Author: The Nation

  • Sujimoto ranks first among 100 real estate developers in Africa

    Sujimoto ranks first among 100 real estate developers in Africa

    Nigeria’s number 1 luxury real estate company, Sujimoto Group, has been ranked by renowned Spanish luxury building materials manufacturer, Porcelanosa, as the only real estate company from Africa to make its exclusive list of developers with the best projects from around the world.

    The Spanish company in its annual ritual of searching for the best companies in the world with exceptional project designs, has chosen Sujimoto’s LucreziaBySujimoto 15-floor architectural masterpiece deemed “the curves of Banana Island,” as an incredible edifice worthy of attention.

    The edifice, which is described as Africa’s most luxurious and extravagant skyscraper, is the brainchild of Sujimoto’s Group Managing Director, Dr Olasijibomi Ogundele.

    It was born from a visionary dream to revolutionise and elevate the essence of luxurious living in Nigeria. Inspired by the 16th-century Italian Renaissance and fashioned after the Duchess consort of Ferrara, Lucrezia de’ Medici, one of the most prestigious queens of her time,the project draws inspiration from the noble woman; her embodiment of elegance and ultimate sophistication, which were influenced by her royal bloodline.

    Read Also: Sujimoto dines with Gov Adeleke

    The project serves as a testament to an exceptional team of designers and architects, both local and international, who meticulously studied how Nigerian elite desire to live in their own villas, understanding their expectations and creating their desires through a first-of-its-kind architectural prowess of stacking villas on top of each other, creating a vertical estate that houses magnificent maisonettes and two of Africa’s best penthouses in the skies of Lagos.

    Speaking on the recognition by Porcelanosa,
    Ogundele said: “In creating the Lucrezia, our intention was to build the best living experience any HNI could ever dream of. This is why we visited the best penthouses in Dubai and the best homes in Cape Town; we came back armed with the right team of experts, ensuring we cross all the T’s and dot all I’s in the delivery of the most luxurious building any human being can ever wish for”.

    Sujimoto’s inclusion in the esteemed list is a testament to its unwavering commitment to excellence, scattering all rules and setting new standards for unrivaled luxury in the Nigerian real estate sector.

    The firm has over 2,320 architectural masterpiece projects across the world.

    A statement by the firm said: “The Lucrezia dusts off the records of several impressive firsts, including being the first building in Nigeria with a glass-reinforced concrete (GRC) facade and housing Africa’s first-of-its-kind interactive lobby. Additionally, it features Africa’s pioneering virtual golf bar with over 2500 courses where customers can express the Tiger Woods in them. Lucrezia is also the first building in Africa to have over 48 electric vehicle charging stations, the first of their kind on the continent. The Lucrezia also showcases a one-of-a-kind, fully furnished private IMAX cinema room with a Bang & Olufsen standard electronic system.

    “Within the space of 8 years, Sujimoto Group has positioned itself as the famed class captain of the ‘global community of luxury bricklayers”. This recognition comes on the heels of setting a recognized industry standard for luxury living in Africa while wearing its crown among the top 20 developers to be a part of the esteemed Porcelanosa International Project Award (PIPA) 2023.”

  • Town planners urge govts to declare action on ocean surge

    Town planners urge govts to declare action on ocean surge

    The Nigerian Institute of Town Planners (NITP) has urged dwellers in places prone to flooding to relocate to safer places to avoid disasters this year.

    It also called on the Federal Government and Ondo State Government to take quick steps to arrest the perennial menace of ocean surge and flooding in Aiyetoro, a community in the state and other vulnerable places which suffer similar environmental distress.

    The institute urged both governments to step up actions through intensive studies and production of implementable plans to arrest the challenges of ocean surge.

    It said similar steps should be taken in other parts of the country where flood disasters occur.

    National President, NITP, Nathaniel Atebije stated this during a press conference on Monday in Abuja.

    Aiyetoro, a riverine community in Ilaje Local Government Area of Ondo State, recently witnessed ocean surge which displaced over 2,000 people while 200 houses were destroyed.

    While sympathising with the victims of the recent ocean surge in Ondo, Atebije said there was a need to take more practical and positive actions to address the menace of ocean surge which he said was overdue.

    He said: “We call on the Federal Government and Ondo State Government to take quick steps to arrest the perennial menace of ocean surge and flooding in Aiyetoro and other vulnerable places which suffer similar environmental distress as well as we enjoin all dwellers in places prone to flooding to relocate to safer places to avoid disasters this year.

    “In a recent disaster in Aiyetoro, a riverine community in Ilaje Local Government Area of Ondo State, an ocean surge displaced over 2,000 people while 200 houses were destroyed. We sympathize with the victims of this catastrophe. The need to take more practical and positive actions is overdue. Permanent solutions such as relocation of residents to a more secured planned environment should be sought instead of the temporary relief measures provided by emergency management agencies of both state and federal governments.”

    Read Also: Southsouth to DSS: name, arrest, prosecute planners of interim govt

    He also lamented the invasion of foreign syndicates employed by governors to carry out Geographical Information Systems (GIS) services in their state.

    The NITP president urged governors to minimise patronage of foreign consultants in physical planning and GIS saying that Nigerian consultants had come of age to provide such services.

    Atebije said: “We lament over the recent quiet invasion of foreign syndicates by Nigerian Governors who confuse them with figures concerning the benefits of GIS. They inform them that they can carry out assignments beyond their core competencies. They engage in physical planning. The end result is poor planning and waste of resources for an unprofessional job. Giving such jobs to foreigners has its security implications.

    “We enjoin all Governors of States to minimize patronage of foreign consultants in physical planning and GIS because Nigerian consultants have come of age to provide such services; even where there are deficiencies in Nigerian consultants, they can invite foreigners to assist; but our land data and information would be kept within our boundaries.”

    He also appealed to the Kano state government to handle the enforcement on illegal developments professionally, logically and with human face especially because of the impact of the actions on the economy.

  • Group lauds Tinubu over Alake’s appointment

    Group lauds Tinubu over Alake’s appointment

    An Ekiti based socio-economic group, Ekiti Pacers has shown its unreserved appreciation to the President of Federal Republic of Nigeria, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu GCFR for appointing its kinsman, Dele Alake, as Special Adviser, Special Duties, Communications and Strategy. The group described the appointment as very significant and appropriate, saying; “it’s a round peg in a round hole.

    In a press statement signed by the duo of the group’s Gov’nor, Alexander Oke and its Information Officer, Olusola Benson, Ekiti Pacers said; “though the appointment was relatively not a surprising one, based on Alake’s track record of professionalism, tenancy of purpose, loyalty to his political structure and dedication to the service of the country, but kudos must be given to the President not just for his political sagacity, but also for his efforts in ensuring that, right hands are put in place, as well as his genuine interest in developing the country.”

    Read Also: Oyebanji thanks Tinubu over Alake, Olanrewaju’s appointments

    “At this particular stage of Nigeria’s nationhood, it is apparent that the nation needs right hands as well as people with the right knowledge of Nigeria and Nigerians’ challenges with the most appropriate solution to make the nation a pride of all.”

    It also noted that, the President hasn’t disappointed so far in his efforts, saying; “he is already replicating the strategy he used as Lagos State Governor, where he assembled one of the best team ever in Nigeria’s political governance and public administration history. It is obvious that Nigeria is in for a first class democratic governance for the next four years.”

    Ekiti Pacers, established about twenty years ago is made up of young and vibrant professionals in diverse sector of the economy. Over the years, the group has been committed to efforts and programs aimed at raising the standard of living of people in the society at large. Though, with members, who are mostly indegens of Ikoro-Ekiti in Ijero Local Government Area of Ekiti State, its socio-economic interventions in the society have transcended different tribes and ethnic group

  • Media Agency partner Skit Maker Layi Wasabi

    Media Agency partner Skit Maker Layi Wasabi

    Penzaarville Africa, a leading media agency in the continent is excited to announce the addition of sensational skit maker Layi Wasabi to their array of talents. The company prides itself in nurturing exceptional talents and positioning them for more visibility channeled towards growths.

    The company’s CEO, Olufemi Oguntamu believes Layi Wasabi’s addition will further enhance the agency’s ability to bring impactful solutions to existing and prospective clients through his enchanting contents creation and deliveries. Olufemi submits that, “With his comedic brilliance, creativity, and ability to engage audiences through captivating skits, Layi Wasabi is set to bring a fresh wave of entertainment and creativity to the dynamic team. Layi Wasabi has gained widespread recognition through his hilarious skits on social media platforms. His unique talent for crafting humorous and relatable content has endeared him to millions of viewers, making him a highly sought-after skit maker.”

    Read Also: Police threaten to arrest popular skit maker over ‘immoral’ pranks

    Expressing his enthusiasm about joining Penzaarville Africa, Layi Wasabi stated, “I am excited to be a part of the team. Having checked out several Talents Management agencies in the country, I chose to join the Penzaarville team because I am convinced they have clear understanding of my contents style and our visions align effortlessly. Collaborating with a company that values creativity and innovation is a dream come true.”

    With this exciting partnership, both Penzaarville Africa and Layi Wasabi are poised to achieve new milestones in the entertainment and media industries.

  • 75 years of trail-blazing school

    75 years of trail-blazing school

    It clocked 75 years on April 5, but the landmark was not celebrated then for obvious reason. It was the holy month of Ramadan and fasting is obligatory for members of the movement.

    The movement is none other than the founders of the first Muslim school in West Africa  – Ahmadiyya College (now Anwar-Ul Islam) College, Agege, Lagos. Founded in 1948 by the Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam, as it was then known, the college has grown through the years to be one of the best in the land. It has weathered storms to be where it is today. Not even the 1976 change in the name of its founders to Anwar-Ul Islam Movement in Nigeria and consequently a change in its own name have affected the school’s fortunes.

    The college is waxing stronger and stronger. Its old students are celebrating its 75th anniversary in a grand style on July 7, three months after it was heralded by a world press conference. The school is as dear to the students now as it was when they were there at various times. Though its name has since changed, it still remains popularly called Ahmadiyya by its old students. In conversations and at play, Ahmadiyya rolls out of their mouths with ease as they recall their days in the school with nostalgia. Those boys of yesterday who have today become men and are doing well in their various fields of endeavour have been using a special purpose vehicle – the Anwar-Ul Islam College Old Students Association (ACAOSA) to give back to the secondary school that moulded them.

    The school developed them in character and learning in their formative years. Away from home and parental guidance, they formed a special bond which remains strong till today. Though they entered the college in different years, this has not affected their relationship. They see themselves more as brothers than just schoolmates. It is for this reason that whenever they gather, what is uppermost on their minds is what do we do for “our school”. To them, it is Ahmadiyya first. They are ever ready to give back to the school in appreciation. So, the 75th anniversary will be another gathering of old boys, their spouses, friends and family members in honour of a trail blazing school.

    For Ahmadiyya boys, football is the food of leisure. It was played virtually in every part of the school. The boarders, especially, enjoyed what was called ‘abeku’, a ball that had become flat after puncturing, which was played in front of one of the dormitories.

    Read Also: Gunmen kill 37, abduct six others in attack on Ugandan school

    It was an exciting game, which many gathered to take turns to play. Among the activities lined up to mark the anniversary is a novelty match between ACAOSA  and All-Star team of first generation schools, which comes up on the school premises at 4p.m. A major highlight of the programme is the career talk with the theme: “It’s about creating yourself “.

     Hakeem Ogunniran, an old student, is the key speaker, while the panellists are Wasiu Fashina, Olaniyi Gbolahan, and Lye Ogunsanya. Adekunle Ojo, another old student, is the moderator. The topics are: “Dream big and become what you believe;

    Entrepreneurship as the gateway to self-sufficiency and Shaping my life to fit into the digital world”.

      Chairman of the anniversary organising committee, Alhaji Rahman Alarape (Snr), said students would be major participants in the programme, with their parents, teachers and the school management expected to attend. Alarape enjoined old students interested in playing in the football game to register immediately, adding that there is space only for the fit.

    The career talk will be followed by Jumat service in the school mosque at 1pm. When the school turned 75 on April 5, ACAOSA President-General, Alhaji Lawal Pedro (SAN), told reporters in Lagos that the anniversary would be celebrated in July to showcase the college’s place in the comity of the first generation of secondary schools in Lagos. The school’s products, he said, were holding their own in all segments of the society.

  • Fed Govt should revive power sector

    Fed Govt should revive power sector

    The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), Ikorodu and District Society, has urged the Federal Government to enhance the energy sector in order to boost the country’s economy.

    Chairman of the Institute Lateef Awojobi, in a statement, said since fuel subsidy has been removed, power should be made more accessible to artisans who form a larger percentage of the informer sector.

    Awojobi added that attention should be given to the transportation industry following the fuel subsidy.

    He said: “Government should begin implementation of the Electricity Aact. This will bring succour to Nigeria and create employment. When electricity is stable, lots of businesses will survive and more youths will be employed. This will help the economy.”

    Read Also: ICT training centre, others to empower youths

    The Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi, who was represented by the Onifekun of Fekunwa, Ole Ife, Oba Adewole Solomon, said the key industry that needs resuscitation should be power. Doing this, he noted, will enable low-income employees in the informal sector increase their efforts.

    He added: “There is a need for the new administration to regulate electricity in a way that more Nigerians will have access to it. This is very important so that more artisans will be able to work. Those who are skilled will be able to work.”

    The immediate past Chairman, Khalifat Hassan, urged the Federal Government to find a way to reduce the country’s debt burden and revive the energy sector.

    “Government should provide some level of palliatives to cushion the effects because it will boost many things in the economy. And also we can’t be borrowing all the time, it will have a negative effect,” she said.

  • Erectile dysfunction rising in Nigeria, health specialist warns

    Erectile dysfunction rising in Nigeria, health specialist warns

    • By Emma Anya

    The rate of erectile dysfunction in the country is rising at an alarming rate, a health expert, Dr David Paddy, has said. David blamed the trend on little or no attention paid to regular exercise, continuous consumption of processed foods, eating and poor resting pattern by many Nigerians.

     He stated that over 65 per cent of Nigerian men were at risk of suffering from erectile dysfunction at the age of 40. The expert, who is the founder of Paddy Paddy Wellness, spoke with reporters in Abakaliki. He added that men who suffer from erectile dysfunction could suffer stroke, heart disease and premature death.

     His words: “About 65% of Nigerian men are likely to suffer from the stigmatisation of having weak or no erection once they are 40 years old. This silent humiliation and suffering have given rise to an urgent need for conversation and effective solutions. It is imperative for men to take action and tackle this issue head-on before it takes a toll on their overall health and well-being,” David advised.

    Read Also: ‘My husband suffers from erectile dysfunction’

     David added that a survey showed that the biggest problem men are facing currently is erectile dysfunction in the form of low libido, weak erection and premature ejaculation. He added: “This is not surprising because in 2019, Dr Festus from the University of Ife conducted a survey and he found out that the percentage of men suffering erectile dysfunction as of 2019 was around 44 per cent. It got us thinking that if we had 44 percent of men having this issue in 2019, imagine the number in 2023. If you look at the statistics, you will now understand the need for us to begin to educate our men.

     “Among the causes of this-we have infections, abdominal fats and low testosterone levels (which is largely attributed to age) because as you grow older your testosterone level decreases. But God has blessed us with natural herbs to take care of all these things. He has provided a lot of natural resources to increase our hormonal levels and a lot more’’. God knows that as you age your testosterone and hormonal level is growing low and He has provided things around us with which to increase it and thereby increase our performance.

    “But like I said ignorance is one of the reasons why a lot of people don’t know that these things exist, let alone using them to help themselves. Men of today have to tap into the secrets of forefathers and ask: How did they survive? What did they do differently? “

  • Inauguration: Guard your health, six mafia ‘wars’ likely (2)

    Inauguration: Guard your health, six mafia ‘wars’ likely (2)

    Please grant me one minute to talk about The Key to Peace And  Happiness. I coined this title from the advice of a wise one to suffering people who did not know their condition was caused by their thoughts. The Wise One said: “Keep the hearth of your thoughts pure. By so doing, you will bring peace and happiness”. The hearth of any thought is the foundation of that thought. In my speech making days,THE KEY TO PEACE AND HAPPINESS was my favourite subject for turning upward the listener’s gaze. I reasoned that keeping the thoughts pure at this time would be a Balm of Gilead when petrol price is above the roof and instigating a riot of other prices under its canopy.

    Before I proceed, please excuse another minute to quickly detour to the second of six mafia ‘wars” I mentioned last week  (June 8, 2023) were likely to follow the inaugural speech of Pesident Bola Ahmed TinubuI on May 29, 2023. This second battle field is the abrogation of the foreign currency black market.

     Currency war

    To avoid the currency war, there are three options…

    • Expand foreign currency earning,

    • Curtail foreign currency expenditure,

    • Confront the cabal or mafia which has created a black currency market out of the official currency market.

    I have been imagining for more than 20 years a bone breaking “war” in this area. This may involve hundreds of thousands or millions of persons who are knee deep in “black currency” business. Government success in this” war ” should enable foreign  companies who do business with Nigeria to have easier access to foreign currency on better terms. But it will be despised by Nigerians abroad who “sow” little foreign currency into the Nigerian economy but reap “bumper harvests” from them , in the local currency, the naira. Many of them emigrated just to be able to return in a few years to take commanding heights of the economy. Of what benefit will be their suffering abroad if their home  remittances amount to little or nothing? should the US Dollar begin to exchange for, say, N250, their dependants at home, too, may not wish the naira well. What about the bank managers who round trip foreign currencies? Can we forget those young Nigerians back home who, unemployed for years, have learned to do internet businesses which pay them in foreign currency? There are several armies the President is going to do battle  with within this sector. They all want Nigeria to become better. But do they realise that Nigeria becoming better means that the naira has to be rescued from the strangulation of other currencies and that, doing so, will pull the carpet from under their feet?

    About 32 years ago, I had the privilege of having lunch with Gen Aliyu Gusau (rtd) then national security adviser (NSA).

    I was Editor of The Guardian newspaper. Soon, Gen. Shehu Musa Yar’adua (rtd) showed up in the room. Gen Gusau introduced us. I knew they wanted to sound me out over election- season promises of presidential candidate, one of whom was  Gen. Yar’adua. The economy was in distress and the “black market” was a major cause of it. Was he ready to take on the “black market?” If he was, would he accept my suggestions? The police and the armed forces should hatch a secret crack down plan as follows:

    • Principal operational zones of the “black market ” nationwide should be pre determined

    • At zero hour nationwide, security operatives should crack down on them

    • Black market currency hawkers should be arrested, handcuffed and bundled into police Black Maria and other vehicles.

    • Next day, they should appear in magistrates courts on holding charges, pending further investigations. They should state the sources of foreign currency found on them, and these “sources” should be immediately arrested for prosecution

    •Regular and unexpected mop up operations nationwide should continue indefinitely.

    • The foregoing should sanitise the banks and the currency market. But the government should expect a backlash from the unseen “hands of Esau”. These persons are the currency “black market” mafia.

    Understandably, Gen. Yar’adua did not warm up to the suggestions. Who would deliberately step on the tail of the cobra in his backyard? He looked at me, flashed a pretentious smile, nodding and puffing a cigarette and coughing.  Even garrulous President Olusegun Obasanjo, a retired army general, avoided the terrain as though it were a quagmire or minesfield. His successor, the younger Yar’adua was too sick to bell the cart. President Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan avoided brinkmanship and Gen Muhammadu Buhari, a retired general, was not a  man who could look his kinsmen or friends straight in the eyes and  square up with them. Bola Ahmed Tinubu is a “make or break man”. For 22 months as Governor of Lagos State, he defied the garrulous President Obasanjo who denied him of federal funds to run the state. But Tinubu found money elsewhere and Lagos State did not know a President Obasanjo existed in Abuja or in Nigeria! Was Lagos not robust enough to be a country? If it was, would it need  Obasanjo’s money outside its frontiers to survive? That is the man who, now as  President of Nigeria, has declared war on the “black currency” mafia! It is yet unclear if the suspension from office last Saturday of Central Bank Governor Godwin Emefiele had to do with other matters or a single market drive or both.

    Yet another interesting battle brewing is in the electricity sector. President Tinubu wishes to double capacities on electricity generation, transmission and distribution in a country where capacities are crashing almost everyday (more about this next week)

    The key to peace and happiness

    We are back to the advice to “Keep the hearth of your thoughts pure. By so doing, you will bring peace and happiness”. The HEARTH of your thoughts is the FOUNDATION of your thought.  This message is not original to me. It is the message of a wise one about 100 years ago to suffering people. It sprang from the knowledge that you are what you think. Many people erroneously believe that thoughts are free and that it is the tongue that we should always discipline. People who think like this may not realise that the tongue merely expresses abundance of the mind and that the starting point of any action, be it the spoken word or physical action, stems from the thought. There is fleeting thoughts which, like rolling stones, may gather no moss, as the English man says. There are also serious thoughts which may gather such large amounts of moss that they may become a VOLITION, the driving motif of one’s life, or a propensity which, like one’s shadow, may be difficult to detach from. I say “difficult” because propensities may also be the easiest things to knock off our lives if we understand them for what they are, where they come from, and if we have the courage and the will to shake them off.

    Many of us have the propensity for the blame game. We blame other persons for whatever befalls us. That is why the modern day priest smiles to the bank. If you listen to FM radio in Lagos from about 4.30am everyday, you may understand what I am saying. I never knew we would ever degenerate spiritually to the point that a so-called prophet would set up testimonials on radio, dictate his account number to listeners who want him to ask their Creator to expedite action on their prayers, even if they do not deserve what they are praying for. That’s not where I am heading.

    In the first part of this series, I outlined the possibility of the subsidy mafia exploiting the pains of pump price deregulation to defend their interests which is above N400 billion naira  every month.

    Thoughts

    We humans are wired up,  as though we are radio and television receiving sets or even the cell telephone sets on which we make wireless telephone calls or send text or voice messages. When we send astronauts to the moon, we communicate with them and they with us. This idea was borrowed from the universe, from worlds higher than ours.

    Read Also: Eko Electric partners institute on mental health

    In the universe, there are several spheres of existence which we may call Power Centres. We may call them so because the nature or characteristic of everyone in a power centre is homogenous or similar. Thus, there is a concentration of likeness in everything everyone does there. Grumbletonians stick together. So do murderers, thieves, kidnappers etc. On earth, there is a mingling of propensities, although we may sense tendencies towards homogenuity in families, tribes and unpolluted nationalities.

    When we  think, we connect with power centres homogenous with the nature of our thought. It is like when we switch on our laptops and we call out to GOOGLE, WHATSAPP or to PLANET, ZOOM, and now, OTRACKER Or O CONNECT or O VARSITY. The laptop takes us to wherever we connect with. If the network provider is not playing funny, my cell phone cannot take me away from Jide Ogundele, who is on my contact menu, when I dial his number and connect me with John Smith, who does not know I exist and who is also unknown to me. Should this happen, it means mankind or the internet service provider has not perfected an idea it borrowed from higher regions of the universe.

    What I am saying in effect is that our thoughts link us with those regions of the universe we are homogenous with.

    Subsidy aches

    Petrol price deregulation is provoking different thoughts in all of us and, accordingly, connecting us all to different climes in the universe. There are some persons who believe the deregulation will crush them. Each time they so think, they would generate thought forms of their worries and fears and these would team up with similar, ugly thoughts generated by other persons. The combined thought forms will re-enforce one another and, together, they will be sucked up by homogeneous power centres in the universe. These power centers must be  negative power centres which, in turn, connect with the negative souls, feeding them with negative ideas about why and how they must find existence more difficult than hitherto. If they are hateful, the hate in their souls will be reinvigorated. Poor, fearful soul, a supposed Lord in the universe who has been  giving  dominion over everything, including petrol prices and paper money. The negative power centre will re-inforce the worries, ideas, fears and self-created helplessness of such negative persons through feedback. Thus, they would be trapped in the quagmire of their thoughts which, through intensification by the power centre, would become larger, stronger, self entrapping and socially disrupting. It is of such persons the Yoruba elders say:TI A BA  GUN IYAN NINU ODO, TI A BA N RO OKA NI INU EPO EPA ENI MAA YO A YO! (If we pound yam in a mortar and make eba in groundnut shell, whoever will have the stomach filled will  have it filled). So, while the negative person delimit their potentials and enlarge their physical encumbrances and psychic entanglements, positive persons will be connected to power centres which would dispense positive ideas to them. Whatever their situations, our forefathers did not diminish themselves with negative thought. They did not know about Norman Vincent Peale and his books, The Power of  Positive  Thinking  and Amazing Results of Positive Thinking, before they deducted their knowledge of survivalism from the universe based on their experiences. Why are we such indolent souls in our generation, always dependent, hardly able to find ways out of a quagmire, always playing the blame game? Do lizards, ants, birds or butterflies talk about subsidy problems?

    Charles Idehor

    In a long, long while, I haven’t listened to a positive interview as I did the Charles Idehor programme on Jordan FM radio in Lagos on May 4, 2023. Maybe the personalities of Gbola  Oba and Adeniyi Adesina made the difference. Gbola Oba is the son of a womanly fish seller now of blessed memory at the  Baba Oloosa Market in Mushin, Lagos. He has been the victim of kidnapping and spent several days in a forest. He supports principles, not persons or political parties. Adesina is the Editor of this newspaper, The  Nation.  Both were effervescent  and electrifying and positive, and the otherwise bellicose regular callers agreed with them. Adesina said we would never know why politicians take their decisions and challenged all of us to say our decisions are not survivalism propelled. Gbola Oba said we all needed to readjust our lives. He was spending  about N40,000 every week to entertain his friends at their Hangouts in Surulere. But since petrol prices went up , he had stuck more to his bed at the weekends. He challenged women in particular to adjust their lives. Nigerian women were spending as much as six billion U.S. dollars every year on Brazilian human hair. Indian women were cutting and selling their long hair for this market and regrowing them for more deals. To catch some of the market, says Gbola Oba, the Chinese are making artificial human hair from bamboo. The direction women are going is the direction the nation will follow. If Nigerian women are fashion spend thrifts and economy destroyers, women are no more than what men see in them and want of them.

    Beyond this, neighbourhood life is what we should encourage. Children should attend schools nearest to home, to cut transport costs. Young persons should find jobs that are walking distances from home. There is no point earning N40,000 a month 30 kilometers away, which transportation and stress will erode, when a N20,000 job is next door.

    Poor Charles Idehor

    He spends N17,000 in these subsidy days to arrange a telephone interview with Gbola Oba and Adeniyi Adesina. The credit finished midway and he had to recharge. I wondered if he had not heard of O connect from ONPASSIVE, which I have been informing my professional colleagues about. O connect is cost saving in these times. It is a telephone conference application which can host about one million persons or more. The credit purchase is once for life because the application is self crediting. O connect is so designed because Onpassive, the newest, biggest and best internet business company in my view, shares 50 per cent of its profit with users of its applications and recharges for them from this account. Therefore, subscribers to O connect would not only earn bonuses every month from ONPASSIVE, they would never have to recharge the credit from out of their pocket once they have purchased this application.

    Self confession

    I admit to being negative until 1994 when Gen Sanni Abacha upset my apple cart. I was director of publications/Editor-in-chief of The Guadian newspaper. Gen Abacha shut it for one year on claims of anti-government publications. I had three school age children and a wife to look after. She worked as an academic at the Lagos State University (LASU) which was on ASUU strike, one of the longest ever, during which she earned no pay. I was on half pay, and had to sell egg, chewing stick, ice block and palm oil, largely to mallams, for survival. I was helped by the story of Bhudah, the Prince who lost his throne and became a happier and more successful person as a truck pusher and snake charmer in foreign lands. Whenever I lost a customer or two, I had sleepless nights. Then, one day, the thought occured to me that there were more than 180 million Nigerians. Why should I be unable to sleep over one or two of them? I learned to pray to be connected to persons who needed my services. Mrs. Beatrice Oloyede, one of my family friends since then, introduced me to piggery. In under one year, I raised about 300 pigs and piglets. I sold about 300 crates of eggs every week to mallams who sell bread and tea at road junctions. I bought vegetable from farms and sold them to market women. I sold honey from Obudu Town and from Ago Are, near Shaki. I began to sell herbs, starting with Patminger, Bitterleaf, Vervain and Lemon grass which I grew in the backyard of my residence. Whenever I took my children back to their boarding house at Kankon Model College, after Badagry, I picked up coconut which I sold in the Lagos Market. What did I not sell? I learned from this experience that the average Nigerian worker needed a second stream of income. Many people are inwardly immobile or are too status concious to make them explore survivalism in the informal market. My children were never sent home on account of school fees. We ate whatever we desired and to cap it all, I began to build a house before General Abacha released The Guardian newspaper from under his jack boot.

  • ‘Ondo govt intimidating judiciary’

    ‘Ondo govt intimidating judiciary’

    Former Deputy Speaker of the Ondo State House of Assembly, Ogundeji Iroju, has accused the government of intimidating the judiciary to get favourable judgment.

    Iroju said the garnishee order he secured against the government for his judgment debt to be paid was struck out due to government’s interference.

    Justice Adetan Osadebey, in January, ordered the reinstatement of Iroju as Deputy Speaker and payment of N10 million as damages. He also directed that all his entitlements be paid.

    Iroju however filed a garnishee order against the government’s account, through his lawyer, Wale Omotosho, due to the government’s refusal to pay him.

    But Justice David Kolawole again struck out the garnishee order yesterday.

    Omotosho, who spoke after the court ruling, said the judiciary was being punished because one of the courts ordered a temporary order against the government account

    “What they should have done is give the opportunity to approach the Supreme Court within 14 days, and file another one, once your motion is dismissed. But they didn’t do that, and this is a deliberate plot to frustrate Iroju from enjoying the benefits of his judgment. So we are in hopeless and helpless situations,” he said.

    Read Also: NSCDC promotes 85 senior officers in Ondo State

    But Commissioner for Justice and Attorney-General, Sir Charles Titiloye, who denied the allegation of intimidation, said Iroju was attempting to blackmail the government into paying what was not contained in the judgment.

    Titiloye said the garnishee order affected the running of the three arms of government.

    According to him, Iroju computed N245 million as his entitlement to be paid without recourse to the Clerk of the House.

    “No court will grant him what is not in the judgment. What he is asking for cannot be paid by any governor without getting an invitation from the EFCC.

    “Let him wait for the Court of Appeal to determine the case. He is asking for jumbo pay that is illegal. He is attempting to blackmail the judiciary.”

  • TETFUND spends N27.6b on ICT in tertiary institutions

    TETFUND spends N27.6b on ICT in tertiary institutions

    • •LASU adopts hybrid teaching method over inadequate facilities

    The Executive Secretary of the Tertiary Education Trust Fund, TETFund, Mr. Sonny Echono, has said the Fund has spent over N27.6 billion on Information Communication and Technology (ICT) intervention programmes in tertiary institutions in the last seven years.

    He made this known on Tuesday in Lagos while delivering a lecture at the 26th Convocation of the Lagos State University (LASU) on campus in Ojo.

    The lecture had as theme: “The impact of digitisation on higher education in a digital age.”

    Echono urged governments at all levels, parents and donor agencies to actively promote avenues that would ensure students and teaching staff get soft loans to enable them acquire digital devices for teaching and learning.

    He said TETFUND had established a National Knowledge Bank where theses beneficiaries of its programmes would be stored in digital form for easy accessibility from anywhere in the world.

    Echono said  ICT use was  not limited to adopting it in the payment of fees, but that it would help many people have access to education among many other possibilities and advantages.

     “Graduates need a mix of skills more than in the past. Incidentally, most of the skills are hinged on digital literacy. Some companies have left the country because of the lack of people with the basic skills required in their sectors despite the high rate of unemployment in the country.

    Read Also: TETFUND Boss to deliver LASU’s 26th convocation lecture

    “To drive this home, 87 per cent of McKinsey Global Survey respondents say they experience such skill gap too. The challenges of higher education are similar across other nations. We must review our curriculum and ensure that as we give people technical knowledge, we also give them real life business practices to guide them in life.

     “We have developed a digital literacy roadmap, as there is the urgent need to reimagine our education system and review our curriculum periodically, as we experience changes in the world daily,” he said.

    The TETFund boss noted that the organisation tripled its allocations to ICT projects in the last few years, a development that led to over 19,000 people being trained in digital literacy across the institutions.

     On the merits of digitisation of teaching and learning, Echono said it would reduce cost, increase access to education, improve efficiency, among others.

    The Chairman of the event, the Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof. Abubakar Rasheed, said two revolutions started globally about two decades ago and were changing the ways people live.

    He listed them to be Digital and Genetic Revolutions, with the former driving the latter.

    The NUC boss said a comprehensive review of the curriculum in universities had been done by the Commission.

    Vice Chancellor of LASU, Prof. Ibiyemi Olatunji-Bello, said the institution had adopted a hybrid teaching method to tackle inadequacy of facilities caused by explosion in student population.

    “Apart from providing a solution to overcrowding in the classrooms, this innovation will also ensure that students who cannot attend physical classes have an opportunity to join virtual ones irrespective of their locations on the university’s campuses.

    “This hybrid method has also solved problems associated with manually accessing university’s services such as certificate and transcript processing, school fees payment and other financial transactions,” she said.

    Earlier, some TETFUND-donated infrastructure was inaugurated by Rasheed. They included  buildings at Department of Arts and Faculty of Communications and Media Studies.