Category: New Woman

  • What to do to keep fit

    What to do to keep fit

    The combination of fitness (sports) offers a multitude of advantages that contribute to the mental health, rejuvenation, beauty and overall well-being of women. With so many tips advice floating about, it can be difficult to pick which healthy lifestyle tips to select from.

    Read Also: Subsidy: Ibeju-Lekki residents hail council chair over palliatives

     To make your life a bit easier, here are some helpful diet and fitness tips for women looking at embracing healthy lifestyle are:

    • Make decisive self-care choices to make lifestyle changes that will greatly impact your health

    • Embrace the journey with an open heart, a curious mind, and the understanding that every step taken contributes to growth, happiness, and fulfillment

    •             Make exercise a way of life

    •             But Start small – (Go from walking to running)

    •             Stay Hydrated.

    •             Find a Workout Buddy.

    •             Stock Your Fridge with Healthy Foods.

    •             Relieve Those Achy Muscles.

    •             Curb Your Sweet Tooth.

    •             Wear Comfortable Sneakers.

    •             Pick Your Perfect Tunes. •             Know When To Weigh Yourself—And How Often.

  • Bayelsa palliatives: If you ask me…

    Bayelsa palliatives: If you ask me…

    Evelyn! Did you read the news this morning,” began Mummy Nkechi early yesterday morning.

    “Not again!” Mummy Nkechi has come again with her Wahala”, I muttered silently to no one in particular as she walked towards my kitchen window. Nothing ever escapes this neighbour of mine, a practising lawyer who runs her law outfit from home. She would always force me into a newspaper review whenever she sees me in the kitchen in the morning.

    And that morning, her eagle eyes were on Bayelsa and the stolen palliatives.

    “What happened? What did they do again? Because it is only when there is a scandal or something scandalous that you come to share!” I screamed to drive home the point that I did not wish to be disturbed.

    “They have started again!”

    “Who?” I asked.

    “The people that want hunger to finish us in this country! How can they hide the palliatives meant for everybody? And people are hungry with all the flood wahala, followed by cashless and subsidy wahala. This people want to kill us o?” cried Mummy Nkechi as she drew closer to my window. We, ladies (Mummy Nkechi and I alongside two other neighbours), like to gist about current affairs in the morning, especially now that the children are on holidays.  And Mummy Nkechi is always the ring leader.

    “Are you from Bayelsa! Wetin concern you with Bayelsa palliative? What is it about this that got you running to me this morning? Abeg, let me cook in peace. My jollof rice dey burn!”

    “Journalist, who do you think are behind the matter?”

    “I don’t understand, Barrister Ada. If you ask me, who I go ask?” Didn’t you read the news? Why are you asking me?” I responded while trying to ensure the pot of rice on the cooker was not burning. And as I turned to quickly slice the onions and tomatoes for the final take down, Mummy Nkechi, who we fondly call Barrister Ada only during heated arguments, retorted,

    “I did. And I am with a copy of The Nation newspaper with me.”

    She took out a copy from her wrapper, held it out so I could see and began to read: “Residents loot Bayelsa palliatives warehouse’ …the headline read. ‘… Aggrieved Bayelsa State residents yesterday broke into a warehouse on Isaac Boro Expressway, Yenagoa, and carted away palliatives kept by the state government…’

    “But come o, Evelyn; as the report states, with the subsidy removal ramping up the price of petrol from around N190 to about N620 per litre in the state, prices of goods and services have correspondingly skyrocketed, resulting in acute hardship for many households across the state… it is no surprise that this happened.”

    “Ehen…? And is that anything new… have you forgotten what happened during the COVID-19 lockdown?”

    “I know. What caught my attention is not just that burglars broke into the warehouse housing the palliatives, but that the food items were meant for victims of last year’s flood. Even some of the food items carted away by the ‘looters’ had since expired. Who does that?”

    By this time, I had finished stirring the food and switched off the cooker; and then my mind drifted to the women and children in Bayelsa who may have suffered enormously while the foods were rotting away in the warehouse. I shook my head as Barrister Ada’s words jolted me back to the kitchen and the conversation.

    “You see, this is what I have been saying, people are wicked. Like somebody allegedly said in the news report, ‘For me, the query is why the state government should leave the food items to get spoilt when they should have given them out to the people at the right time?”

    “My sister, I do not understand. I just do not understand.” And before she started another tale of how Mongo Park discovered River Niger, I pleaded: “Barrister, I am running late, when I return in the evening, we will interrogate the matter deeply alongside Mummy Fawas and Jolaolu, the usual suspects. I never write my column sef.” I told her.

    She laughed as she walked away reluctantly, warning me to, “Come back early o. This matter never finish;” as if we are on the payroll of the Ministry of Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation.

    And so this week’s column was born. And as I sat on my computer with hibiscus flower drink in hand, my mind strayed to Bayelsa and the matter arising; and Barrister Ada and the conference that would take place later that evening. I made a raincheck to scribble down our evening conversation for next week’s piece.

  • A new journey begins

    A new journey begins

    So it’s a new day and a new lease of life. With the break of dawn comes a breath of fresh air that gets the blood boiling for new dreams, new hopes and aspirations. As a performance poet and artist I am inspired by world of women…an inspiration that led me into founding the community theatre play, “Kitchen Revolution” that has transverse Lagos metropolis.

    And as a journalist and social commentator, I have continued to emphasise that fact that the role of women in societal and national development should be spotlighted as harnessed for the greater good. History should teach us that much.

    But it’s a new beginning…and the land is green. In short the grass in the women’s world is green, fresh and for the picking. And as we begin a fresh journey in our Women’s Corner, ‘Woman join me to dream’. Take this new voyage with me as we journey into the inspiring world of women at Women’s Corner.

    Nigeria is blessed with women that have motivating stories to tell. I am particularly interested in bringing women matters to the fore. Choosing to begin this journey with former First Lady of Lagos State, Alhaja Abimbola Sikirat Jakande, is deliberate. From the first time I met her she had left an impression on me as she had no air that was usually associated with the political class.

    I remember meeting first time in her Ilupeju home in Lagos shortly after the death of her hubby. I saw her as a very strong woman as she was very composed as she welcomed guests into her home. That was in 2021.

    Fast forward to August 7, 2023, when the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) held a memorial lecture in her hubby’s honour, it was no surprise that she was also the toast of the event.

    And because your wellbeing is equally important to us, we have shared some tips on “five foods to make you alert”.

    And as you move into the midweek, I’d like to leave you with this poem, commissioned by and first performed at the United States Consulate in Lagos:

    Women Arise

    With colours of Strength

    Colour your world

    Colour your home

    Be a pillar for that Sister…that Mother

    Show your true Colour

    Women Arise

    Gather like Clouds

    Become a Broom

    Stand tall like the Iroko

    Shine like the Moon

    We are stronger than the colour we show  

  • Foods that keep you alert

    Foods that keep you alert

    It’s Wednesday and time to reach out for some of your brain’s favorite attention and memory-boosters to get you running for the Midweek. Whether you are working from home, in the office or going for a meeting, relax. There’s no worries …grab a cup and have a pick from any of our choices and your brain will thank you.

    • Go healthy … whip a smoothie

    Begin the day with a healthy option of fruit smoothie of super healthy blueberries and with natural sugars in the form of glucose, a fruit shake can provide a short-term memory boost in addition to vitamins and minerals that your whole body needs. Overdo it and you’re likely to feel tired soon

    • Grab yourself a cup of coffee or healthy tea.

    An early morning cup can get you going for the day. Choose to brew a coffee or go the way of tea. There are many choices to choose from. Coffee is really good for waking you up and keeping you focused for a short amount of time, but drink too much and you’ll feel jittery and ill. So, choose a tea that keeps you alert and healthy.

    • Treat yourself handful of dark chocolate pieces and nuts.

    They’re as brain-boosting as anything (dark chocolate even has some caffeine) and they’re anti-aging too.

    • Include fruit and vegetables in your diet.

    For breakfast, fruits and vegetables are packed with essential vitamins and minerals, a variety of phytochemicals (naturally occurring plant substances), and fibre—all of which are important for general good health and well-being.

    •Eat fish or beans potatoes and whole grains fibre foods for lunch.

    They’re not the most attractive items on the menu, but your brain loves both. If you eat fish, try to aim for at least two portions every week, one of which should be oily. Salmon and other fatty fish have loads of Omega-3 fats that boost memory and slow your brain’s decline as you age, while potatoes provide steady energy that your brain really needs (it takes up 20 per cent of your body’s energy!)

    Feel free to incorporate potatoes and whole grains fibre foods.They have good gut health benefits, can help to stabilise blood sugar levels, and lowers cholesterol levels. You can make cheap and healthy snack. Remember to leave the skin on potatoes to up your fibre intake!

    •Culled from https://www.ef.com/wwen/blog/language

  • The matriach of Jakande’s family

    The matriach of Jakande’s family

    She is beautiful but her fashion style is simple but delectable. Let’s celebrate former First Lady of Lagos State, Alhaja Abimbola Sikirat Jakande.

      As Nigeria match further into this administration, berthing fresh crop of politicians, with women playing key roles in diverse spheres, Women’s Corner puts the spotlight on the delectable Alhaja Jakande, who stands in a class of her own as an inspiration to women in the corridor of power.

    She met him at Ibadan, in the home of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, while she was working with Mama HID Awolowo.

    Alhaja Jakande’s humility and simplicity are the qualities that continue to command the respect from both old and young. She was the toast at the maiden edition of Lateef Jakande Annual Memorial Lecture organised by the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE).

    Her dedication and support to the late Lagos State Governor, Chief Lateef Jakande, received the nod of media gurus, experts, associates and editors. Besides extolling her virtues and accomplishments and a standing ovation to celebrate her, the words of praise from her son was what stole the hearts of all.

    Her son Seyi commended his mother for her magnanimity in allowing Jakande to do all the things that he did without interference, he said she deserve a round of applause.

    His words: “She allowed him to govern the city of Lagos selflessly. She deserves commendation because she had the capacity to have changed what we are listening to today. She stood with him through thick and thin. Throughout his tenure as governor, it is on record that he never allocated anything to his wife or any member of his family. He started the Banana Island, planted it and filled it up and not even sand was given to his beloved wife or any member of his family. That is why I said my mother deserved a round of applause because he stood with him through thick and thin

    “We were all in private schools. And one day as we were been driven to school, they said they have changed our school and took us to a public school. At that time they were said to be like a poultry site because the classrooms were constructed without doors and  windows. And we were coming from a school that had air conditioners. But the governor believed that what is sauce for the goose is also sauce for the gander. And mama accepted it. I don’t know how many wives or ladies today that will accept such condition”

    This interview of Alhaja Jakande with The Nation gives an insight into her personality.

    My assessment of women participation in politics

    I must say what a man can do, a woman can also do. Women are now fighting for positions in government. And if any government must fill five positions, let women occupy at list two slots from the five. We are the one working for them to attain any position they want to attain. Besides, women are more than men, in terms of number. My advice to women politicians is participate well and accommodate shades of opinion in their areas.They should consider what people will say after leaving office.

    How I felt when he became governor

    My husband and I lead a simple life. We are simple people by nature. I have not become arrogant simply because my husband became governor. When he was governor, we allowed everybody unrestricted access to our house. We accommodated everybody, irrespective of tribe. Our house was home to Hausa, Igbo, Yoruba and other tribes. We maintained the same style up till now. This place you are conducting this interview was the same place we lived when he was governor and that is where we are still living. You don’t need to fill any form or observe certain protocols before you access our place. There was a police officer attached to Alhaji Jakande, he drew the attention of Alhaji to the fact that he needed to restrict people because of the way they freely came to see him. But, Alhaji told him that the people voted for him and he could not prevent them from seeing him. People are still commending him for his style of government, which allowed people to freely see him. They said he did well as governor of Lagos. We did not harass anybody. For four years, we remained in this house when he was governor. We accommodated people and up till now, people are still coming for help.

    Coping with being a wife to a politician with a busy schedule

    I never took this thing seriously. So, nobody will say that Alhaja is not good. Just as he was busy, I was equally meeting people who desired attention. Whoever came looking for Alhaji was given the seat to wait for him, if it was not urgent. I did my bit to give him the necessary support.

    How did you feel when the military sacked your husband as governor and he was not allowed to complete his tenure?

    We did not carry this thing on our head. I was here when the military came knocking my doors. The security man came knocking my door. I asked him what was the matter, but he could not respond. I initially thought it was armed robbers that came. The soldiers had gone to the nearby police station to ask for the residence of my husband. When the police showed them our house, they could not believe that Jakande would be living in that type of apartment they saw. They did not meet Alhaji at home because he went to Badagry. We tried to reach Alhaji, not knowing that all the soldiers had disconnected communication lines. So, I started moving from one place to the other in search of Alhaji. It was on my way back home, I saw his driver, who told me that Alhaji was taken to the Ikeja Cantonment. When I met him there, he asked me to bring for him clothes, food and praying mat. I went there and met him. He told me that the soldiers had done their homework and found that it was only him among other governors who never travelled abroad during their tenure. It was true. It was only Alhaji who did not travel outside the country during the fours year of his administration. They told him at the cantonment that we should not worry, that no harm would be done to him. The late General Sani Abacha even asked his wife to make provision for the feeding of Jakande while at the cantonment.

  • Anything and everything

    Anything and everything

    And I would do anything for love

    I’d run right into hell and back

    I would do anything for love

    I’d never lie to you and that’s a fact

    But I’ll never forget the way you feel right now

    Oh no, no way

    And I would do anything for love

    Oh I would do anything for love

    I would do anything for love, but I won’t do that

    No, I won’t do that

    I will do anything for Love. This is certainly a familiar love song and it goes on and on talking about the things lovebirds would do, for the heart they cherish and want to keep forever like diamonds. The song which has been recorded by different artists over time points to the promises, love heights, and the other side, which reminds us all about love’s reality zone.

     So, many lovebirds are willing to do everything and anything for the heart that they love. The stakes are higher when it is reciprocal and everyone is happy and intoxicated by the loving environment.

    Unfortunately, the love season differs. It changes with an emotional vulture, but some birds are in control, composing sweet melodies and flying sweetly around no matter what.

    Some are very restless, they actually set out to betray the process from the onset, and others simply get carried away midway and forget the sweet promises and vows of sticking to one another.

    When the chips are down, those who have hearts as strong as the lion learn to move on without causing a stir. However, not everyone gives up so easily. Those in this category would fight as well as take back a pound of flesh or even more. A recent video of a battered widow beaten to a state of coma by a jealous wife and her sister comes to mind here.

    The images naturally bring tears to the eyes and you cannot help but pity the woman at the receiving end. As a widow, she must have been a lonely heart and that vacuum obviously led her to trouble. Perhaps, she didn’t even give the man her consent. Or she may not even know that he was ‘happily’ married.

    Whatever transpired between the twosome is a personal secret. We are not in their shoes and cannot make any assumptions here. They would be able to tell their story, that is if it is something they want to go viral like the video in question.

    Read Also; Adeboye: Ask God to kill me if…

    Next, your mind goes to the woman at the center of the emotional scandal, the wife. Naturally, she would have been nursing emotional wounds over time. Sadly, that is the story of the cheating game. Someone must be at the lower end and the emotional trauma would someday give way to what happened or even worse. Nights of pain, crying in the dark, waking up to curse the day they met, how she is going to pay them back, and subsequently unleashing emotional terror. Unfortunately, you don’t have to take the law into your hand to vindicate yourself. Also wrapped in the love triangle is a sister who has also gone through tough emotional times.

    Guilty? Yes. You can’t take the laws( emotional) into your hands, without fully understanding what’s going on in the space. You just cannot be the victim, the prosecutor, and the jury. When in a deep emotional mess, the wise thing to do would be to step aside and allow other people to come in and find answers and solutions for you.

    Jungle justice won’t work. This is certainly crude and it would only get you into more trouble. As a matter of fact, it may actually mess up the whole process and you will end up losing what you set out to save in the first place.  To survive, it is better to have a great strategy. That would definitely make you smarter, and wiser and you would be able to recover, repossess and realign your ‘loot’ without stress. 

    Interestingly, sometimes the emotional space can be unfair to the real victims. Some things are not visible and there are no arguments that would justify that you have been robbed in the emotional transaction. Here, the best thing perhaps would be to let go of the loot instead of fighting over a heart that has already been repositioned. 

    Everyone is part of the emotional jury here and you can give your verdict depending on what side of the emotional coin that you are on. We would all have something to say. It’s tough judging a desperate housewife  flogging a helpless rival in despair

    The crux of the matter is that, they wear the shoes, they know where and how it pinches and you cannot pass a verdict except you have been down that corridor yourself. If you have, then simply do a flashback and recall the things that went on in your mind. Thank God, you didn’t carry out your plans. Imagine, what would have happened if you had done what you wanted to do then. God forbid!

  • China to raise gasoline, diesel retail prices

    China to raise gasoline, diesel retail prices

    China says it will raise retail prices of gasoline and diesel on Thursday, following the recent rise in international oil prices.

    Gasoline prices will increase to 240 Yuan (about 33.53 U.S. dollars) per tonne, and diesel prices 230 Yuan per tonne.

    Read Also: 11 die as roof of school gym collapses in China

    This is according to the National Development and Reform Commission in a statement on Wednesday.

    Under the current pricing mechanism, the prices of refined oil products would be adjusted following changes in international crude oil prices.

    China’s three biggest oil companies are China National Petroleum Corporation, China Petrochemical Corporation, and China National Offshore Oil Corporation and oil refineries.

    The companies have been directed to maintain oil production and facilitate transportation to ensure stable supplies, according to the commission.

    (Xinhua/NAN)

  • Expect more ministerial-nominees in coming days – Presidency

    Expect more ministerial-nominees in coming days – Presidency

    Chief of Staff to the President, Hon Femi Gbajabiamila, has assured that another list of minister-nominees will be sent to the National Assembly “in coming days” to increase the number to suit constitutional requirement.

    Gbajabiamila gave the hint while talking to journalists at the Presidential Villa, Abuja after submitting President Bola Tinubu’s list of 28 minister-nominees to the Senate, explaining that the process of selecting suitable nominees has been thorough and careful.

    The Chief of Staff, who praised the list of nominees submitted as a perfect selection of technocrats and people with political acumen, also explained the reason why the President did not attach portfolios to the names submitted.

    “First of all, I’m sure you all know that the government is not fully formed until a cabinet is in place and that process started a while ago, culminating in the delivery of ministerial nominees today. The President took his time, spent a lot of time going through, did a lot of due-diligence, going through the nominees one by one.

    “As you know he had 60 days from time of inauguration, as stipulated in the Constitution. He has fulfilled that requirement of the Constitution by submitting 28 names today, as his letter stated, and was read on the floor of the Senate, the remainder names, not sure how many, probably about 12, maybe 13, will be forwarded to the Senate in the coming days.

    “As far as the nominees themselves are concerned, and like I said, Mr. President took his time to sift through those names, he dissected those names with a fine-tooth comb and that’s what you’ve seen, each and every one, I believe, of the persons on that list, are worth being on that list. But I really hope that we haven’t missed anything that would have necessitated any name not being on that list, but we wait and see.

    Read Also: Full list of Tinubu’s ministerial nominees with States

    “It’s a good mix of both people with political acumen and technocrats. So this is a good balance and it’s needed, these are people who have keyed-in to the vision and mission of Mr. President. Like I said, it’s a good balance, needed to move the country forward, as Mr. President is eager to do and has already started doing,”he said.

    Explaining why the President did not attach portfolios to the names of his nominees, Gbajabiamila said it will afford him (Tinubu) the opportunity to look at the characters of the nominees and see the ministry that fits most of them.

    He explained that while it would have been the best idea to attach portfolio to the names, it may cause problems if the President changes his mind after they have been screened.

    He further hinted that the President may separate portfolios or restructure the ministries in such a way that new ministries may emerge.

    Asked why portfolios were not attached, he said “for me that would have been one way to go about it. It would have been a welcome development. As good as that sounds it straightjacket’s the President to pigeonhole one person in an office or the other.

    “What happens then if you change your mind? Do you then bring the person back for screening again because the President is at liberty to change your mind?

    “For instance, if I decide I want somebody as Minister of Labour, and then after setting the name, later on, I decide that, you know what, I didn’t know this about this person, this person would actually be better with another portfolio.

    “And meanwhile, the senate has screened that person for that particular initial portfolio, what happens then? Do you now rescreen the person?

    “So, a lot of these things have their merits and demerits, advantages and disadvantages.

    “I like the idea of attaching portfolios, I actually do, because it makes it necessary for the Senate to know exactly what you’re asking and what you’re looking for.

    “But for now, it’s been thought wise that we stick to the tradition of sending the names and then whilst the screening processes going on allowing the Mr. President and his team to to look at the portfolios and the characters and see how they fit.

    “The first step that he has done is that these are people that can work wherever you put them, except this specialized fields like attorney general and what have you.

    “But in the main in most of the portfolios, he believes most of them can fit in anywhere and what’s important is also the Mr. President intends to separate portfolios or restructure the ministries in such a way you might be hearing of new ministries that were not standalone ministries before. So the process continues,” he said.

    Gbajabiamila assured in the next few weeks, the new ministers would hit the ground running, hinting that they would even begin work in some ways before their clearance and inauguration.

  • In the trash can…

    In the trash can…

    What do you do with Love that has gone sour? Usually, it is better to throw it in the trash can before it runs the tummy. That is exactly the way Teju is feeling at the moment. She had just survived an emotional hurricane and just could not fathom where and how she was going to move on. The feeling at this point can be compared to jumping off a moving train, the disaster that would follow is better imagined than experienced.

    Flashback down the emotional memory lane and it looked like the best love story. But along the line, she came to the realization that the relationship which lasted for two years and four months was filled with ‘emotional errors’. The guy she wanted to donate her heart to was a serial cheater.

    Sadly, Teju just had to move on, hoping to find a better heart, one that would not contaminate whatever was left. On her part, she felt it may just be too hard to start over on a clean slate. The other option, therefore, was to avoid any emotional entanglements for now.

    The emotional pressure she was going through started to affect her work and so she thought of different ways to recover herself.

    A few weeks after she just could not take her mind off it and there was also tension at work.  Teju decided to take a break from work and the restaurant in the neighborhood looked like a great arrangement. A few minute walk down the road and she was in the right place, relaxed in the serene environment feeling different. The meal was also great and she waited a little just to get refreshed before going back to work.

    Two jolly good fellows walked in looking as famished as she was and they also had lunch. Once the stomach was sorted out they talked about some of their recent conquests and escapades. Midway into the conversations, they remember a third friend, Lanre, and the exploits he made when he was part of this team of emotional ‘musketeers’.

    Unfortunately for them, Lanre recently found love and amended his ways. “I just don’t know what is wrong with that guy. How can he lose all his head for one woman? I thought he was stronger than this but he has really disappointed me. Sometimes, when I remember his matter I get really upset. That is why I have stopped thinking about him”, Adamu lamented.

    Read Also: Liverpool trash Leicester at King Power Stadium 3-0

    The bone of contention is the fact that their good friend has ‘repented”. Old things and ‘emotions have simply passed away. “One other thing that he does is that he actually keeps all the money he makes in a joint account with this woman. To make matters worse is the fact that the alert actually goes to the woman’s phone number. He just cannot do anything without her. Is that really what they call love? Humh….. I am sure that something fishy is going on.

    The question here is what is wrong with being faithful a hundred percent? Our friends however feel differently and believe that it is better to have a plan B in every arrangement. “That is not how to be faithful at all. I think he is just being a Mugun and I am very sorry for him. I just hope that it won’t be too late before he realises what’s going on”.

    Humorously, Mr. B goes on to talk about a similar experience and how a smarter Alec survived the emotional struggle. “Muyiwa had always been smart from our schooldays. Then about three years ago he met this lady and he became very cool and calm. The first time I met the lady in question; I just did not like her at all. She was very rude and domineering and I told him that he was not likely to go far with that kind of lady”.

    He continued: “For the first time, Muyiwa was visibly angry with me and he told me not to interfere with the relationship because he was in charge. So I left him with this emotional cross and thought this was another lost case. We met at a friend’s party about six months after and we reconciled. It was there that he made me realise that he was not as foolish as I thought. “We have a joint account and we use this account to service whatever we need to run the home. I pretend to put all my resources in the account but I have a secret account where all the extras that I make are kept. The strategy however is to look and feel helpless financially, so that I can continually draw from the joint account. This way I have a robust savings account that she doesn’t know exists”.

    Can you beat that? Well, a lot of women actually get stuck on the road to an amazing relationship, and most times it has to do with the fear of the unknown.

    Lots of women who are afraid of being alone also end up picking the same kind of men over and over who just don’t “get it”.

    So you need to identify what you want and if it isn’t there, then there is no point hanging on. If you’re afraid of being alone, you’re likely to put up with the behavior you aren’t comfortable with just for the sake of being in a relationship.

  • Telecom access gap dips by 53 per cent

    Telecom access gap dips by 53 per cent

    The number of identified clusters across Nigeria without access to telecoms services has been reduced by 53.1 per cent as at the end of last year, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) said yesterday.

    Access gaps refer to the cluster of communities or grouped areas in various parts of the country that do not have access to telecom services over two decades after the famous telecoms revolution.

    From 207 clusters of access gaps identified in 2013, the industry has witnessed a steady reduction to 97 as at the end of 2022 by bridging 110 access gaps, representing a 53.1 per cent reduction

    NCC Executive Vice Chairman/CEO, Prof. Umar Garba Danbatta, said by implication, the number of Nigerians who fell within the access gap which were estimated at 37 million in 2013 has been reduced to 27 million, following increased access to telecoms services by those hitherto digitally excluded.

    Represented by Head, Pre-Licensing at the Commission, Usman Mamman, at a forum in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, Danbatta said: “We have worked tirelessly to ensure we bring telecom services to people living in rural, unserved, and underserved areas of this country, totalling 37 million people courtesy of the consultancy that was conducted in 2013.

    Read Also: Operators seek NCC’s clarification on 5% telecom tax

     “By 2019, we had succeeded in reducing the clusters of access gaps to 114 through the deployment of the necessary infrastructure needed to bring services to people living in rural, unserved and underserved areas of the country. The deployment of infrastructure is in terms of base transceiver stations, which resulted in the reduction of Nigerians in those clusters from 37 million to 31 million in 2019.

     “By 2022, we have reduced the clusters of access gaps to 97 from 207 in 2013. The number of Nigerians again has come down from 37 million in 2013 to 27 million as we speak. We achieved this by deploying, from 2009 to 2011, a total of 79 new base transceiver stations.”

    Prof Danbatta said between 2013 and 2018, the telecom sector also witnessed the deployment of additional 124 base transceiver stations (BTS) while from 2019 to 2022, a total of 364 BTS were deployed.

     “So far, the total numbers of base transceiver stations we have deployed to date between the time the access gaps were identified till the end of 2022 are 567,” he said.

    While describing the reduction in access gap so far as a landmark, Danbatta, however, said the Commission will not rest on its oars as it thrives to ensure that the remaining 27 million Nigerians, who currently lack access to telecoms services, are provided with services.

    Meanwhile, the EVC said part of the regulatory interventions of the Commission to bridge the remaining 97 access across the country to provide ubiquitous connectivity in all the nooks and crannies of Nigeria are the issuance of the Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) Licences and the deployment of Fifth Generation (5G) networks, among others.