Author: The Nation

  • ‘Geophysics is solution to building collapse’

    ‘Geophysics is solution to building collapse’

    A Professor of Geophysics in University of Lagos (UNILAG), Lukumon Adeoti, has noted that the rightful application of geophysics into subsoil investigation will help curb the menace of building collapse.

    Adeoti made this known at his inaugural lecture, entitled: “Geophysicist and human survival”, at J.F. Ade-Ajayi Auditorium, UNILAG.

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    It was a captivating journey through the lens of the seasoned geophysics in the areas of mineral exploration, oil and gas, agricultural, engineering, environmental and forensic geophysics.

    Adeoti noted that waste deposit represents one of the important and actual environmental problems that pose a huge risk for the environment.

     “All through the recent past, unlined disposal sites have been filled with household refuse and different kinds of potentially dangerous industrial waste. This poses a huge risk for the environment, and is the main source for groundwater contamination. Once waste is deposited on a dumpsite, pollution can arise from degradation of waste and the migration of leachate,” he stated.

  • Firm donates laundry facility, 40 washing machines to BUK

    Firm donates laundry facility, 40 washing machines to BUK

    The Aspira Corporation on Tuesday donated an ultra-modern Laundromat with 40 state of the art washing machines to the Bayero University Kano (BUK).

    The donation is a nationwide project to ease life for students living on campuses across the country.

    The same facility had been donated to the University of Lagos (UNILAG) and University of Ibadan (UNIBADAN), it was learnt.

    In Kano, the inauguration of the Viva Laundromat took place at BUK old site on Tuesday.

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    Spokesperson of the organisation, Linda Aguacha, said the laundry facility is donated as a corporate social responsibility for students to wash their clothes and alleviate their difficulties.

    “This is part of our social responsibility because we want the students to focus on what is important, focus on their education and their personal growth, which is why we donate this so that they can wash their clothes for free. Laundry does not have to be a problem anymore.

    “We hope that the students will enjoy it and use it very well for the betterment of themselves. I also hope it will last very long.

    “It is a self-service state of the art laundry with two sections. We have the section with the washing machines, where you will go and put your clothes and it washes them for you. You wait aside reviewing your book. When the clothes are washed, you then take them to the dryer and it will dry them for you, free of charge; no fees attached.”

    The university’s Vice Chancellor, Prof. Adamu Sagir, expressed appreciation with the cooperation they are enjoying from the company. He thanked them for donating the laundry facility to the university.

  • Benue SUBEB, police partner on Security in Schools

    Benue SUBEB, police partner on Security in Schools

    Chairman of Benue State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB), Dr. Grace Adagba, has sought collaboration between the board and Police to bolster security measures in basic education schools across the state.

    Adagba spoke during a visit to the Commissioner of Police, Steve Yabanet, at the Police Headquarters Makurdi.

    In a statement by the board’s spokesperson, Akese Emmanuella, the chairman emphasised the imperative of fostering a harmonious relationship with the police, highlighting the incessant challenges of theft, vandalism and other security breaches plaguing public schools.

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    She cited a recent incident in Makurdi, where there was an attempted abduction of school children, underscoring the urgent need for ensuring the safety of learners, teachers and school property.

    Yabanet acknowledged the existing synergy between the police and schools, particularly through initiatives like the Safe Schools programme.

    He urged school administrators to maintain close communication with security agencies, ensuring they have access to emergency contact numbers of law enforcement agents within their vicinity.

    This proactive approach, he emphasised, would facilitate prompt response to security incidents, thereby fostering a conducive environment for teaching and learning.

    Highlighting the effectiveness of such collaborations, Yabanet shared a recent success story where the police thwarted an attempted kidnapping at a school in Makurdi, underscoring the importance of continuous cooperation between SUBEB and law enforcement agencies.

    The meeting concluded with both parties reaffirming their commitment to a robust partnership aimed at safeguarding schools  and preserving the well-being of learners and staff members.

  • Group urges govt to implement policy on education for PWAs

    Group urges govt to implement policy on education for PWAs

    The Albinism Association of Nigeria (AAN) has urged the Federal Government to implement the national policy on albinism.

    In a communiqué signed by Programme Manager of the association, Joseph Akuse, at the end of a one-day meeting on Advancing policy implementation on inclusive education for persons with Albinism(PWAs) in Nigeria, AAN  stressed the need for the implementation of the policy developed in 2012 and assented to in 2019.

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    It said: “In 2012, a Ministerial Committee was set up by the then Honourable Minister of State for Education, Nyesom Wike, to develop a National Policy on Albinism. This immediately started with the involvement of multifarious committee comprising of representatives from Federal Ministries of Education, Health, Women Affairs and Social Development, Justice, Finance, Labour and Employment; Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation and many other parastatals and private organisations.

    “After the draft and justification of the policy through the appropriate quarters, it was finally assented in 2019 to last for a period of five years after which a review will be done to keep space with the current humanitarian and environmental activities. But unfortunately, this was not implemented as intended and up till now, PWAs are suffering and it seems there is no hope even though a national policy supporting our course of living was initiated.”

    The association noted that the implementation should be based on four points, including, legal, education, health social security and other services.

    It urged government and non-governmental organisations to provide visual and other learning aids for PWAs through Special Needs Education Branch at the federal, state and local government levels, adding that school counsellors and teachers should counsel and guide students on the albinism in basic, secondary and tertiary institutions.

  • How we’re addressing transcripts, certificates issues, by OOU VC

    How we’re addressing transcripts, certificates issues, by OOU VC

    Amid complaints by graduates of Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) Ago-Iwoye arising from inability to collect their transcripts and certificates, the institution authorities have given insight into how the issues are being tackled, ERNEST NWOKOLO reports.

    The joy of every student is to graduate and collect one’s transcript and result quickly from his or her alma mater. Availability of these two vital academic documents is critical to effective decision-making by the holder, whether to seek employment or further one’s studies.

      But where a cloud of shock and uncertainty hover over these records regarding availability, it leaves the graduate in a quandary, stalls ambitions and even truncates life dreams or opportunities.

    This is the fate many OOU graduates have been subjected to in the last two or three decades ago, with some of them recounting how they missed valuable job offers, admissions for further studies and in worse scenario, jobs termination, especially when employers could not get the institution to verify or authenticate their credentials bearing OOU.

    The Nation reported the cases of efforts spanning over 36 and 12 months made by two graduates of the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU) in Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State, to access their transcripts without success.

    The two graduates – Feyisara and Comfort (not real names), who graduated in 1997, have done everything to get their transcripts to no avail. It has been one excuse or the other by the institution since they applied for the transcripts. Feyisara, who resides in Ekiti State, applied for hers in March 2021. The United States (U.S.)-based Comfort did so in March 2023. They paid the mandatory N50,000 processing fee along with their applications.

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    While Feyisara has heard nothing from OOU more than three years after applying for her transcript, Comfort, who applied for hers at UNILAG and OOU in March, last year, got the document from UNILAG alone. The only response they have been getting from OOU is to exercise patience. They said their patience have run out as they require the transcript for further self-development.

    But the university’s Vice Chancellor, Prof. Ayodeji Agboola, said the institution has introduced technology and computerisation that make processing of results, transcripts and certificates seamless in the last decade.

    Citing the last two sets of graduates – 20021 and 2022/23 academic sessions – Agboola said the results and certificates had been collated and signed with many of them already collected by the students.

    He said those who graduated from 2012 till now, did not have issues with their certificates or transcripts being ready for collection because  their academic records had been computerised and could be accessed easily in the event of complaints and rectification when necessary.

    He also explained that some students were going about with notification of results issued by departments, believing that they have graduated but when they come for the certificates itself, it turned out that they have not fulfilled the requirements for graduation.

    He stressed that this informed why this year, he cancelled and stopped, the issuing of notification of results, which is not sufficient evidence that one has graduated from the OOU.

    The vice chancellor, however, noted that many of them going on air or to the media to say they graduated from the OOU but no certificates or results to show for it, never graduated from the institution and challenged them to prove it.

    “Students would write ‘S.O.S, I need my results and certificates’ and when they send it to me, I will refer the memo back to the department and faculty to look at those results and give me the feedback. It was during the course of investigation by the department and faculty that they would write to say that these students did not graduate here. And when they put it in writing, what do you expect me to do? They are all with me. They wrote it. When they call for those letters, I took the memos that were discussed at departmental and faculty boards that were sent to me, I take it back to the Senate. When they got to the Senate, the Senate in their wisdom, set up a committee to act on those matters and in their recommendations, determine the studentship of those that have no results.

    “In fact, there is a case that nobody is ready to sign the result in the department because it was not prepared in the department. Nobody in that department is ready to sign and that guy has been going around saying that in 16 years after he graduated from OOU, he had no result,” Agboola said.

    He added: “So, those people that go on air to say, ‘Oh, it is 16 years we graduated from OOU but no results’, never graduated from here. They should prove it that they graduated from here. In the course of proving, that is how they brought some documents to us which we are now investigating.

    “In January, I cancelled notification of results and the reason I cancelled it was simple. They use notification of results to do all sorts of things. I have seen a case where it is only that person that graduated in this university. Is it possible?”

    Also corroborating, the university Registrar, Dr. Femi Ogunwomoju, said some assumed they have graduated but did not, adding that  part time students and those who passed through the study centres and outreaches, many of which the university was not aware of, are mostly affected.

  • An innovative strategy to transform waste into wealth

    An innovative strategy to transform waste into wealth

    The consequences of neglecting proper waste disposal extend beyond cluttered streets to environmental pollution, diminishing property values and health hazards. Despite the daunting challenges posed by waste materials, an environmental expert, Dr. Chizoba Obele, offers a glimmer of hope by mapping out innovative waste-to-wealth initiatives. She elucidates how research and innovation can transform waste items, such as plastics, into valuable resources, with her pioneering work in recycling waste plastics into functional products exemplifying the potential of waste-to-wealth endeavours to mitigate environmental degradation and foster economic growth. NWANOSIKE ONU, Southeast Bureau Chief, reports

    Every day, waste materials accumulate in our surroundings, posing a significant environmental threat. According to the 2024 World Bank report, the average person generates between 0.11 to 4.5 kg of waste daily, amounting to substantial kilograms per household depending on its size. Efficient waste collection and disposal are imperative functions of any government, with poor neighbourhoods often grappling with filth while affluent areas boast streamlined waste management systems.

    Beyond cluttering our streets, waste pollution infiltrates our environment, diminishing property values and inviting pests and diseases. Land pollution can seep into waterways through flood currents or deliberate dumping, endangering aquatic ecosystems. As waste continues to mount, urgent action is needed to safeguard our communities and ecosystems from its far-reaching impacts.

    Environmental expert and waste-to-wealth advocate, Engr. Dr. Chizoba Obele, emphasised the grave risks posed by waste materials, stating, “Waste threatens life on land and also threatens the sustainability of the ecosystem, either on land or below water. This explains why some of the most important Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) have targets which are devoted to waste management and environmental sustainability. SDG No 12, for example, has developed certain specific targets incorporating approaches for reducing pollution and recycling and reusing waste items via environmentally sound management practices,” she told The Nation.

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    However, waste materials are not always totally useless. The value of waste items including human faeces and animal dung in composting and manure production was long recognised.  Throughout civilization, humans have continually designed new uses for different waste materials, and this has led to the idea of waste recycling and waste-to-wealth initiatives. Continuing, Dr. Obele, who is an Associate Professor of Polymer Engineering and leading figure in waste-to-wealth and environmental sustainability research in Nigeria, said, “Research is an important approach to wealth creation from waste materials, and waste-to-wealth research is gaining increasing relevance in our society. Actually, there is a nexus between environmentally sound waste management and environmental regeneration and sustainability.  Toxic wastes pose a threat to all life, whether on land or in the water. In Nigeria today, oil residues and oil spills pose great threats to the ecosystem of the Niger Delta, also threatening the livelihoods of local farmers and fisher men. Nigeria must invest in remediation of such wastes and in converting solid wastes occurring on land to other uses.”

    The environmentalist added, “The definition of waste is already changing and will change completely in the immediate future, as new uses are discovered or designed for items previously regarded as waste. Refuse dumps will gradually reduce in size. Research has the capacity to increase the value of waste items and to turn waste into wealth, and this is my area of research interest.”

    Dr. Obele used one popular economic endeavour to buttress her position – the recycling of plastics. According to her, “About two decades ago, plastics constituted a huge fraction of waste materials littering walkways and waterways. However, research has led to new innovative ways of recovering and recycling such plastics, and recycled plastics are now serving new uses in homes and industries. Even though plastic wastes still abound in our environment, the advances recorded in waste-to-wealth research have been commendable, and there is hope that mankind will always be on top of the threats posed by waste materials in our environment.”

    According to findings by The Nation, recycling of waste materials is already serving as a veritable source of income for many households in Nigeria. In almost every refuse dump, scavengers can be spotted rummaging through the dumped materials in the hope of finding some valuable items, such as plastics and metals. The World Bank estimates that about 1% of the urban population in developing economies – up to 15 million people – are involved in scavenging for recyclables for a living. Some of the scavengers are children of school age, who depend on picking out recyclable waste items from such dump sites in order to support themselves or their families. But that is just the first step in the long process of recovering and recycling the waste materials. In order to understand the subsequent steps and how Nigeria can make it more economically viable. What does it portend? The Nation, asked Dr.Obele.

    “Plastics are prepared from several classes of polymers. These polymers, each possesses unique properties, making them suitable for different uses ranging from packaging food items and general goods, to more sensitive uses such as the packaging and delivering injectable products, such as medicines and blood. Many of such plastics are capable of being remolded, or re-processed into new items, first by cleaning and decontamination, followed by the application of heat or other stresses. This is the traditional concept of plastic recycling.

    “But it is not every time that the recycled plastics are re-presented as solid plastic objects for use in homes or offices. For example, I have pioneered an innovative process for converting waste polystyrene into a binder which could be used as a printing ink component as well as in the development of wood adhesive. Polystyrene is a plastic which is commonly used in packaging of household electronic items like television sets, where they serve as anti-shock/cushioning components.  This research, which won the best research prize of the Polymer Institute of Nigeria (PIN), with a cash prize of N500,000, has attracted the attention of the Raw Materials Research and Development Council, which wants to sponsor the next phase of it, that is, its translation from bench to the market. So, it is one research that I am hoping will progress all the way to a tangible product having commercial use in Nigeria.

    “I am particularly pleased with this research because of two related reasons. Firstly, polystyrene which can be found in the inner packs of many household electronic gadgets is not associated with any known further use after the electronic object has been successfully delivered. It simply litters our refuse dumps; so this is a typical example of waste-to-wealth research.  But my other fascination with this research is that beyond creating wealth, this kind of research can help Nigeria cut down on its import dependence. Every year, millions of dollars are spent on the importation of different raw materials, many of which are plastics or their starting materials, called monomers. The recycling of waste plastic materials and their re-purposing for other applications can save Nigeria a lot of money that would have gone into the importation of these polymers overall.  This can help ease the pressure on the naira-dollar exchange rate,” she said.

    She explains further, “Environmental sustainability goes beyond waste removal and recycling on land, which is the focus of SDG No 15, and extends all the way to addressing climate change and remedying the pollution of water ways, which is the focus of SDG No 14. One of the things we must do is the continued recycling of paper, plastics, glass, metals and electronics. The other is the use of composting to reduce climate impacts while also recycling nutrients. I am now calling on the Federal Government, specifically TETFund, to assist my university in establishing a Centre of Excellence in Environmental Sustainability and Waste Recycling, to enable us scale up our research and also collaborate better with industry partners and other stakeholders, including international partners.”

    Dr. Obele elaborated on the idea of Nanoplastics and the dangers they pose to aquatic life and humans. “As polymer scientist, I am drawing the attention of the people to the idea of microplastics in water bodies, and nanoplastics in bottled water. According to data released by the National Institutes of Health in its January 2024 report, about a litre of bottled water contains up to 240,000 tiny pieces of plastics, mainly nanoplastics, because they typically occur in the nano range of dimension. This is a huge concern, primarily because the effects of these nanoplastics on the body are currently poorly understood.”

    With the situation of things, Nigeria needs to invest more in educating the population of the dangers posed by different wastes, especially waste plastics, which today are some of the most common items found littering the environment. Their contributions in polluting the environment must be recognised by all, and there is need to invest in studies seeking to come up with new ways to convert waste plastics into useful environmentally benign items.

  • Milnapath wins Bayelsa, Abuja & Lagos…Live Pure returns

    Milnapath wins Bayelsa, Abuja & Lagos…Live Pure returns

    Whether an economy is livid, languid, tumultuous, famishing or azure, lively, healthy, peaceful, uplifting and up-building, whoever will drown or float in it will do. It is not a question of the wickedness or of the friendliness of an economy. It is the degree of the heaviness or of the lightness or the player in it. Heavy persons tend to see no way out of harm’s way, whereas every way is an escape route from trouble for light persons.  From this premise, I want to tell two stories today. One of them appears to still be legally immature and, therefore, unsafe to tell. So, about it I say… Hush! The other concerns a Nigerian company which has successfully replaced many foreign herbal medicinal supplements with local ones in Bayelsa State and, from that humble beginning in Nigeria’s choking economy,  has made a brave go for Abuja,  Nigeria’s Federal Capital Territory (FCT), and Lagos, Nigeria’s economic and commercial nerve centre. That smacks of the proverbial mortal man fearlessly treading  over where  angels fear to fly. It is still about heaviness or denseness, that is sinking or drowning and lightness or floating and soaring and fluttering like a butterfly. Something is prompting me to tell a third story, to compensate for the first one which flew out of the window.

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    The second story is about Milnapath. The compensatory story is about Live Pure, a food supplement company from the United States, which had been here before, but, proverbially, put worms and maggots in the stomach of many of its affiliate distributors, threw them away like dirty, old socks or bras, and went back to America, only to  indirectly return to Nigeria for business  through Ghana, thereby making Ghanaians business bosses of Nigerians! 

    MILNAPATH

    Milnapath recently got my attention in Abuja, where it had just celebrated one successful year in business, handing brand new cars to key players in its multi-level marketing business. Car gifts may dazzle new market players, they do not turn the heads which have voyaged on many lagoons and oceans. Business durability is what matters to old cargoes.  Milnapath’s success wasn’t surprising to me. Its products are made from local raw materials and were, therefore, not intensely dollarised, making them cheaper than pharmaceutical products which were costing about 10 times more than they did a few months ago. Besides, many of the pharmaceutical products are now fake. Already, the authorities have shut down more than 300 patent medicine stores and pharmacies in Jos, the Plateau State capital, over this syndrome.

    Neither the climate nor the weather is faring well for the foreign herbs and food supplements’ sky-line. I could never have believed that Neprinol, the tumour breaker, which cost between N20,000 and N30,000 last year, would hit more than N200,000 this month.  Only last year, my favourite tea, the world’s first Alkaline Coffee made by Nature’s Way in the United States and marketed worldwide by Alliance in Motion Global (AIM GLOBAL or ALLIANCE) from the Philippines cost N6,000.But today, it goes for more than N20,000. What about Ubiquinol which rose from about N40,000 for 90 soft gels to more than N100,000? If I may describe as “shylock” economic forces behind Neprinol and Ubiquinol of today,  I would describe as “prodigal” the directors of the once-thriving foreign company, Live Pure, who are trying to stage a return to the Nigerian market they once bastardised.

    MILNAPATH

    The plant medicines from Bayelsa State made by a company named Milnapath, an acronym (Milellum Nature Path) is said by the company to be a “new way to nature’s abundance”.

    There are seven medicinal proprietary blends/products in its kitty, namely:

    GYNOCARE…

    For…”Female hormone balance, yeast infection and irregular menstruation”.

    NAKOM OIL…

    For…” Asthma therapy and to dissolve ovarian cyst”.

    DETOX PLUS

    For…”Body cleansing”.

    GLUCO CARE….”To keep pancreas active, to increase metabolism, for heart care and blood glucose level”.

    REJUVENATE STEM CELL

     For …”Wrinkles and stress, mental clarity, fight cancer, immune boosting, weight loss and to relieve arthritis pain”.

    CARDRDIO CARE

     For…” Brain health, blood circulation, Parkinson’s disease and seizures, heart attack and stroke and for cardio issues”.

    D-MAN

    For…”To  boost sperm count, libido, handles impotence and arrests premature ejaculation”.

    I hope that, sooner than later, it would be possible to review contents of these products, for the hood does not make the monk. In natural medicines, it is the content, not just the name, which tells us what a medicine may be up to.

    FOREIGN SUPPLEMENTS

    We should not deceive ourselves. Foreign food supplements companies are in Nigeria for enlightened self interest, not on charity or on humanitarian grounds. They price their products well above market values at about N2,000 to the U.S. Dollar, pay their affiliate marketers bonuses rated at about N1000 to the USD, instead of about N1,400 or more on this publication date of May  23, 2024,  keep the balance  for re-orders or future import budget, thereby making no additional investment to keep the business running. When there is going to be a hitch, they quietly leave the market as Live Pure did about one or two years ago. That is why the products are scarce and shelf prices are outrageous today. The trend was predicted towards the end of the 1990s, when I began my newspaper reports promoting multi-level marketing (MLM), a job creator for a growing army of unemployed Nigerians. We had been dependent on government and multi-national companies for jobs which were no longer forthcoming. Now, we had to learn to become independent workers. Many MLM companies trooped in from abroad. Among them were G.N.L.D, Tianshi, Forever Living Products (FLP), Tasly, Green World, Nutri Health, Kedi, Fohow, Longrich, Norland, Edmark, Tahitian Noni, Dynapharm, Nature’s Gift For Life (NG4), and Eternal, among others. Some of them, like Tiansh, sold small dosages for the price of larger dosages. I still recall my shock at discovering that I had to swallow 12 tablets of Tianshi Zinc for only 15mg of this mineral whereas Nature’s Way, a direct sales company from the U.S. sold one 50mg of zinc capsule or tablet for a price much less than Tianshi’s 15mg. Alliance products were often no more than 10 capsules per blister pack at prices that, equated to 90 capsules or softgels for one month’s order, far exceeded the prices of  standard packaging.

    My defence of such anomalies then was that we had to pay a price to learn, to grow and to become our own masters. I gained this insight from my first visit to Europe in 1979.  I was lucky to visit the site of a stone storey building where Bethoven was said to have written his music and directed his orchestra. I visited, also, another building where Handel was said to have written and directed The Messiah between August 22nd 1741 and September 17th 1801. These were great classical musicians. I thought about the state of housing in my village then. Had the missionaries not come, would we have been able to live in the types of houses in which we live today? In Lagos today, there are houses better than Buckingham Palace, home of the King and Queen of England, and 10 Downing Street, official residence of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. I was privileged to live on Femoy Street, London, where two bedrooms shared an only bathroom and water closet. I haven’t lived in such a house since 1990! There is no doubt forces of religion, business, and politics exploited the civilising mission of the envangelising  missionaries and fighters of slave trade such as William Wilberforce. The bottom line, nevertheless, shows a profit balance in the ledgers of our  people.

    That was how I foresaw the onslaught of MLM in Nigeria of the 1990s. It taught us to remember our traditional medicines and to build our own MLM around them. It took me almost one week to register with Katine Communications under the bridge at Ikeja, Lagos, to sell cosmetic products called Carrot, which were made from Diatomaceous Earth (DE or Diatom). Katine Communications, a previous recharge card selling business, took Carrot products all over Nigeria, selling a million units of the products every day, before differences with the producing company killed the business. After Katine and Carrot came several others, including Friends of Nature which was domiciled at Gowon Estate, near Ipaja, Lagos. The CEO killed the promising business in my view,  by reneging on agreements. One of them was that a distributor could earn the moon, even the sun, with the personal purchase of only one product every month.

    One of the affiliate distributors, Edith Njoku, had no marketing gift but was a great organiser for recruiting marketers…. She disappeared as it were to the Southeastern  states and to Port Harcourt in the Southsouth and grew down-lines by the thousands.  When the cheque for her bonus was written and the CEO discovered she bought a product valued at only N200 for the month, he developed cold feet about paying her almost half a million naira. I remember him asking if anyone had heard of N200 yielding N500,000 anywhere on earth. The woman, a house girl all her young life, became agitated, tampered with some computers, and the police were called to take her away for a few days. All the affiliate marketers quit in protest, and the company failed.

    MILNAPATH HOPE

    My hope is that Milnapath will not let us down. Nigeria is a huge traditional and alternative medicine market. There are many plant medicines in the bushes, thickets and forests than  we  can identify for generations. Diatom is abundant in Bayelsa State and in the Southeast. It is not purified before it is eaten, and that is dangerous. It is called Nzu. In the days of the Goodluck Jonathan administration, this column suggested this would be a great gift he would give his people if he helped them to set up factories to conveniently mine and purify Nzu, which could then be marketed world-wide.  At that time, the Canadians wished to sell theirs in Nigeria.  I declined to be a party to that. All that we lack in order to seize the initiative is technology.  Money is abundant.  The only trouble is that politicians who are afraid to invest in Nigeria, money that they stole from Nigeria, believe other thieves like them will consume their investment. I once toyed with the idea of a small freeze drying machine in the U.K. It cost about €3 million then. With it, anything can be turned into powder with long shelf life and marketed everywhere. Name them – orange, orange peels, plantain, plantain peels, tomato, corn, okra, carrot, garden eggs, yam, mushroom, bitter leaf, ewedu (jute mallow), vegetables,  peppers, cassava, nuts, etc. Are the governors listening?

    Live Pure returns

    Live Pure never really came to Nigeria, although it was in this country and did business with us. It ran on a business model which many MLM companies employ to minimise cost and maximise profit, The Independent Business Developer (IBD). This fellow is like the ‘Property Developer’ we are familiar with. He develops your property,  shares the rent with you for a while  and then goes his way when his purse is well stuffed. Ben Peter may have been an IBD for Live Pure in Nigeria.

    An IBD in Nigeria protects the business owners far away against capital risks in an unknown terrain. He sets up the “company” with his own money. He is not a stupid fellow though. He appoints stockists of his products among Nigerians. These are the fellows who really fund operations. He gives them mouth-watering commissions for interfacing as wholesalers between him (and the company abroad) and the retailers (independent marketers or distributors).  The IBD receives commission on every item sold in the country. He may lower business terms to speedily achieve his goal or, hand the business over to his principal and move on to open newer national markets.  In Nigeria, the Live Pure IBD omitted Annual Subsciption in the terms of business to quickly grow the business. The subscription is compulsory in many Euro- American MLM businesses. At the end of the business year, the independent distributors “drop something” as we say in Nigeria, to continue to be in business with  the company  for another year. This may be as little as $100 USD. It may be a little drop of water in the U.S. where many of them make a “mighty profit ocean” but it is a big deal in a poor country. Imagine a company with one million distributors worldwide. $100 a year will amount to $100 million or N1,400,000,000,000 at Nigeria’s current exchange rate of about N1,400 to one USD. This is “profit after profit “or second-level profit.

    Live Pure IBD let go annual subscription in the business to encourage business growth and hammered it into the business when the “cooking” was done with. It was a third major blow for independent Nigerian distributors before the company crashed out of business in this country. The first major blow was the abandonment of foreign tours for high flyers among them. The IBD did not envisage rapid business growth. About three times more distributors than were anticipated qualified. Happily, for the IBD, this was in COVID 19 season which was an opportunity to down scale foreign trips of the value of more than N5 million per person in cash or travel expense to about N500,000 per person. “Hungry” Nigerians jubilated nevertheless and enjoyed the crumbs. The next major blow was the abandonment of the STtockist business model.  I am aware of a stockist who invested about N10 million on Live Pure warehousing. Imagine about 1,000 of such persons nation-wide. That must have meant about N10,000,000,000. That may have amounted to N10 billion cheap business capital provided the IBD by stockists.

    Suddenly, the IBD abrogated the stockists’ position to directly interface with the market on an electronic platform backed with a grandiose motor bike courier delivery logistics programme. Stockists were stuck with stocks that could expire in their warehouses should they not drop prices.  On top of all those financial problems for stockists, the IBD suddenly packed bag and baggage, and was gone. The Live Pure business in Nigeria collapsed. Surprisingly, the IBD tried, but failed, to introduce to Nigeria new products from another company believed to be theirs.

    Now, the Live Pure business is on a rebound, however, from Ghana. It is possible the IBD has gone to open the Ghanaian market which is expected, through remote control, to drive the much bigger Nigerian market and make commission on every Live Pure product brought into Nigeria. This would also make Ghanaian up lines of Nigerians who would have to reregister under Ghanaians to do Live Pure business in Nigeria. Worst still for Nigerians, Ghanaians, buying and selling less in Ghana, would now earn biggers  bonuses from the labour of Nigerians. In order words, Nigerians are going to be financial slaves of Ghanaians. This will be one of the drains on Nigeria’s U.S. Dollar earnings and push down the value of the Naira. As of today, the old-time Nigerian stockists are heading to Ghana to stock up Live Pureproducts from Ghanaian stockists, making the head become the foot, as we are wont to say  in a YORUBA adage.

    LOCAL PRODUCTS

    It is against a background such as this that I found exciting the information that a sprouting of local  Nigerian food supplements has erupted again, with MILNAPATH appearing to take the lead. I asked my wife, who lives in Abuja, to watch many of them, and give me an idea of what is happening up there.

    She reports:

     1) The Spice House Ltd, Olive Estate, Satellite Town, Lagos:

    •Bay Leaves •Ceylon Cinnamon •Moringa Leaves Powder

    2) GOTEA,  Ilupeju Industrial Estate: •Cholesterol Reducing Tea •Immunity Tea •Eyebright Herbal Tea •Arthritis Herbal Tea

    •Blood Sugar Balance Tea

    3) Jamdah Worldwide Ltd, Sharada Phase 2, Industrial Area, Kano: •DAHIR Curry Powder •Black Seed Powder

    4) Off Abacha Rd, Nasarawa State: •DIOGO Pure Soya

    5) Rice Mill Rd, Gboko, Benue State: •Turmeric Powder

    6) National Technology Incubation Centre, Farm Centre, Tarai LGA, Kano State: •Thyme

    7) Toa Agro Allied Services Ltd, Dawanau Mkt, Katsina Rd, Kano: •Black Pepper Powder

    8) Little Mayfield, Jos: •GOTEA-Antidiabetic Tea •Organic Kidney Tea

    9) Vital Quest Nigeria Ltd, Yusuf Doma St, Kaduna: •Premium Black Tea

    10) Home Affairs Organic Products, Mbubu Industrial Area, Imo State: •Mistletoe Tea

    For this column, I thank my wife for linking me up with Zainab Ademola who works with Milnapath in Abuja. Zainab is herself a distributor of the products. This is indeed a critical time, hopefully, for an opportunity to monitor the growth of these new Nigerian plant medicines MLM company at a time we seriously need many of them in the economy. We should encourage them.

  • Court summons church over land dispute

    Court summons church over land dispute

    Lagos State High Court in Ikeja has ordered Incorporated Trustees of Victorious Army Ministries International to appear before it to answer to a land dispute case involving Asade Royal Family of Ogba, Lagos.

    Justice Raliat Adebiyi gave the order following a motion ex-parte brought pursuant to Order 9, Rule 5 of High Court Civil Procedure Rules 2019 by Prince Oyewole Asade and Prince Olabisi Asade.

    Asade Royal family had filed for an application seeking leave of the court to serve a writ of summon and other originating processes on the church by substituted means by posting at the church premises having failed to accept service.

    In the writ of summon, the family is seeking a declaration that they are owned all the land at Plot 22, Acme Road, Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos State.

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    They also seek a declaration that the family is entitled to the statutory Right of Occupancy in respect of the land at Plot 22, Acme Road, Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos State.

    Also, Asade Family as claimants are seeking an order of Perpetual Injunction to restrain the church, their servants, agents, privies, assigns, representatives and whosoever derived title from them from trespassing on the disputed land.

    They prayed for an order for possession of the land.

    In its statement of claims, the royal family relied on the decision of Supreme Court in suit SC 129/1984 wherein Justice Andrews Obaseki affirmed that Agidingbi village and farmlands surrounding it lie in Asade’s Ogba land.

    The family averred there is no record of any sale, assignment, transfer, or lease of the land from its record to the church and didn’t know how the church, Incorporated Trustees of Victorious Army Ministries International, got to its land.

    Lawyer to the family, Remi Adeoye, noted that despite service of the originating processes, the church didn’t file its defence within the time allowed by rules of the court.

    He said the church deliberately failed and refused to file any process in court with the intention of delaying the case.

  • Court summons church over land dispute

    Court summons church over land dispute

    Lagos State High Court in Ikeja has ordered Incorporated Trustees of Victorious Army Ministries International to appear before it to answer to a land dispute case involving Asade Royal Family of Ogba, Lagos.

    Justice Raliat Adebiyi gave the order following a motion ex-parte brought pursuant to Order 9, Rule 5 of High Court Civil Procedure Rules 2019 by Prince Oyewole Asade and Prince Olabisi Asade.

    Asade Royal family had filed for an application seeking leave of the court to serve a writ of summon and other originating processes on the church by substituted means by posting at the church premises having failed to accept service.

    In the writ of summon, the family is seeking a declaration that they are owned all the land at Plot 22, Acme Road, Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos State.

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    They also seek a declaration that the family is entitled to the statutory Right of Occupancy in respect of the land at Plot 22, Acme Road, Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos State.

    Also, Asade Family as claimants are seeking an order of Perpetual Injunction to restrain the church, their servants, agents, privies, assigns, representatives and whosoever derived title from them from trespassing on the disputed land.

    They prayed for an order for possession of the land.

    In its statement of claims, the royal family relied on the decision of Supreme Court in suit SC 129/1984 wherein Justice Andrews Obaseki affirmed that Agidingbi village and farmlands surrounding it lie in Asade’s Ogba land.

    The family averred there is no record of any sale, assignment, transfer, or lease of the land from its record to the church and didn’t know how the church, Incorporated Trustees of Victorious Army Ministries International, got to its land.

    Lawyer to the family, Remi Adeoye, noted that despite service of the originating processes, the church didn’t file its defence within the time allowed by rules of the court.

    He said the church deliberately failed and refused to file any process in court with the intention of delaying the case.

  • 8,000 farmers get support via Ogun-cares

    8,000 farmers get support via Ogun-cares

    Over 8,800 small holder farmers in 20 Local Governments of Ogun State have received agricultural input and assets as well as infrastructural support via OGUN CARES FADAMA.

    Presenting the items at OGUN CARES FADAMA’s premises, Abeokuta, Commissioner for Agriculture, Bolu Owotomo said Governor, Dapo Abiodun, is committed to alleviate challenges through intervention programmes.

    According to the commissioner, items distributed include 14,000 Day Old Chicks, 560 bags of chick feed, 209 fish feed, fish smoking kin, 500 bags of fertilizer, eight motorized sprayers, 75 rechargeable knapsack sprayers, 13 cassava graters, pressers, bowls for fermenting cassava, iron pots, protective kits among others.

    Others are road rehabilitation, renovation of culvert, water drainages and provision of bore-holes for water supplies at four wet markets where food processing takes place to increase hygiene and reduce food contamination.

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    He enjoined beneficiaries to join hands with FADAMA Team and make use of the items to maximise profit, imploring farmers yet to benefit not to lose hope…” he  said.

    Head of State CARES Coordinating Unit, Bayo Adenekan, said Nigeria COVID-19 Action Recovery and Economic Stimulus (NG-CARES) also OGUN-CARES was a federal initiative backed by World Bank.

    Permanent Secretary of Ministry of Agriculture, Samuel Adeogun, said over 10,000 farmers have been assisted since inception.

    Project Manager, OGUN-CARES FADAMA, Babatunde Beckley, hailed the farmers and urged them to work in unity.