Alimosho Local Government Area of Lagos State in conjunction with Ikeja (Golden) Lions Club last Monday offered free eye screening and glasses, drugs and medication to residents of the area.
At the event, which held at the secretariat of the local government (LG), no fewer than 100 people benefited from the gesture.
The council’s Sole Administrator, Ganiyu Isola Quadri, said the event was a collaboration between the council and the club, adding that the LG contributed the lion’s share of the deal. ‘’We provided the logistics, the drugs, etc.,’’ he said. He praised the club for its assistance. He harped on the dividends of democracy, saying the medication was one of them.
Lions’ President, Mrs Caroline Adediran said the club provided over 100 eye glasses, costing over N120,000 each to the beneficiaries. She added that the money was raised from the members. She said the event was part of the Lion’s objectives to assist the less privileged in the society. ‘’Lions Club helps the poor. We have been doing that for 100 years,” she added. According to her, Lions had provided medicare at Oregun and Shomolu local governments.
On why the group chose eye treatment, the club’s Health Committee Chairman, Mrs Olajumoke Adebanjo, said: ‘’We believe eyes are essential to everybody. So, we should not lose them.’’ Earlier, she said, the club held screening for diabetes, dewormed children and took care of the elderly.
A beneficiary, Mr Samson Ogunjumo said: ‘’We thank Ikeja (Golden) Lions Club. We didn’t expect this. They tried a lot. May God give them more strength.’’
Category: Life – The Midweek Magazine
-

Lions, local govt offer free medicare
-

Nwapa, Emecheta were pioneers, says publisher
The late Buchi Emecheta’s literary voice was given expression through the support of Margaret Busby, who is reputed for being Britain’s youngest and first black woman book publisher. She co-founded Allison and Busby (1944 to 2011) with Clive Allison.
Besides being her publisher, Busby also became the late Emecheta’s friend, even as she followed the writing career of Nwapa, though from a far. In an online interview with The Nation, after Emecheta’s death, Busby spoke on both writers.
“It was an honour to be able to include both Flora Nwapa and Buchi in my 1992 compilation Daughters of Africa: An International Anthology of Words and Writings by Women of African Descent. Hard to believe it is 25 years since that was first published.
She added: “As I noted in that volume, Flora was the first African woman novelist to gain international recognition, with her 1966 novel being published in Britain in Heinemann’s African Writers Series. She was indeed a pioneer, as were the other African women also starting out in the 1960s and additionally exploring the genres of playwriting and poetry – with Ghana’s Efua Sutherland and Ama Ata Aidoo leading the way, alongside Southern Africa’s Bessie Head.
“Little wonder that when Buchi Emecheta too began to write, in the early ’70s, she would be influenced not only by “the father of modern African writing”, Chinua Achebe, but by her trailblazing countrywoman, to the extent that the title of Emecheta’s The Joys of Motherhood directly alludes to Nwapa’s words at the end of Efuru. Just as Efua Sutherland in the early 1970s co-founded a publishing company, so in the 1970s did Nwapa, giving as one of her objectives “to inform and educate women all over the world…about the role of women in Nigeria, their economic independence, their relationship with their husbands and children, their traditional beliefs and their status in the community as a whole. “Emecheta, too, for a while became her own publisher. In such initiatives it recognised the need for African women to continue to make interventions in the literary world, and the likes of Bibi Bakare-Yusuf of Cassava Republic Press must be accorded every respect for building on that brave tradition.” -

UNFPA, UNICEF call for proactive steps to end female genital mutilation
The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) have called for proactive steps that would quickly eradicate female genital mutilation.
The statement was made by UNFPA Executive Director, Dr BabatundeOsotimehin, and UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake on yesterday on 2017 International Day of Zero Tolerance for female genital mutilation(FGM).
The world must make faster progress to end female genital mutilation by 2030, it was said.
UNFPAOsotimehinlamented the excruciating pain and irreparablydamagesinflicted on girls’ bodies. “It causes extreme emotional trauma that can last a lifetime.It increases the risk of deadly complications during pregnancy, labour and childbirth, endangering both mother and child.
“It robs girls of their autonomy and violates their human rights.It reflects the low status of girls and women and reinforces gender inequality, fueling intergenerational cycles of discrimination and harm.It is female genital mutilation and cutting. And despite all the progress we have made toward abolishing this violent practice, millions of girls — many of them under the age of 15 — will be forced to undergo it this year alone.
“Sadly, they will join the almost 200 million girls and women around the world who are already living with the damage FGM/C causes – and whose communities are already affected by its impact.
According to him, in 2015, the Sustainable Development Goals recognized the close connection between FGM/C, gender inequality, and development – and reignited global action to end FGM/C by 2030.
“In 2016, more than 2,900 communities, representing more than 8.4 million people living in countries where UNFPA and UNICEF work jointly to end FGM/C, declared they had abandoned the practice. In 2017, we must demand faster action to build on this progress. That means calling on governments to enact and enforce laws and policies that protect the rights of girls and women and prevent FGM/C.
He said: “It means creating greater access to support services for those at risk of undergoing FGM/C and those who have survived it. It also means driving greater demand for those services, providing families and communities with information about the harm FGM/C causes – and the benefits to be gained by ending it. And ultimately, it means families and communities taking action themselves and refusing to permit their girls to endure the violation of FGM/C.Let us make this the generation that abolishes FGM/C once and for all – and in doing so, help create a healthier, better world for all.” -

Teecoks competition celebrates winners
The annual literary competition, tagged Teecoks writing competition, has celebrated its fresh winners.
The competition, which was organised for secondary schools pupils in Lagos, held its grand finale at the Summit Auditorium in Agidingbi. The event was attended by over 30 schools; it was chaired by Mr Niyi Karunwi.
According to the founder, Miss Towunmi Coker, the literary initiative was inspired by her interest in promoting reading and writing among teenagers.
This year’s edition, fourth in its series, was divided into two categories – poetry and prose. It had 99 participating schools. This year’s judges included Abigail Anaba, Lolade Ajekigbe, Chika Jones, Doyin Jaiyesimi and Dami Ajayi, who was the event’s guest speaker.
Adebogun Oluwatosin from Ansar-Ud-Deen College, Isolo, came first in the poetry category; Ibukunoluwa Addy of Chrisland College, Idimu, came first in prose. Ogbonna Collins from Ajegunle Senior High School was first runner-up for poetry and Oyekola Ibukunoluwa from Providence Heights Secondary School, second runner-up.
Oguntayo Favour from Maryland Comprehensive Secondary School, came second and Adetayo Ayomide from Christ the King International School, Gbagada was third in prose. The 20 candidates that came fourth to 10 th place in poetry and prose were also applauded for their efforts and they went home with consolidation prizes and certificates.
Townumi said: “After winning the Association of Nigeria Authors/National Examination Council (NECO) award as a secondary school pupil in 2007, I wanted to encourage others to develop their gifts and flair for writing.
“Nigeria is known for producing wonderful writers and intelligent storytellers. I wanted the standard to be maintained by the younger generations. And that was how the initiative was born.”
The event featured a quiz session, which had names of authors of African literature as the focus.
One of the judges, Madam Anaba, urged English and Literature teachers to teach pupils the act of writing. “We noticed that many literary terms were wrongly used and many did not pay good attention to the rules of grammar,” she said.
Despite the recession, according to the organiser, this year’s edition drew enormous support and sponsorship. They included Parresia Publishers, Mobile Oil Nigeria Plc, Yetunde Sarumi Collection, Piggybank and Roving Heights Books, among others. -

Osita Ike: Death as nuclear festival
Death steals in the unkindest of moments. There were no signs, whatsoever, that Prince Osita Ike was on his way out. Aged 54, he had countless dreams ahead. I should know because we were more than friends. A lot of commentators have had their say that Osita was not the literary type like his legendary father, His Royal Majesty, Eze (Prof) Vincent Chukwuemeka Ike, Eze Ikelionwu XI and author of Toads for Supper, The Potter’s Wheel, The Naked Gods, Sunset at Dawn, Expo 77, The Chicken Chasers, Our Children are Coming and others. Now let me get the cat out of the bag, for Osita Ike did publish a collection of poems entitled: Festivale Nucleare, way back in 1986, when he was 24 years old.
Born on June 12, 1962, he passed away on December 17, 2016. Osita used his poetry to truly encapsulate the life he would live. It is said anything not worth dying for is not worth living for. Osita fought the good fight and died for a worthy cause.
Tears welled up in my eyes as I picked up the copy of Osita’s poetry collection Festivale Nucleare, which he autographed for me on March 20, 1987 with these words: “To a dear friend Maxim Uzoatu with best wishes.” He writes out his full names on the book’s title page thus : Ositadinma Adeolu Nnanyelugo Olusanya Ike, sumptuously representing his Igbo-Yoruba parentage. Published by Oyster St. Iyke Editions, the book bears the dedication: “for mum and dad, Adebimpe Olurinsola and Vincent Chukwuemeka Ike.” The Osita Ike Enterprises, Publishing Division, has addresses via P.O. Box 638 Bauchi and P.O. Box 9113 Lagos.
In the Preface to Festivale Nucleare, Osita Ike writes: “This is my first published work apart from articles and essays on radio and in magazines. It is also the end of an experiment and the first finished product from Osita Ike Enterprises born in 1986.” We do know that Osita died as a result of asthma complications, and he did live his entire life dedicated to the fight against asthma. As he revealed in Festivale Nucleare, he set up a body to fight asthma, writing: “In July 1986, OSFAN, the product of a vision, was born to join in the fight against respiratory afflictions, especially Asthma. OSFAN – Osita For Asthmatic Nigeria, seeks to drum up support for NISASMA – the Nigerian Society for Asthmatics in particular. OSFAN is also planning a sponsored cycle run from Ibadan to Lagos in December 1986. I also intend to see this anthology out by then and proceeds from its launching are pledged to the work of OSFAN and NISASMA. You are all therefore, cordially invited and requested to join hands and lungs with the asthma vanguard.”
He, indeed, made out a form at the back of the book, which he encouraged his readers to fill in and send contributions, in cash or kind and pledges, straight to NISASMA. He asked the pointed question “Is Asthma a killer?” and promptly answers: “Yes, it is!!!” He then made the appeal: “Please help to control Asthma.”
According to Osita Ike, “Some people can live for weeks without food, some can live for days without water, but no human being, however highly placed, can live for minutes without air. The biggest concern of the ASTHMATICS is how to breathe well. There are over two million (2,000,000) ASTHMATICS in Nigeria. Many of them are children. During an attack they fight for every breath. ASTHMA can strike at any age irrespective of sex or creed. Thousands of Nigerians die from the disease every year. It is a matter for NATIONAL CONCERN. ASTHMA is a distressing, disabling, hereditary and non-contagious disease. However, it is preventable, controllable, and treatable.” Osita Ike’s dogged fight to stop asthma in its tracks was carried on with his customary gusto until the selfsame accursed disease stopped the fight mid-flight.
A committed soul from the very beginning, Osita Ike was an only son, indeed an only child. The heir to crown, he dared not to be sheltered in the hood of royalty. He cultivated a network of friends, largely from the families of his father’s friends such as Chinua Achebe’s children, Chinelo and Ike, Chike Momah’s daughter, Ada, Prof Emovon’s daughter, Osa, Prof Ukoyen’s daughter, Adia etc. He was an accomplished member of the Boys Scout movement as a child. He was elected the Secretary-General of the Students Union Government of the University of Jos.
An avid motorcycle rider, he enjoyed travelling, such as recalling the trip that took him “through Kaduna to Jos and Bauchi, back through Jos to Enugu, Ndikelionwu (for the laying to rest of our late Rev. Canon Chief W.N. Mbonu) to Aba, Onitsha, Awka, and five weeks and several poems after the initial departure, back through Ijebu-Ode to resume classes with my students at The Polytechnic, Ibadan”. He once “hitched a ride from Ibadan, in the cabin of a Fiat trailer carrying wheat offal to Kaduna.”
He was an irrepressible promoter of music and the creative arts, and enjoyed the hobbies of photography, politics, fishing and gardening. Little wonder his collection of poetry, Festivale Nucleare, “spans a wide range of emotions and subjects, from the satirical and political to the amorous and rib-tickling humorous.”
Osita made bold to say in life that he would have been a trader if not for his parents, who were distinguished pathfinders in the course of education. The mother, Adebimpe, wrote new chapters into the book of librarianship in Nigeria while his renowned novelist father served as the Registrar of the West African Examinations Council (WAEC).
Osita Ike was the Principal Consultant of Oyster St Iyke Limited, a Public Relations and Communications consultancy. He was an active member of both the Public Relations Consultants Association of Nigeria (PRCAN) and the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR). John Ehiguese, the President of PRCAN, was stunned by Osita’s sudden death, stating: “We mourn our dynamic and enthusiastic colleague, whose commitment to the public relations profession was never in doubt. No doubt the outpouring of emotion and tributes since his sudden transition are confirmations of how well he played his part in the advancement of his cherished profession and his belief in humanity. We pray that God Almighty comforts his aged parents, wife, children and all whose lives our brother and friend, Ike, impacted on.”
An unwavering lover of his homeland where his father reigned as Eze Ikelionwu XI, he avidly promoted the Ndike books and the cultural festival that held every October, that is, following the September hosting of the New Yam Festival. Popularly known as Jizospikin, to wit, the child of Jesus Christ, Osita Ike was indeed, larger than life and death.
Osita’s death literally tore apart Facebook. Let’s end on the note of December 21, 2016 post by Anita Aggrey: “A wonderful, kind-hearted giant has been called to eternal rest and glory. I’m still reeling from the shock of Prince Osita Ike Jizospikin’s sudden departure. It is not necessary to have met someone physically in order to be impacted by their uniqueness. Prince Osita was one of the loveliest, kindest, most humble of gentlemen: no detection of pomposity or arrogance despite his royalty. Always encouraging and good-natured. Never for a second imagined he would not be here with us. May the Holy Spirit comfort his family and friends. Our loss is Heaven’s gain. By God’s grace we will eventually meet on the other side of eternity some day. Rest well in Father’s bosom until then our Prince.” He is survived by his aged parents, his son and his daughter. -

Arthouse auction opens Saturday
Arthouse Contemporary, West Africa’s premiere auction house, will present its second edition of the Affordable Art Auction on February 11, at the Kia Showroom, 308 Adeola Odeku Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.
It will feature no fewer than 123 lots by emerging artists, many of whom are being presented at auction for the first time, alongside Africa’s most prominent artists. The auction will also feature works by leading contemporary artists such as Olu Amoda, Rom Isichei, Ndidi Dike, Tayo Quaye, Abiodun Olaku, Bunmi Babatunde, Sam Ovraiti, Lemi Ghariokwu as well as modern masters such as Bruce Onobrakpeya, Ben Enwonwu, Ben Osawe, and Jimoh Buraimoh. The auction is expected to feature an unprecedented number of photographers, including George Osodi, Uche Okpa Iroha, Leonce Raphael Agbodjelou, Yetunde Ayeni Babaeko, Aderemi Adegbite, Oluwamuyiwa Logo and Jenevieve Aken.
The Affordable Art Auction is to engage emerging markets and the rise of a new collector base, with all works of art estimated below N1m. As the third annual auction after the May and November auctions of modern and contemporary art, the Affordable Art Auction will feature artworks that are scaled to a more affordable and accessible price point. The auction aims at attracting both seasoned collectors and first time buyers to build a stronger network of local clients in Nigeria.
The auction will also feature charity lots to support the Arthouse Foundation, a non-profit artist residency programme in Lagos, with artworks donated by artists Dipo Doherty, Olumide Onadipe, Sade Thompson and Uchay Joel Chima. The proceeds from these charity lots will go directly to supporting the programmes of the Arthouse Foundation, including its residencies, workshops, talks and public events. The artworks will be available for public viewing on Thursday, February 9th, 6-8 PM, and Friday, February 10th, 10 AM-6 PM.
Founded in 2007, Arthouse Contemporary is an international auction house that specialises in modern and contemporary art from West Africa. It aims at creating awareness of the scope of contemporary art in the region, encourage international recognition towards its talented artists and strengthen the economy of its art market. It has recently expanded with Arthouse-The Space, which organises exhibitions of contemporary art, as well as the Arthouse Foundation, a non-profit residency-based programme. The Affordable Art Auction is generously supported by Kia and Prosecco Fantinel. -

The amazons’ act
Their contributions to literature and women’s cause stood them out. Besides writing, the late Flora Nwapa and the late Buchi Emecheta now share a unique “January” connection. Last month, as the literati marked Nwapa’s posthumous birthday, they also mourned Emecheta’s exit. EVELYN OSAGIE writes on their life and times.
They came before their time. Born at a time when many women were excluded from scholarship and cerebral enterprise, they saw into the future. They envisioned a world where women are not limited by their gender but are independent-minded, excelling and achieving great feats in diverse fields – writing in particular.
Flora Nwapa and Buchi Emecheta were icons of modern literature.
With a mind to unmask the true face of the African woman beyond the one-dimensional depiction of women in their time, they independently charted a course with their ink. They meant to write and, subsequently, right the wrong representation of the “persona” of the African woman. The writings of both women and their presence in the African literary landscape spanned decades.
Today, the duo are guiding lights as their works have inspired a generation of writers and thinkers. Their efforts birthed an endless list of thinkers and ruling women writers with internationally-acclaimed works and literary/cultural movements, including Chimamanda Adichie, Chika Unigwe, Nnedi Okorafor, Tricia Nnaji, Taiye Selasi, NoViolet Bulawayo and Chinelu Okparanta.
Younger generations of women writers have passionately expressed how the works of both writers influenced theirs. Widely acclaimed Adichie is one. She says of Nwapa’s influence on her work: “If Chinua Achebe and Flora Nwapa and Chukwuemeka Ike had not written the books they did, when they did, and how they did, I would perhaps not have had the emotional courage to write my own books.”
She also speaks of Emecheta’s influence on her, thus: “I read and admired all her books. Destination Biafra was very important for my research when I was writing Half of a Yellow Sun. The book I adored was The Joys of Motherhood, for its sparkling intelligence and a certain kind of honest, lived, intimate insight into working-class colonial Nigeria.”The two writers connect
Besides sharing the name “Florence”, over the years, critics have posited that both writers share a lot in common. They linked the thematic preoccupation of the works of both writers, observing that their works highlight diverse social themes, such as interogate issues in women’s empowerment and independence, freedom through education, child slavery, motherhood and Biafra.
Also, both authors were influenced by “the father of modern African writing”, Chinua Achebe, Emecheta was said to have also drawn inspiration from trailblazing Nwapa’s work. Some critics observed that the title of Emecheta’s The Joys of Motherhood directly alludes to Nwapa’s words at the end of her novel Efuru, precisely on page 221, which reads: “Efuru slept soundly that night. She dreamt of the woman of the lake… She gave women beauty and wealth but she had no child. She had never experienced the joy of motherhood. Why then did the women worship her?”
But other than writing, by a stroke of fate, the duo now share a unique “January” connection. Last month, as the literati commemorated the posthumous birthday of Nwapa on January 13, they mourned the exit of Emecheta on January 25.
Though both dates in January, are mutually exclusive, they now represent a dramatic link between the two writers. But what does it spell for the literati? Observers say this development presents the literati an opportunity to celebrate the works, lives and times of both authors.Their life and times
Born Florence Nwanzuruahu Nkiru Nwapa, the late Flora Nwapa as she is widely known has been called the “mother of modern African literature”. And although she says: “There was nothing in me when I was in school that made me feel I was going to be a writer. It was one of those things that just happened.” Her first novel, Efuru, published in 1966, is said to be the forerunner to a generation of African women writers. Nwapa, who died of pneumonia at 62, on October 16, 1993, is recognised as the “first African woman novelist” to be published in English Language in Britain, for which she achieved international recognition.
Efuru was followed by the novels Idu (1967), Never Again (1975), One is Enough (1981) and Women Are Different (1986). Besides authoring several children books, Nwapa published two collections of stories: This Is Lagos (1971) and Wives at War (1980); and the volume of poems Cassava Song and Rice Song (1986). In 1974, she founded “the first press to be run by a woman and targeted at a largely female audience”— Tana Press — and in 1977, the Flora Nwapa Company, publishing her own adult and children’s literature as well as works by other writers.
On her imaginative representation of women, Nwapa laid claim to the culture of empowerment that defined her upbringing. She earned a BA degree from the University College, Ibadan, in 1957. And in 1958, she earned a Diploma in Education from Edinburgh University, Scotland. After returning from Scotland, she got a teaching job at Queens College, Enugu, where she drafted stories “to ward off boredom”.
Florence Onyebuchi Emecheta, who is known widely as “Buchi” Emecheta, died in her sleep at 72. She was a pioneer among women African writers, championing the cause and rights of girls and women at work. Her writing typifies women independence and ability to rise stronger in the face of any setback. Like Nwapa, her writing draws inspiration from her upbringing and life experiences. In fact, her works are autobiographical in nature, chronicling her experiences; but more than that they were healing for her. This, she put succinctly at a conference: “I am just an ordinary writer, an ordinary writer who has to write because if I didn’t write I think I would have to be put in an asylum.”
Born on July 21, 1944 in Lagos to Ibusa in Delta State parents, her father died when she was eight years old. Thus began her struggle for survival. From being passed from one relation to the other, she received full scholarship at the Methodist Girls School, Lagos, where she remained until the age of 16 when, in 1960, she married Sylvester Onwordi, a pupil to whom she had been engaged since she was 11 years old. Her travails in marriage led to her divorcing her abusive husband, who burnt her first manuscript, at 22. She raised her five children alone; and earned a degree, becoming a widely-travelled academic. Emecheta’s trials and triumphs are expressed in her biographical novels.
She authored over 20 books, including In the Ditch (1972), Second-Class Citizen (1974), The Bride Price (1976), The Slave Girl (1977) and The Joys of Motherhood (1979) and many others. She ran the publishing house Ogwugwu Afor, which published her works. Emecheta published her last novel, The New Tribe in 2000, and continued to work as a publisher and writer. In 2010, she suffered a stroke. She received many literary awards and considerable critical acclaim and honours, including an Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2005.On feminism
Both writers do not like to be pigeonholed as feminists but would like to be remembered for their efforts at educating the world on the role of women in Nigeria/Africa, their economic independence, their relationship with their husbands and children, their traditional beliefs and their status in the community as a whole. -

Mama Africa the musical hits Cape Town
Last Thursday, the past struggles of great South Africans, such as world-renowned singer and rights activist Miriam Makeba were relived when Mama Africa the Musical, produced by ZMirage UK, took the stage at Artscape Theatre Centre in Cape Town, South Africa. Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME reports.
Ninety minutes before the show began, the hall was filled to capacity with the huge crowd that came to witness it. While some were curious, others genuinely looked forward to watching the icon, Miriam Makeba, portrayed on the stage of The Artscape Theatre Centre, Cape Town, South Africa.
When Miriam Makeba’s performance: Mama Africa The Musical, started at 7:30pm last Thursday, the atmosphere was electrifying as the first sequences of music, dance and praise chanting rented the air. The excitement of the audience was obvious as they watched the story gradually unravel. The audience was seen responding to the moods of the performance as it switched from celebratory, to sadness, to the fighting spirit and finally to freedom.
At intervals, you could hear the excited chatter of the crowd as they clustered together in groups to discuss the nostalgic feeling the play evoked in them. It was a reawakening and reorientation on the past struggles of great South Africans such as Miriam Makeba. The play also seemed to give the young people the opportunity to identify with the fighting spirit of Mama Africa. It will run till February 12.
Miriam Makeba: Mama Africa The Musical is meant to coincide with Black Month celebration, when African heroes and icons’ virtues and heroism are brought into international limelight. Among the audience were celebrities; captains of industry; American Ambassador to Cape Town; Artscape’s Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Marlyn Le Roux; Richard T. Moody and Simone Heradien of Artscape, amongst others.
Mama Africa the Musical is a unique production mix for Artscape Theatre as it presently exhibits 90 per cent western theatre content for its mostly African audience’s consumption. Mama Africa has travelled the world equipped with African energy, resilient with messages of love and brotherhood, coincidentally, in this traumatic Trump-u-tic Nope World Order.
The story of the life and career of the Grammy award winning singer and civil rights activist is delightfully told in the musical, written/directed by Niyi Coker Jnr, winner of Washington DC Kennedy Centre Award for directing. Mama Africa The Musical, a cross-continental cultural project, started three years ago as a collaboration between the University of Missouri, St. Louis United States (US), and the University of Cape Town, South Africa. It also has the support of the ZM Makeba Trust.
Prof Coker (Jnr), an E. Desmond Lee Distinguished Professor of African/African-American Studies, Theatre & Cinema Arts at the University of Missouri, St. Louis, US, did an extensive research into the life and career of Miriam Makeba, especially her role in the struggle against apartheid. Makeba’s life story illustrates the resilience of the African spirit, master artistry and positive, forward looking spirit.
The 40-man cast maiden show, with an international crew, was at The Great Hall, University of Western Cape, South Africa between May 25 and 29, last year. It later proceeded on tour of the US at The Anhuesser Busch Theatre in the Blanche M. Touhill Performing Arts Centre, University of Missouri Campus, St. Louis. This was between September 15 and 18 of the same year; and Skirball Performing Art Center, New York City on October 3, 2016.
After these successful outings in the academic circuits, both in South Africa and the US, Mama Africa was repackaged for wider public outing, starting with its scheduled run at the influential theatrical performance space, ArtsCape in Cape Town. It has also been billed for tour of the United Kingdom (UK) next month and Nigeria in May, this year.
Mama Africa parades top performers including Jennifer Pau-Kakaza, whose credits include Lady Macbeth in (Macbeth), Ciesca, (Gianna Schichi); and 1st Chercatrice (Suor Angelica). She has also done voice over work, background vocals and acted films, series, and musical shows.
Simangele Mashazi is a talented singer/songwriter, who has performed on various stages at festivals such as KKNK, Woordfees, the Artscape Youth Jazz Festival and Darling’s Vooorkamer Festival. Most recently, she shared the stage with the Ramon Alexander Quartet at the 2016 Cape Town International Jazz Festival.
There is also Phelo Nodlayiya, who performed roles such as Osmin from Die Entfurhung aus dem Serail, Coppelius from Tales of Hoffman, Don Alfonso from Cosi fan Tutte, to mention but a few.
Makeba was born in 1932 in Prospect Township, Johannesburg, South Africa. She was a world-renowned singer and civil rights activist. In the 1960s, she was the first artist to popularise African music around the world. Ms. Makeba became active and outspoken against the Apartheid system. These activities led to the revocation of her South African citizenship. Although banned from South Africa until the release of Nelson Mandela from prison in 1990, Makeba was a towering figure in the global anti-Apartheid struggle, leveraging on her highly successful music career. She lived and worked in the US, Europe and Africa during these years, enjoying both celebrity status as an entertainer and often encountering difficulties because of her outspoken political positions. -

Telecommunications and Nigeria
The 196 page book is a comprehensive profile of the telecommunications industry operating in Nigeria. The author explores the history of the Nigerian telecommunications sector.
The very well researched book with 35 chapters carries interviews of different big shots in the telecommunications industry. The book provides answers to many questions going on in the mind of subscribers.
The writer touched all the key agencies in the telecommunications industry one after the other as she tells you each history, challenges and targets.
She also lets you a bit into the private lives of the owners of these telecoms as she pictures them either in their officer, cars or homes putting on a particular wrist watch, cloth or using a particular phone, ring tone, shoes or even answering calls from their wives mothers and other loved ones.
The writer picks particular mannerisms that the reader cannot overlook but read to the end of each description.
For MTN, she explains that it was a great risk to consider investing in Nigeria but after hitting the ground running, in no time, the company became the first mobile company in Nigeria to record one million active subscribers on its network.
Still in the first chapter she talks about internet, broadband, data revolution, online transactions and e-commerce.
The third chapter, cybercrime, explores the rising possibility of falling victims of cybercrime because of the availability of smart phones and internet at very affordable costs.
The writer gave examples of cases of victims who have lost millions to cybercrime and added that a total of N7.33bn was lost in 2007 to cybercrime.
Chapter four pictures a scenario showing the challenges that network providers go through. A very interesting chapter, a chapter that unravels the idea behind the coming of one of MTN’s big advert that gets anyone who hears it dancing; chapter five talks about the advert “I don port o.”
Part of the revelations as earlier mentioned includes the problems between MTN and NCC in 2013 when NCC wrote to all operators in the Nigerian telecom sector setting July 1, 2013 as deadline for all SIM cards to be registered if not each unregistered SIM card would attract a N200, 000 fine if not disconnected.
Two years after NCC slammed MTN with a fine of N1.04 trillion in October 2015 which was later reduced to N780 billion with an initial payment of N50 billion.
The chapter also exposes the security challenges that they face, tax payments, infrastructural challenges but concluded that after 15 years, MTN remain steadfast in its drive to add value to the society.
Airtel: The cat with nine lives is the title for chapter 6. The chapter also witnesses an interview with the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Bharti Enterprises, Mr Sunil Bharti Mittal, boss of the Airtel network.
The chapter also chronicles the history of Airtel, how it changed names several times and where it is at the time of the publication of the book. It concluded with the saying: “At Airtel, we will continue to blaze the trail in the telecoms industry by introducing revolutionary interventions and value offerings that will make life better for more Nigerians.”
For Globacom, the story of how it came to be is one of a father and son. The writer explains how the discussion went in Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 focuses on Etisalat, how it broke into the market even with other telecoms around and what they brought to the table for customers.
Many Nigerians may not have heard about the latest nTEl that took over the NITEL/MTEL bringing the number of mobile operator in Nigeria to five. According to the owners “We did not buy NITEL because it was never up for sale. What we did was to acquire these assets from within the NITEL portfolio and MTEL portfolio. Of course, we have taken a small number of ex-NITEL/MTEL employees. These people went through a process of redundancy with the federal government, but we found them knowledgeable and experienced with deep historical expertise to customers.”
In interview shows the status of nTEL, its strength and possibility of building the biggest possible network in Nigeria.
Other topics from chapter 10 to 35 includes, Ministry of Communications, NCC: The Enforcer, NITDA: The Flagship Agency, Telecom Group: The Smart Initiator, Zinox Technologies: The Digital Oak, Unotelos Nigeria Ltd: The Entry of a Little Giant, ATCON: Mother’s Love, ALTON: The Game Changer, MainOne: The Main Cable Operator, VDT: The Resilient Operator, HeightSafety West Africa, Slot: The Bull, PTV: The Turning Point, Pointek: The Egalitarian Transformer, IT World Ltd: Cashlite Facilitator, Kaadi Igbe Ayo: Sunshine State’s Card Technology, Subol: The Telemedicine Innovator, We Erred in Killing CDMA, Broadband Will Restructure Nigeria, Sanction Not Best Strategy to Correct Telcons, Online Transaction to Hit N168bn in Q4, Why Poor QoS Will Persist, Bitflux May Invest Over N20bn for Broadband Rollout, 80% Evades Taxes in Ondo, In Ondo Mimiko Digitalises Service delivery with Kaadi Igbe Ayo, Ondo Leverages on Technology, To Unveil Digital Smart Card. -

‘Fed Govt will not tolerate destruction of national monuments’
The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has said the Federal Government will not tolerate the destruction of national monuments anywhere in the country for whatever reason.
Mohammed gave the assurance when he visited the site of a national monument, the 190-year-old Brazilian style building in Lagos.
The building, which was acquired and gazetted as a national monument by the Federal Government in 1956, was destroyed by some developers. The Federal Government and the developers have since instituted cases in court over the property.
‘’Because they wanted to develop this place, they have broken so many laws. Fortunately, this is a country of laws and we are ready to meet them in court and one thing I can assure you is that nobody can benefit from his own crime.
‘’I want to assure you that we will challenge them in court and we are going to get our reliefs and we will restore this building to its former glory. We have the picture, we will rebuild it,’’ he said.
Alhaji Mohammed said the monument, built by returnee slaves from
Brazil, is unique because it chronicled the historical, cultural and social relationships between Nigeria and Brazil
‘’It is like a living monument of our (slave trade) past. It was a monument that exhibited the Brazilian architecture at that time, which is rare to come by anywhere in the world. It is a remembrance of what our ancestors went through in slavery and how they triumphed, came back and showed that they were well-to-do. The important thing is that a people without history will perish very fast. This building was worth billions of dollars because it symbolised our past.
‘’No amount of skyscrapers can replace this history and all important monuments that have been demolished, and I want to assure you that nobody can profit from his crime. You cannot go to court now and say that because the structure has been destroyed, the land should go back to the owner.
‘’This is why I have come here with the (Lagos State) Commissioner of Police, who has been quite helpful. I want to assure Nigerians that we are going to pursue whoever has destroyed this place. It may take time, but the hand of the law is long.