeria has for years been borrowing to fund subsidies on petrol importation. “We are now debt-distressed as repaying our debt is consuming a very significant percentage of our earned revenues. We should not continue borrowing to pay for “petrol subsidies” that generate nothing that we can utilize to repay the debts,” he remarked.

    Okumagba also stated that over N13.7 Trillion of the nation’s scarce earnings, as verified by Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) spent on subsidizing petrol consumption from 2005 to 2020 could have been better ploughed into the critical sectors of education, healthcare, and reduction of poverty, critical indices of Human Development Index (HDI). This amount excludes the figures for 2021 to half-year 2023 estimated at over N7 Trillion.

    According to Okumagba, other strategic sectors that savings from removal of petrol subsidy can also be channeled to, are agriculture and improved transport infrastructure because Nigeria possesses abundant arable land areas that are uncultivated because they are not presently accessible, while good road infrastructure will reduce transport costs, making it easier for businesses to reach internal and external markets.

    Olorogun Okumagba therefore urged the Federal Government to design and implement programmes that will cushion the effect of the subsidy removal on the masses such as a cash-transfer scheme targeted at the poor, reduction of excise taxes payable by citizens, subsidy of public transportation by buses, railways and waterways to free up the earnings of our citizens and increase their purchasing power.

  • Obekpa congratulates Akume on appointment as SGF

    Obekpa congratulates Akume on appointment as SGF

    All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain, Arc. Anthony Obekpa  has congratulated immediate past Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs and Special Duties Sen. George Akume, on his appointment as the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF).

    Akume’s appointment as the SGF was made public by President Ahmed Bola Tinubu on Friday.

    Obekpa in a statement on Saturday said the North Central APC leader is the most qualified for the job and thanked President Tinubu and the party for rewarding the labour and efforts of Sen. Akume with the appointment.

    Read Also: Tinubu appoints Akume SGF, Gbajabiamila Chief of Staff

    “I am excited that President Tinubu in line with the APC zoning rewarded the North Central party leader with the appointment as SGF for his tireless labour and efforts in the last elections. 

    “He is the most qualified and I am confident in his wealth of experience to work with the President in the full capacity of his office to move Nigeria forward,” he said. 

    Obekpa further described the former Benue Governor as a detribalised Benue politician who is raising young men and women to be future leaders in different capacity in the state.

    According to him: “Dr. Akume is a detribalized grassroot politician who is known for raising young men and women irrespective of tribe and location in Benue State.

    “As a party leader in my community, Owukpa in Ogbadibo LG, I bring the SGF the message from my people. The entire Owukpa felicitates with you and appreciates all you have been doing for the community.”

  • Raising the Bar of Performance in NDDC: Ogbuku’s PPP Template

    Raising the Bar of Performance in NDDC: Ogbuku’s PPP Template

    • By, Willie Etim

    The concept of “Rewind to Rebirth is sweet to the ears. This is the first time in 15 years that I am attending an NDDC function and this is because the current leadership of the Commission is charting a new course that is impressive. ”Those were the words of a former Chief Executive Officer of the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, Chief Timi Alaibe, as he reviewed the prospects and the initial strides of the new team. Alaibe, who had worn the shoes of the interventionist agency, surely knows where it pinches.

    He spoke at the NDDC Public Private Partnership, PPP, Summit, held at the prestigious Eko Hotel & Suites, Lagos on April 25, 2023.The man, affectionately known as the principal by the NDDC family, stated: “the PPP initiative is the right way to go because we need the private sector to help with funding and expertise. ”Bringing the likes of Alaibe and other stakeholders of the Niger Delta region, including captains of industry in the private sector under one roof to explore ways of driving sustainable development in Nigeria’s oil-rich Niger Delta region, points the way to a new dispensation.

    Read Also: Senate passes N1.4tr NDDC’s 2021, 2022 budgets

    Leading the charge in this new era, the NDDC Managing Director, Dr Samuel Ogbuku, explained that the commission decided to adopt the PPP model to provide alternative sources of funding for its key development projects and programmes. He declared: “Our ‘Rewind to Rebirth’ initiative is a strategic vision designed to recalibrate our engagement with the Niger Delta and the Commission’s overall intervention implementation plan. Embedded in this initiative include exploring more avenues for funding, for better technical expertise, for higher yielding varieties of crops, as well as opportunities for collaboration and investment in the Niger Delta region.”Ogbuku, a development strategist and administrator, gives more background to what could be described as a paradigm shift in the efforts to develop the Niger Delta region.

    He said: “The current Board and Management, in its bid to do things differently so as to effectively drive sustainable development in the region, decided to adopt the PPP model to provide alternative sources of funding for key development projects and programmes. “We have started engagement with the key stakeholders, such as the oil companies who contribute three per cent of their operational budget to the Commission; the state governments; traditional rulers; Civil Society Groups; youth organisations and Contractors. “We are showing in our operations, through our example and conduct, how diligence, due process and transparency are key ingredients to building confidence and trust among all partners and stakeholders. We are committed to not just being transparent, but we want to be seen to be transparent. ”Listing the commission’s achievements, he said: “In the coming weeks, some of our major projects will be inaugurated.

    Among this is the 132/33kv sub-station constructed by the Commission in Okitipupa, which will provide electricity for over 2,000 communities spread across five local government areas of Ondo State. ”According to Ogbuku, “another key project that is ready for inauguration is the Ogbia-Nembe Road, which was jointly funded by Shell Petroleum Development Company, SPDC, and the NDDC. ”The collaboration with Shell on the 29-kilometre road, remains a model that needs to be replicated and the NDDC appears to be heading in that direction. In this wise, the NDDC boss said that as part of efforts to renew and reposition the Commission, the Governing Board stepped up collaboration with various stakeholders. Ogbuku explained: “We have started engagement with the key stakeholders, such as the oil companies who contribute three per cent of their operational budget to the Commission; the state governments, traditional rulers, Civil Society Groups, youth organisations and contractors.” Part of these engagements was the meeting between the NDDC and members of the Oil Producers Trade Section, OPTS, of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

    According to Ogbuku, the “group, which embodies the International Oil Companies, IOCs, stand out for us because we need their cooperation to get full and prompt remittances of their contributions as prescribed by law.” Other stakeholders that he mentioned, include, local, state and federal governments. He rationalized that “by partnering with government agencies and departments, participating in government-led initiatives, and advocating for policies that promote sustainable development”, the NDDC can access government resources, policies, and programmes that support its development objectives. Premising on their expertise in promoting sustainable development in developing countries as well as offering technical assistance, Ogbuku said that multilateral agencies such as the World Bank, African Development Bank (AfDB), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and International Monetary Fund (IMF) can provide technical support, funding, and policy advice for the NDDC. Again, Ogbuku said that the NDDC would be banking on multinational corporations such as Shell, Chevron, ExxonMobil and Total to collaborate with the NDDC in executing legacy projects. He said that the oil giants “have what it takes to provide funding, technical assistance, and expertise in environmental management, community development and corporate social responsibility.

    ”Along this line, the NDDC took what was explained as preliminary steps by signing a memorandum of understanding with a United States-based firm, Atlanta Global Resources Inc., AGRI, to build a railway network that will connect the nine states of the Niger Delta region. The ceremony, which was one of the highlights of the PPP Summit, gave a positive indication that better days were ahead. In fact, the NDDC stated that work on the preliminary stages of the project, perhaps the biggest in the history of the Commission, is expected to start immediately. Obviously, elated by this development, the NDDC boss described the event as representing a big harvest for the Commission from the PPP Summit.

    The Chief Executive Officer of Atlanta Global Resources Inc, Mr. Tony Ekpele, said the company was partnering with NDDC to as much as possible provide funds for the Commission to construct, operate and also manage the rail line. In his keynote presentation, the Executive Secretary of Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, Engr. Simbi Wabote, stressed that for partnerships to be successful, they must be based on proper analysis and studies. While commending the initiative of the NDDC to attract additional funding through PPP, he warned that capital attraction was a big challenge when there were real or perceived infractions, corruption, lack of accountability, and other vices within the organisation seeking funding. Speaking further, he lauded the management of the NDDC for embarking on the Summit, describing it as “the start of a new dawn in making the Commission to retrace its steps back to the original objectives of its formation as an intervention agency for the development of the Niger Delta region.

    ”Wabote admitted that it was imperative for NDDC to explore innovative funding via PPPs as a credible option to meet the expanding developmental demands of the Niger Delta region, noting that the PPP arrangement brings corporate governance, technical expertise, and commercial acumen to enhance project delivery and successful operations. Wabote added, “From what I can see with the current management, a new dawn is in the horizon and I look forward to very exciting times at the Commission.”Several big wigs at the summit were open and candid in their goodwill messages. The former Governor of Edo State, Comrade Adams Oshiomole, commended the NDDC for admitting that it had suffered from goal displacement.

    He said: “The NDDC Management and the Board have shown courage by putting the Summit together. The NDDC has our prayers and support. What is missing is not the ideas, but the courage.”Oshiomhole advocated that the budget cycle of NDDC should be in line with the national budget. He advised the NDDC management to promote inclusive and sustainable development in the region.In another goodwill message, the former Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, acknowledged that things have changed for the better at the Commission and applauded the NDDC Board and Management for striving to leave legacies in the region.

    According to him, “the founding fathers of the NDDC intended that the NDDC should be a catalyst for development. The PPP arrangement is a new way of getting good results. There must be a fusion between the private sector and the public sector. It is important to bring in the resources and expertise of the private sector.” One of the participants from the international community, the founder and Chief Executive Officer of Miundo Misingi Hub, based in Nairobi, Kenya, Johnson Mwawasi Kilangi, applauded the NDDC management for putting together a summit to discuss how to deploy infrastructure assets and services with the private sector.According to Johnson, the summit came at a time when many countries are struggling to meet the ever-expanding infrastructure financing requirements, exacerbated by the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic.Johnson said that time was ripe for the region to leverage on private sector resources and innovation to develop qualify, affordable and sustainable infrastructure for the citizens.