Category: Life – The Midweek Magazine

  • ‘How to reduce thrombosis’

    ‘How to reduce thrombosis’

    Avoidance of sedentary lifestyles can help reduce the risk of thrombosis, a medical expert, Dr. Adebukola Orolu has said.

    She gave the advice during the commemoration of this year’s World Thrombosis Day organised by the Alimosho General Hospital, Lagos. It had the theme “Eyes open to Thrombosis”.

    Orolu, a Consultant Heamatologist and Head Hematology Department of the hospital, listed  Deep Vein Thrombosis  (DVT)  symptoms as leg swelling, pain and redness symptoms of Pulmonary Embolism, such as shortness of breath and chest pain.

    Read Also: LUTH gets $10,000 for maternal, reproductive health research

    She sought healthy weight, avoidance of sedentary lifestyle, short stay in bed after surgery, leg exercising every two hours.

    “Thrombosis is the formation of a blood clot in the blood vessel; and when it forms in the deep veins of the legs or arms, is called Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT) and if the clot dislodges, and travels to the lungs, it causes life-threatening condition called Pulmonary Embolism (PE).

    Orolu, who noted that thrombosis accounts for one in four deaths worldwide, should be of concern to everyone. She called for more  awareness on the disease.

    She tasked healthcare workers on patients at risk of clot formation, by conducting Venous Thromboembolism (VTE) risk assessment and administration of clot prevention drugs.

  • Don to curate LIMCAF exhibition

    Don to curate LIMCAF exhibition

    A Lecturer in the Fine Arts at the Federal University of Lafia, Nasarawa State, Dr Chika Obeagu, has been appointed by the Board of Life In My City Art Festival (LIMCAF) to curate this year’s LIMCAF grand finale.

    A multi-talented artist and scholar, who finds creative expression through painting, photography, installation art and poetry, he has won several awards, including First Prize for the 2011 National Arts Competition in Nigeria, the UNODC Award for Partnership in Combating TIP (Trafficking in Persons) and SOM (Smuggling of Migrants), the W.K Kellogg Foundation/Ford Foundation Awards, and Prince Clause Fund for Culture and Development.

    Read Also: NEMCEA 2022 kicks off with content exhibition

    Obeagu has participated in major exhibitions, biennials, residencies, and workshops in Nigeria and internationally.

    He is a co-founder and creative director of FAbA (For Artists by Artists) studios and also an instructor with Art is Everywhere project.

    Chike is also involved in several cultural initiatives and over nine curatorial projects, including LIMCAF 2018 and 2019.

  • Club holds contests

    Club holds contests

    To promote literacy and the reading culture in Ogwashi-Uku, Delta State, members of Aweleka Social Club of Nigeria are targeting secondary school pupils.

    The club held  its quiz and debate for about 60 public and private secondary school pupils.

    Tagged: ‘Ogwashi-Uku secondary schools quiz and debate competitions’, the maiden edition held at FrankBryan Event Hall, Ogwashi-Uku.

    One highlight of the contest is the institution of a prize in honour of award-winning writer and professor of African Studies, Carleton University, Canada, Nduka Otiono.

    The chairman of the organising committee, Mr. Harry Odibe, said:  “It was aimed at stimulating intellectual development and healthy competition among public and private secondary school pupils. It is hoped that competitions such as these would help improve literacy and the reading culture among our wards. Founded in 2008 as a not-for-profit organisation, we, as a club, are committed to charitable, educational, and humanitarian services for the less privileged in society. We used the opportunity to do a tour of the schools. And we are always open to partnerships: this year’s edition was co-sponsored by Ifedinma Social Club of Nigeria along with kind-hearted individuals and institutions from the town with donations of different prizes worth thousands of Naira for the pupils to compete.”

    Read Also: MBGN unveils 2022 contestants

    The awards includeThe Prof. Ikechukwu Enwemnwa Award for the Best School in Quiz, Professor Nduka Otiono Award for the Best School in Poetry, Dr. Celestine Iwendi Award for the Best School in Debating, Derry Nwaduba Foundation Award for the Best School in Drama, Global Lives Touching Foundation Award for the Best School in Talent Display and Comrade Cyril Ohai Award for the Best Debating pupil, among other  awards and recognitions for outstanding students.

    The club’s President, Mr. Tony Mordi,  said: “The club will continue to engage in such activities that will encourage our young ones to embrace education and focus on their studies,” Mr. Mordi said. The club has been engaged in different activities to support the young ones educationally. These include the award of scholarships to some primary school pupils, the provision of writing materials, school uniforms as well as the supply of lawn mowers to the schools to reduce manual labour by the students and in turn create more time for their studies, sports and other recreational activities that would promote intellectual and physical well-being.”

    Otiono praised the organisers of the contests and offered a brand-new laptop for the winner of the poetry prize.

    Also,  the Executive Secretary of Local Education Board, Aniocha South LGA, Mr. Jude Elue, stated that the contest was the first of its kind. He  added that it should be sustained as it would help in the reduction of crimes and youths’ restiveness as well as other vices associated with idleness and ignorance.

    The President of Ifedinma Social Club of Nigeria, Mr. Michael Anialua, an engineer, noted: “This is a valuable project in the town for well-meaning individuals to support. Supporting our educational system through programmes of this nature will further encourage and provoke our youths’ self-confidence and intellect, and will help in building their social capacity, thereby making them responsible members of our society in attaining their desired goals in life.”

  • Museum of Unity wears new look

    Museum of Unity wears new look

    National Museum of Unity Ibadan in Oyo State has been rebranded for tourists’ accessibility with upgraded, well-equipped galleries, children’s play park.

    The museum was inaugurated on Saturday, August 20, this year by the National Commission for Museums and Monuments Director-General, Prof. Abba Isa Tijani.

    The museum collects heritage and research into them, communicates ethically and involves communities, open and accessible to the public.

    In the museum, an exhibition (gallery) is due for a change after a decade. This has been the yearnings of  tourists.

    Established in the early 70s, after the civil war to foster unity among the multi-ethnic groups, it opened to the public in 2002.

    “No one pours a new wine into an old jar”! Similarly, the first giant stride of the museum is for the galleries to undergo reconstruction. The first exhibition had as its theme Our Cultural Heritage in retrospect.

    Read Also: Museum as artistic haven

    The gallery calls for exploration. Its various sections portrays the nation’s heterogeneous cultural heritage.

    The story line cuts across – religious practices and worship, ancient cultures, royalty, symbols of power and Paraphernalia, local crafts and technologies, pottery, divination, marriage institutions, traditional wears/dressing and body adornments, trade, exchange and currency, and motherhood.

    The ambience of the new exhibition is aided by the digital illustration of the subsections of the galleries on electronic screen devices side by side the exhibition, particularly demonstrating the utilitarian purposes of the exhibited objects.

    The guide brochure is an accompaniment to the new galleries to create a lasting experience for tourists.

    Complementary services are Children Play Park, which has a restroom and other facilities where children can easy their limbs after expository tour of their cultural background and identity through the gallery tour.

    Adults can also be treated to good and healthy food at the place.

    This hospitality is further enhanced at the health stand where herbs and roots are health boost and guide are available if so desire. So is craft shop for sournir items.

    The museum has become all-inclusive and all-encompassing.

    • Abakun is Assistant Director (EST), National Museum, Ibadan

  • My story, by Lanre Arogundade

    My story, by Lanre Arogundade

    Title: Breaking Coconut with your Head (Akowe’s Journey in Student Unionism)

    Author: Lanre Arogundade

    Publisher: Great Tentacles Integrated Global Limited

    Number of Pages: 241

    Reviewer: Rotimi Olatunji, PhD

    Tenth of October yearly is World’s Mental Health Day. We may as well begin this review by asking: What happens when a sane person attempts to stop a moving articulated vehicle with his hands? What happens when someone else breaks the coconut on your head? And what happens when you break the coconut with your head?

    Obviously, there will be different outcomes to the above scenario. There is, obviously  a world of difference between allowing someone else to break the coconut on your head and breaking the coconut with your head.  In the former case, you may not live to tell the story, but not so when you break the coconut with your head.

    Accordingly, the reason we are here is because Lanre Arogundade did not allow others to break the coconut on his head. Rather, he broke the coconut with his head.

    The choice of the title of Lanre’s autobiography- Breaking Coconut with your Head (Akowe’s Journey in Student Unionism) is very intentional and most apt. Intentional because when you break the coconut with your head, it tells of the very hard choices that you make, for which of course, you are very well-prepared to bare the consequences.

    Again, breaking the coconut with your head requires that you use your head (that is, your senses, or operating in wisdom) to carry out the task without getting consumed in the assignment. Even at that, when you break the coconut with your head, you are most likely to experience one degree of headache or the other.

    The story of Breaking Coconut with your Head (Akowe’s Journey in Student Unionism) is the story of a young man who deliberately stirred the hornet’s nest. (Omo ti o ba tu Ile Oyin, o gbodo ri ija Oyin – A child that tries to hurt the Bees in their hive will necessarily experience bee’s attack.

    The good thing about it all is that this Akowe  did not act alone;  he acted in concert with other equally revolutionary and progressive youths and patriots who, like the a gang or obstinacy of a Buffalo,  took on a monstrous state apparatus, at one time  civilian and the other time, the military, and came out, though bruised, but not killed.

    Who is this personae who broke the coconut with his head?

    Read Also: Arogundade, the King of Boys, @ 60

    The man who broke the coconut with his head and lives to tell the story must truly be an enigma.The rider to the title of the autobiography, Akowe’s Journey in Student Unionism gives us a clue.

    The onomastic  of AKOWE is found in chapters one and 12, while the ‘madness’ of the secretary or writer ( different meanings of the Yoruba word, AKOWE) for breaking the coconut with his head is  scattered in the other different chapters of the book.

    Right from his early days in the elementary school, the precocious boy called Lanre had already made up his mind, so very early in life, and told whosoever cared to listen, including his peers in the classroom,  “Akowe lemi o se, Akowe”, that is,  “I will be a writer, a writer” (p.4). By the time the reader gets to the final chapter, this AKOWE has established himself as an accomplished secretary and writer, and an uncompromising student union leader, but not “Akowe Onijogbon”, (Troublesome Secretary) as Professor Wande Abimbola, then Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ife,  would want the reader to believe.

    I present to you Breaking Coconut with your Head (Akowe’s Journey in Student Unionism , the autobiography of Lanre Arogundade, radical student union leader, former Secretary-General, Student Union, University of Ife (UNIFE), legendary President of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) (1983/1984 session); human rights and free press advocate; former Chairman, Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) House Chapel, The Republic newspaper and Chairman, NUJ,  Lagos State Chapter, revolutionary, patriot and orator of the finest global standard the phenomena Writer/Journalist  who, in school and out of school, remains  a  writer who is a thorn in the flesh of powers that be.

    As with most other autobiographies, Breaking Coconut with your Head: Akowe’s Journey in Student Unionism begins with the story of Arogundade’s  birth, early life, growing up, the elementary  and secondary education. It is one of a family genealogy rooted in the fluid Southwestern region cocoa-based economy; and one with early contact with Western education, along with its multi-religious compositions including the traditional as well as imported Christian and Islamic religions all of which had profound effects on the personality of the autobiographer. He was not born in any modern maternity home or hospital, but rather as one of the  “Abagbedi Children” (p.1) , a sort of traditional birth attendant. As a result, Lanre’s  belated access  to orthodox  immunisation meant that he successfully wrestled  childhood killer diseases of his time.

    He “survived on local herbs” (p.2) and strong doses of   prayers of the  Aladura Church Movement of  the famed Apostle Babalola’s Christ Apostolic Church (CAC) tradition.  It is not surprising that Lanre’s head was not broken when he broke the coconut with his head, later in life.

    His parentage was rooted in the Arogundade/Oginni/Osungbohun family of Ijebu-Jesa and Ilesa (present-day Osun State) who migrated to Osi-Ekiti (now Ekiti State), where Lanre was born.

    His father, Thomas Akinyemi Arogundade (Akin Onikoko), as a cocoa merchant, was a man of means, along with his mother (Layoonu Hannah Arogundade) ever so dutiful, faithful, supporting, materially and spiritually, even as a prayer warrior, brought Lanre up with all care and love.

  • MUSON to honour Soyinka at festival

    MUSON to honour Soyinka at festival

    Chairman Musical Society of Nigeria (MUSON), Mr Louis Mbanefo, has said the Nobel laureate and master playwright Prof Wole Soyinka, will be celebrated at their forthcoming festival.

    He broke the news at a briefing in Lagos to announce the events for the feasta. He said the 26th festival, which would hold between October 21 and 30, would kick off with a drama production of Wole Soyinka’s play Childe Internationale sponsored by Chevron. It has as the theme Resurgence.

    The organisers said talents such as Afrobeat artist, Made Kuti, Nollywood actor and Tunji Sotimirin and Skit maker, Edgar Eriakha would feature.

    Kuti will perform at the Festival Jazz night while Sotimirin and Eriakha will feature in the musical play of Wole Soyinka’s ‘Child International.’

    Mbanefo said the MUSON was formed by a group of friends in 1983, “most of whom are now deceased, with the main objective of promoting the understanding and enjoyment of serious music’’.

    He recalled how MUSON has been holding concerts since 1984, and the Musical school has grown into an accredited institution.

    He said: “From humble beginnings, the School has become a diploma awarding institution accredited by the Ministry of Education and the music examination Board in England.The School has produced over 350 Diploma graduates.

    “The MUSON Choir, which has won gold medals at international competitions, travelled to Greece just last week and performed to a distinguished audience.”

    Read Also; Soyinka @ 88: Activists interrogate citizenship, nation building

    The inauguration of Sunday Musical Brunches at the La Scala Restaurant will hold on October 23. “During the brunch, our talented musicians from the Diploma School will provide a continuous concert. Hopefully, this will become a monthly event,” Mbanefo said.

    The traditional MUSON Day will be  October 25, and the occasion is to celebrate the birthday of MUSON with a concert by its talented MUSON artists.

    On October 29, “We shall celebrate the 70th birthday of Senator Daisy Danjuma, the wife of our distinguished Patron, General T. Y. Danjuma, with the performance of the opera ‘Cavalleria Rusticana’ and I in her honour’ “.

    The gala concert would hold on October 30, sponsored by Total Energies.

    “The concert will feature the MUSON Choir, directed as usual by the Emeka Nwokedi, and the MUSON Symphony Orchestra conducted by our visiting maestro, Walter-Michael Vollhardt”.

    A member of MUSON, Mr Ayo Ajayi, believes the organisation has impacted music tremendously.

    Speaking on the position of MUSON in the tending of Afrobeat and Afrobeats genre, Ajayi said: “MUSON has affected the different strata of music in Nigeria; it would interest you to know that some of the people who started creating Afrobeats got their first platforms with MUSON.”

    He explained that the birth of the Open Mic sessions and shows gave the platform for some young upcoming artists.

    “The likes of Dare Alade and Timi Dakolo attended the MUSON basic school of Music,” he said.

    He added that MUSON believes in giving a platform to both Afrobeat and Afrobeats artists a platform regardless of the generation.

    “Fela Kuti, Femi Kuti, Davido, Banky W and others have performed on this stage, and now we are bringing Made Kuti this year for the Jazz festival.”

  • Literature, science instruments of national development, says Obasanjo

    Literature, science instruments of national development, says Obasanjo

    Dignitaries thronged the Nigeria LNG Limited Grand Award Night for this year’s Nigeria Prize for Literature, Science and Literary Criticism. The event headlined by the former President Olusegun Obasanjo had the usual suspects – glitz, glam and a rich bouquet of suspense of such high-profile events at the Eko Hotels and Suites, Victoria Island, EVELYN OSAGIE writes.

    The Grand Award Night (GAN) ceremony for this year’s Nigeria Prize for Literature, Science and Literary Criticism, organised by the Nigeria LNG Limited (NLNG) at the weekend in Lagos, was similar to a play with many dramatic scenes.

    Themed: “Touching the Stars”, the event headlined by the former President Olusegun Obasanjo underscored the importance of literature and scientific innovation, particularly in agriculture, in nation-building, and economic advancement.

    It was indeed a night of memories … one that the winners of NLNG-sponsored prizes would not forget in a hurry. The high-profile guests from all spheres that thronged the GAN held their breath. One could almost feel the suspense as they awaited the announcement of the winners, even as the numeri uno of comedy Alibaba anchored the night.

    Winners and their prizes

    None of the other two prizes held the kind of suspense that the $100,000 The Nigeria Prize for Literature. This was because early on NLNG had announced the winners of The Nigeria Prize for Science, who were jointly awarded the prize money of $100,000.

    The literature prize that has been described as the Nobel Prize of the continent is prestigious not only for the prize money but also for the calibre of past winners.

    It was little wonder then that the shouts that followed the announcement of the poet, Romeo Oriogun, author of Nomad as winner by the Chairperson of the Advisory Board, Prof. Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo, who was flanked by her board members – Professors Ahmed Yerima and Olu Obafemi, while NLNG’s Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Philip Mshelbila, stood in the background.

    The winning book beat two others on the Shortlist of Three: The Call of Water by Su’eddie Vershima Agema, who collected the winning plaque on behalf of Oriogun, and Your Crib, My Qibla by Saddiq Dzukogi to clinch the prize. The book competed against 287 books submitted for the competition.

    Although right from inception, the prize has been winner takes all, this year’s edition ruuners-up won’t go home empty-handed. Oriogun will be sharing his USD$100,000 prize money with the two poets. He said this on his verified Twitter handle shortly after being announced winner. Prof. Akachi-Ezeigbo also announced Dr. Sakiru Adebayo as winner of the  Nigeria Prize for Literary Criticism, which comes with N1 million prize.

    According to the judges, the winning book, Nomad, stands out as the most technically-accomplished, rendering the topical subject of migration in a language laced with lyrical figurations. They stated that “the 67 poems in the collection were held together by a travel motif, marshalled in each poem with equal intensity, and linked to the African past, including the Middle Passage, and the African Future.”

    The farmer-writer

    One of the highpoints of the event was the keynote address by Obasanjo, which came after the four winners of The Nigeria Prize for Science were awarded $100,000. Muhydideen Oyekunle, Shehu Ado, Sesan Peter Ayodeji and Emmanuel Olatunji Olatomilola won the prize for their works entitled Gains in Grain Yield of Released Maize (Zea Mays L.) Cultivars under Drought and Well-Watered Conditions, and Development of Process Plant for Plantain Flour.

    Obasanjo, whose pastimes are farming and writing, stressed the critical roles science and literature play in national development. According to him, Nigeria could reach greatness through a strong will to change the prevailing narrative

    He added: “Nigeria is, as we all know, blessed beyond measure in talents, capabilities, and resources.

    “The world has always been fast spinning into areas of scientific breakthroughs and innovations that aim to maintain high standards of living, while sustainably preserving the earth for generations yet unborn. Just like a space launch, a scientific breakthrough can shoot our nation to those seemingly unattainable heights where we can touch the stars.

    “We can adopt world-class best practices, and leap with giant strides into the future. We can collaborate on exchanges of ideas and invest in research and development. We can focus on the education and mental development of our people so that we position the nation in the direction it should go.”

    Decrying the state of libraries, reading culture and education, Obasanjo charged the organised private-sector to borrow a leaf from NLNG’s example to invest in the creative sector as part of their CSR.

    “I speak to the political class, the administrators, business institutions and organisations, small and medium scale enterprises, the creatives and content developers, leaders across all spheres of influence, the man or woman whose heart burns with passion for Nigeria’s good, and to the boy or girl, who is discovering his or her talents and gifts. May we all rise to that place of willingness and do so, collectively,” Obasanjo said.

    NLNG boss: The art enthusiast

    Mshelbila said the company sponsored the prizes to ensure that excellence assumed a prominent position in creativity and innovation in the country, stating that the entries for the Nigeria Prize for Literature were the most ever in the history of the prize.

    His welcome remark was further heightened by his rendition of Maya Angelou’s poem entitled: “I know why the caged bird sings.”

    On the theme of the science prize, Innovations in Sustainable Food Security, Mshelbila stated that the prize and the winners were a wake-up call for the country and Nigerians to take responsibility for food sustenance.

    “From the mangroves of the Niger Delta, through the rain forests, to the grassy plains and savannah terrains, the nation pitifully boasts of poverty, yet it is bountifully endowed with arable lands and agricultural treasures. Including its aquatic wealth. This is a wake-up call! We must take responsibility for food sustenance, at the very least, and scale up to foreign exchange revenue drive from food/agriculture export once our people are assured of their daily meals. It really is the future of the world, and one for which NLNG should be rightly positioned, to bring Nigeria into that realm. What’s more, we must shun wastages, arising from poor handling or preservation of agricultural produce,” he said.

    Other guests at the event were Minister of Science and Technology Adeleke Mamora; Prize Advisory Board member Prof. Olu Obafemi; the Amanyanabo of Ancient Grand Bonny Kingdom, King Edward Asimini William Dappa Pepple III CON, JP, Perekule XI; NLNG’s Deputy MD Olalekan Ogunleye; Su’eddie Agema, representative of the winner of the Prize; and Ahmed.

    The panel of judges included Sule Emmanuel Egya, who is the chairman of the panel and a professor of African Literature and Cultural Studies, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University, Lapai, Niger State.

    Other judges were Toyin Adewale-Gabriel and Dike Chukwumerije.

    Adewale-Gabriel is a poet and fiction writer. Dike Chukwumerije is a spoken word and performance poet, and an award-winning author.

    Prof. Susan Nalugwa Kiguli was the international consultant for this year’s Prize. She is a Ugandan poet and an associate professor of Literature at Makerere University.

  • Events industry contributes N1b  to GDP yearly, says Dabiri-Erewa

    Events industry contributes N1b to GDP yearly, says Dabiri-Erewa

    CHAIRMAN/Chief Executive Officer, Nigerians in Diaspora Commission, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, has said Nigerians in the diaspora are not only supporting the growth of the economy through remittances, but also through foreign direct investments.

    She said the Diaspora Day, the Nigerian Diaspora Investment Summit were some of the programmes the commission facilitates yearly to attract diaspora investments to support businesses and grow the economy.

    Mrs. Dabiri-Erewa, who spoke as the chairperson at the Event Industry Conference, held in Lagos, said these events created a platform for businesses and business owners to connect with potential diaspora investors.

    “According to statistics, the events industry contributes conservatively to the Gross Domestic Product of Nigeria annually approximately N100 billion and the industry is growly exponentially,” Mrs. Dabiri-Erewa said.

    She noted: “Imagine if you could identify the pain points in your industry, get a clear picture of how they limit the appeal and size of your industry, and then flipped these constraints, developed innovative solutions to create value which in turn gave your industry a competitive advantage which in the long run attracts investments.”

    The former federal law maker said  when you’re outside the box, the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission is waiting right outside that box to encourage you with the support you need within her command.

    Read Also: Dabiri-Erewa: My life of broadcasting, politics and service

    “I challenge every professional here, today, rather than carry on with the norm, think divergently, think creatively,” she said.

    Adefunke Kuyoro in her message said: “We not  just empower event professionals alone but also to extend a hand of development through our CSR initiative to our communities.”

    She said this is too great a mandate to be quelled by the challenges at the time and this is the reason TEIC5.0 has persevered for five editions due to the resilience and vision shown by the men and women of APPOEMN.”

    The conference, which is the 10th anniversary, was tagged Globalisation- see outside the box, to think outside the box to show how the way members could develop not just local but international influence and how members will be helped in numerous ways to see in different dimension on how to develop their business.

    Chairperson of the conference, TEIC5.0, Bose Abisagboola said that the conference will provide conducive atmosphere for the bonding experience and sharing of knowledge in a relaxed atmosphere. She said that it will enable event professionals maximise their unique skills with a view to grow together with amidst shift to go global with collaboration and networking as a game-changing strategy. The conference was a hybrid  of virtual and in-person attendees.

    Other speakers at the event were representatives from Access Bank, Bellanaija, media guru, Dele Momodu and Wakanow among others.

  • Anioke elected into IPA executive

    Anioke elected into IPA executive

    Nigerian Publishers Association (NPA) National President, Dr. Uchenna Cyril Anioke has been elected into the Executive Committee of Geneva, Switzerland-based International Publishers Association (IPA).

    Other elected members include Dante Cid (Brazil), Sharon Hague (UK, statutory appointment), Lawrence Njagi (Kenya, re-elected), Christian Schumacher-Gebler (Germany, statutory appointment), Heidar Ingi Svansson (Iceland, re-elected), and Chunchi Yu (China, statutory appointment).

    Those who stepped down alongside Adedapo are Pengyi Li (China), Joachim Kaufmann (Germany), Arys Hilman (Indonesia), and Lis Tribe (UK).

    Anioke said: “It is a call to service. It is a call to show that all is well with my state, my country and indeed my continent, Africa. I will devote the next three years to showcasing Nigerian and African publishing potentials by paying utmost attention to freedom to publish.”

    Also, Brazil’s Karine Pansa succeeds Bodour Al Qasimi as president-elect while Gvantsa Jobava of Georgia is vice-president-elect.

    Pansa is the third female president of the global publishing body.

    Read ALso: NPA remits over N400b revenue in five years

    In her parting words, Qasimi said: My presidency reinforced my belief in what we do as an industry and also reinforced my respect and appreciation for publishers. I witnessed first-hand their generosity, resilience, and determination despite all the challenges. I am truly inspired by their hard work and passion and I’m confident that our industry is in safe and capable hands as we write the next chapter in our book.”

    Pansa noted: “I’d like to thank Bodour for her exemplary leadership, tireless dedication and competence in dealing with the complex issues that our industry have had during the past two years. It honours me to follow your path and be the third female president of IPA. I am excited to serve our industry and support our members’ recovery, and to continue to ensure IPA is an inclusive organisation represented and respected globally.”

    For Jobava, “It is a special honour and responsibility to be IPA Vice President. My Georgian roots, my experience of occupation, drive my fight for a better world. Our sector has a unique weapon to achieve it – the book. A tool to educate, spread diverse voices, and create a free society. That is why I will dedicate my vice presidency to strengthening IPA’s main pillars: copyright, freedom to publish, literacy, inclusion, and educational publishing. I will fight for the well-being of our members’ publishers, because books published by them make our world better.”

     

  • NCC raids, confiscates infringing books

    NCC raids, confiscates infringing books

    Determined to wipe out piracy, and other copyright violations, the Nigerian Copyright Commission (NCC) has  has commenced investigation into cases of infringement and suspects found guilty will be prosecuted.

    In line with the commission’s efforts to stem the menace, especially during the ongoing book season, NCC’s Director-General Dr. John Asein said suspected pirated books worth over N2 million were seized from the raided outlets.

    He said: “In the last three years, we have renewed our commitment to the fight against piracy, and no efforts would be spared in discovering and apprehending those involved in these heinous crimes, irrespective of their status and locations.”

    Urging operators of sales outlets for copyright works to stock genuine products, he stated that four suspected bookshops: Venco Bookshop (one outlet), Gozie Bookshop (one) and Kizito Bookshop (two outlets) were raided during the operation which was led by the Director of NCA, Mr. Akpan, and Director, Public Affairs, Mr. Vincent A. Oyefeso, with a team of copyright inspectors and armed policemen.

    Some books confiscated during the raid included Basic Science and Technology for Primary Schools by Spectrum publishers; Modular Mathematics by Evans Publishers; New Concept English by Learn Africa; Comprehensive Home Economics by Lantern Books; Oral English SS1 by Jil Communications; Business Studies by Spectrum Publishers and other titles for primary and secondary schools.

    Warning those involved in pirating books to desist from it or face the strong arm of the law,  Asein stressed that the commission was collaborating with stakeholders like the Nigerian Publishers Association (NPA), Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council (NERDC) and authorities in the book value chain to curtail the act.

    Meanwhile, as part of efforts to curb the menace in Lagos, the commission has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Nigerian Publishers Association (NPA) and the three major booksellers associations, under the auspices of the major booksellers associations: the Booksellers Association, Ajegunle, Lagos State (BAALS), Integrity Booksellers Association of Nigeria and Booksellers Association, Yaba.

    Read Also: NCC signs MoU with publishers, booksellers

    The event, which was held in Ajegunle, also featured the kick-off of its monitoring and documentation programme.

    “The trauma, pain, and anguish that piracy inflicts on right owners are unimaginable.The level of copyright piracy, particularly in the book sector, is unacceptable! With the signing of this MoU and the commencement of the monitoring and documentation programme, it is our hope that everyone will subscribe to a higher standard of vigilance and respect for copyright across sectors of the creative industry,

    “Booksellers should work with publishers to obtain only genuine copies of published works. We shall also not hesitate to bring to book operators of schools who patronise distributors of pirated books. We cannot afford to allow the shores of Nigeria to be used as a haven for piracy which is clearly an economic crime that has the potential to support other more serious crimes.

    “We urged members of the public, especially proprietors of schools and educational institutions to support the fight against piracy by sharing information on sources of pirated works; he expressed concern that piracy has remained one of the big challenges of the creative industries in Nigeria while the book sector remained a prime target of pirates,”  Asein said.

    The move followed the MoU it signed last September with NPA and the Book Section of Ariaria International Market, Aba. These exercises, according to him, were part of a broader commitment to ensure that copyright owners are provided safe corridors for the exploitation of their works without fear of molestation and abuse from pirates.

    Assuring that the commission is determined to ensure a level playing field for investors and businesses in the creative sector, the D-G warned that the new Copyright Bill, which is to be passed law, provides for stiffer penalties for piracy.

    The event was attended by major publishers, booksellers and NCC staff members.

    Both the publishers and booksellers raised some worries over the move, citing areas of concerns in the MoU.

    NPA National President Dr. Uchenna Cyril Anioke said: “In continuation of what we did in Aba, this event is historic because it is no longer news that the extent piracy is crippling the book industry and the economy. This is a step in the right direction. We hope that this will send the right signals to the culprits that it is no longer going to be business as usual for book pirates.”

    Also, former executive of the booksellers association, Chief Alloysius Obiefuna, said: “This is the best thing that has happened in recent times to the survival of the stakeholders of the book chain; but while we talk about MoU, the concerns of all parties should be looked into. We urge NCC to keep their word and be a good mediator between all stakeholders.”