Category: Online Special

  • Dolapo Osinbajo at 52: Seven things you should know about her

    By Praise Olowe

     

    As wife of the Vice President Mrs Oludolapo Osinbajo marks her 52nd birthday today, here are seven things you probably didn’t know about her.

    • Mrs Oludolapo Osinbajo is a grandchild of the late Obafemi Awolowo.

     

    Dolapo Osinbajo
    • She lost her mother Otunba Olubusola Soyode, one of the children of the late Awolowo, in 2011.

     

    • She is the leader of the Ladies Fellowship of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Jesus House Parish.
    • She wedded her heartthrob Prof. Yemi Osinbajo in 1989

    • The couple is blessed with three children.

    • In 2007, Prof. Osinbajo and his wife founded “The Orderly Society Trust”, a non- governmental organization that is dedicated to the promotion of Christian ethics and orderliness.

    • In October 2014, Mrs. Dolapo Osinbajo launched her book, ‘They Call Me Mama, From the Under Bridge Diaries’ in Lagos. She said that her drive to write the book came from her experiences with some street boys and men in Lagos State, and with the book, she aims to give them a human face.
  • 10 things to do when bored on a plane

    By Praise Olowe

     

    The thought of sitting on a plane for hours can be really disturbing. However, if you prepare properly and plan your air time well, the time will seem to go by more quickly.

    The trick is having a few things to do to choose from so that boredom will not set in.
    Here are some ideas that can make your long haul flight more pleasurable.

    Read a book:

    One of the things I enjoy doing the most on a long trip is reading a book. Whether it’s a random paperback bought at the airport or a carefully chosen novel, books can help reduce boredom.

    Clean up your phone:

    What to do when bored on a plae

    One of the best times to clear your mobile phones off junks and free up some memory is during a long trip. You can create categories for your apps and put all similar ones into a folder, go through your contact list and clean up the entries you don’t need or people you can’t remember, delete the applications you never use, go through your gallery and delete those embarrassing selfies and duplicates of photos that look practically the same.

    Watch a new series:

    What to do when bored on a plae

    Pick one show you’ve been meaning to watch and download the first season to your phone before your trip begins. While your phone is offline, you can always watch the saved movies without realizing how much time you have spent on the trip.

    Play phone games:

    It is pretty easy for me to occupy an hour or two playing games on my phone. My absolute favourite games are Candy Crush, Four pics one word and BitMango. The trick is to find the perfect game for you and enjoy it while the trip is on.
    However, if it happens that you are not with any technology, flip to the back of the airlines magazine, most will have a crossword puzzle or Sudoku game.

    Plan something:

    Plan the decoration of your next home, places to visit after arrival, a dinner party, a surprise birthday, or a work project. You’ll be surprised how productive you can be during a few uninterrupted hours. You could even plan your next trip.

    Read the News:

    Being inflight doesn’t mean you can’t read your favourite news sites or blogs. There are many ways to have access to them when you are offline too. You can make use of Safari or Chrome browser on your iPhone. This helps you open an article and then add it to your reading list.
    Alternatively, you can open several tabs on your internet browser prior to boarding with any articles you want to read. You won’t have access to any links, but you’ll be able to see everything on each tabs page.

    Read Also: Seven countries Nigerians can visit without visa

    Create a gratitude journal:

    Over time, I have cultivated the habit of writing everything I’m thankful for at the end of every week. This can be made super easy during a long flight. You can start by writing down three things for every day of the past week you feel thankful for. Keep the habit when you reach your destination and beyond.

    Write a story:

    You can always write something interesting out of flight experience. Your friends might be interested in knowing what your journey was like, the kind of people you met and many others. Write down your thoughts about the trip and keep the memories forever.

    Answer Emails offline:

    What to do when bored on a plae

    Yes, you can answer emails even when you are not connected to the internet. If you have a Gmail account simply download Gmail Offline to your Chrome Browser and voila! You can read and respond to each pending email. Although, they won’t get to the recipient immediately, but will automatically send when you are reconnected to the internet.

    If everything else fails, sleep:

    Sleeping on the plane

    If you run out of things to do on a plane, have a snooze-worthy playlist ready, pop in your headphones and drift off to dreamland. You’ll be glad you did.

  • Full text of Obasanjo’s open letter to president Buhari

    Dear President and General Buhari,

    I am constrained to write to you this open letter. I decided to make it an open letter because the issue is very weighty and must be greatly worrisome to all concerned Nigerians and that means all right-thinking Nigerians and those resident in Nigeria. Since the issue is of momentous concern to all well-meaning and all right-thinking Nigerians, it must be of great concern to you, and collective thinking and dialoguing is the best way of finding an appropriate and adequate solution to the problem. The contents of this letter, therefore, should be available to all those who can help in proffering effective solutions for the problem of insecurity in the land.

    One of the spinoffs and accelerants is the misinformation and disinformation through the use of fake news. A number of articles, in recent days, have been attributed to me by some people who I believe may be seeking added credence and an attentive audience for their opinions and view-points. As you know very well, I will always boldly own what I say and disown what is put into my mouth. But the issue I am addressing here is very serious; it is the issue of life and death for all of us and for our dear country, Nigeria. This issue can no longer be ignored, treated with nonchalance, swept under the carpet or treated with cuddling glove. The issue is hitting at the foundation of our existence as Nigerians and fast eroding the root of our Nigerian community. I am very much worried and afraid that we are on the precipice and dangerously reaching a tipping point where it may no longer be possible to hold danger at bay. Without being immodest, as a Nigerian who still bears the scar of the Nigerian civil war on my body and with a son who bears the scar of fighting Boko Haram on his body, you can understand, I hope, why I am so concerned. When people are desperate and feel that they cannot have confidence in the ability of government to provide security for their lives and properties, they will take recourse to anything and everything that can guarantee their security individually and collectively.

    For over ten years, for four of which you have been the captain of the ship, Boko Haram has menacingly ravaged the land and in spite of government’s claim of victory over Boko Haram, the potency and the activities of Boko Haram, where they are active, remain undiminished, putting lie to government’s claim. The recent explanation of the Chief of Army Staff for non-victory due to lack of commitment and lack of motivation on the part of troops bordering on sabotage speaks for itself. Say what you will, Boko Haram is still a daily issue of insecurity for those who are victimised, killed, maimed, kidnapped, raped, sold into slavery and forced into marriage and for children forcibly recruited into carrying bombs on them to detonate among crowds of people to cause maximum destructions and damage. And Boko Haram will not go away on the basis of sticks alone, carrots must overweigh sticks. How else do you deal with issues such as only about 50% literacy in North-East with over 70% unemployment?

    Herdsmen/farmers crises and menace started with government treating the issue with cuddling glove instead of hammer. It has festered and spread. Today, it has developed into banditry, kidnapping, armed robbery and killings all over the country. The unfortunate situation is that the criminality is being perceived as a ‘Fulani’ menace unleashed by Fulani elite in the different parts of the country for a number of reasons but even more unfortunately, many Nigerians and non-Nigerians who are friends of Nigeria attach vicarious responsibility to you as a Fulani elite and the current captain of the Nigeria ship. Perception may be as potent as reality at times. Whatever may be the grievances of Fulanis, if any, they need to be put out in the open and their grievances, if legitimate, be addressed; and if other ethnic groups have grievances, let them also be brought out in the open and addressed through debate and dialogue.

    The main issue, if I may dare say, is poor management or mismanagement of diversity which, on the other hand, is one of our greatest and most important assets. As a result, very onerous cloud is gathering. And rain of destruction, violence, disaster and disunity can only be the outcome. Nothing should be taken for granted, the clock is ticking with the cacophony of dissatisfaction and disaffection everywhere in and outside the country. The Presidency and the Congress in the US have signalled to us to put our house in order. The House of Lords in the UK had debated the Nigerian security situation. We must understand and appreciate the significance, implication and likely consequences of such concerns and deliberations.

    No one can stop hate speech, violent agitation and smouldering violent agitation if he fans the embers of hatred, disaffection and violence. It will continue to snowball until it is out of control. A stich in time saves nine, goes the old wise saying.

    With the death of Funke, Chief Fasoranti’s daughter, some sympathetic Nigerian groups are saying “enough is enough”. Prof. Anya, a distinguished Nigerian merit Laureate, has this to say “We can no longer say with certainty that we have a nation”. Niger-Delta leaders, South-Eastern leaders, Middle-Belt leaders and Northern Elders Forum have not remained quiet. Different ordinary Nigerians at home and abroad are calling for different measures to address or ameliorate the situation. All the calls and cries can only continue to be ignored at the expense of Nigerian unity, if not its continued existence.

    To be explicit and without equivocation, Mr. President and General, I am deeply worried about four avoidable calamities: abandoning Nigeria into the hands of criminals who are all being suspected, rightly or wrongly, as Fulanis and terrorists of Boko Haram type; spontaneous or planned reprisal attacks against Fulanis which may inadvertently or advertently mushroom into pogrom or Rwanda-type genocide that we did not believe could happen and yet it happened.

    Similar attacks against any other tribe or ethnic group anywhere in the country initiated by rumours, fears, intimidation and revenge capable of leading to pogrom; violent uprising beginning from one section of the country and spreading quickly to other areas and leading to dismemberment of the country.

    It happened to Yugoslavia not too long ago. If we do not act now, one or all of these scenarios may happen. We must pray and take effective actions at the same time. The initiative is in the hands of the President of the nation, but he cannot do it alone. In my part of the world, if you are sharpening your cutlass and a mad man comes from behind to take the cutlass from you, you need other people’s assistance to have your cutlass back without being harmed. The mad men with serious criminal intent and terrorism as core value have taken cutlass of security. The need for assistance to regain control is obviously compelling and must be embraced now.

    A couple of weeks ago at a public lecture, I had said, among other things, that:

    “In all these issues of mobilisation for national unity, stability, security, cooperation, development, growth and progress, there is no consensus. Like in the issue of security, government should open up discussion, debate and dialogue as part of consultation at different levels and the outcome of such deliberations should be collated to form inputs into a national conference to come up with the solution that will effectively deal with the issues and lead to rapid development, growth and progress which will give us a wholesome society and enhanced living standard and livelihood in an inclusive and shared society. It will be a national programme. We need unity of purpose and nationally accepted strategic roadmap that will not change with whims and caprices of any government. It must be owned by the citizens, people’s policy and strategy implemented by the government no matter its colour and leaning.

    Some of the groups that I will suggest to be contacted are: traditional rulers, past heads of service (no matter how competent or incompetent they have been and how much they have contributed to the mess we are in), past heads of para-military organisations, private sector, civil society, community leaders particularly in the most affected areas, present and past governors, present and past local government leaders, religious leaders, past Heads of State, past intelligence chiefs, past Heads of Civil Service and relevant current and retired diplomats, members of opposition and any groups that may be deemed relevant.”

    The President must be seen to be addressing this issue with utmost seriousness and with maximum dispatch and getting all hands on deck to help. If there is failure, the principal responsibility will be that of the President and no one else. We need cohesion and concentration of effort and maximum force – political, economic, social, psychological and military – to deal successfully with the menace of criminality and terrorism separately and together. Blame game among own forces must be avoided. It is debilitating and only helpful to our adversary. We cannot dither anymore. It is time to confront this threat headlong and in a manner that is holistic, inclusive and purposeful.

    For the sake of Nigeria and Nigerians, I pray that God may grant you, as our President, the wisdom, the understanding, the political will and the courage to do what is right when it is right and without fear or favour. May God save, secure, protect and bless Nigeria. May He open to us a window of opportunity that we can still use to prevent the worst happening. As we say in my village, “May God forbid bad thing”.

     

    OLUSEGUN OBASANJO

  • Three reasons why Super Eagles lost to Algeria

    The Super Eagles on Sunday night lost a massive opportunity to win a fourth AFCON title in a 2-1 semi-final defeat to Desert Warriors of Algeria.

    The painful defeat was down to the following main reasons:

    ·       Predictable line-up:

    The Super Eagles went to the game without any element of surprise after the quarter-final victory over South Africa. Gernot Rohr went to the all-important with the same line-up that defeated the South Africans. The Algerians read his mind well and had everything figured out on how to stop the boys. This they did successfully. Had he fielded players such as Shehu Abdullahi and Samuel Kalu, the Algerians would have been so shocked to play.

    Read also: UPDATED: AFCON 2019: Super Eagles fall to Algeria

    ·       Low confidence: It was clear the Eagles were lacking in confidence. Coming after a deserved victory over the South Africans, one expected the Eagles to take the game to the Algerians. Rather, they sat back and allowed the Desert Warriors dictate the tempo of the game.   Ekong, Omeruo and goalkeeper Daniel Akpeyi as well as Chidozie Awaziem obviously could have done better with psychological help. They ended up making crucial mistakes that affected the game.

    ·       Mahrez magic: The last-second free kick goal by Riyad Mahrez was simply magical. Only a top class player like him could have pulled out such a stunt. Clearly, the goal defined his participation in the African Nations Cup. It is debatable if a Nigerian player could have scored such a goal had the call gone the opposite way.

  • Before you apply that cream…

    Before you apply that cream…

    People go to great extent to look beautiful. They go as far as applying creams either locally or internationally made that can bleach their skin.

    It is amusing that people who are dark want to get lighter, those who are light want to get whiter and those who are white want to get tanned (darker).

    But, what is unknown to many is that, although such creams work but it might contain some harmful chemicals because the lightening creams use is quite cheap and produces fast result. These creams lighten the skin which glows for awhile and the end results are unimaginable

    Reports on websites like sciencedirect.com, southwark.gov.uk, dermnetnz.org shows that these creams use in lightening contains active ingredients like hydroquinone and mercury which can cause immediate lightening but dangerous.

    Mercury and hydroquinone could cause peeling skin, uneven skin tone, blotchiness, sun burnt skin, thickened skin. Large pores, itchiness, redness, dark patches, lines, wrinkles etc.

    Creams that contain mercury and hydroquinone to lighten the skin weaken the immune system and can cause irreversible damage to the skin. It penetrates the skin and can cause permanent damage to the brain, kidney and liver.

    Mercury is toxic and can also affect the life of an unborn child, if pregnant mothers should use it.

    Hydroquinone may cause cataracts, plastic anaemia and bladder cancer. Hydroquinone is a powerful chemical used in photo processing, rubber manufacturing and acts as an active agent in hair dyes.

    Mercury applied to the skin will react with the UV rays of the skin and re-oxidise, leading to darker and premature ageing when you continue to bleach the affected area.

    Countries like London, Australia, Malaysia has banned the sale of cosmetics containing mercury and hydroquinone as an over-the-counter (without prescription) ingredients. The European Union had prohibited the sale of such products and in January 2003, they forbade the export of the products.

    In United States of America, creams containing 2%hydroquinone and less could be bought over-the-counter and creams that contain more than 2% are sold under-the-counter, only if it is recommended by the dermatologist.

    In Nigeria, the sales of such products are not restricted, you could get it anywhere without restrictions. But, all the same, be careful of the creams or products you apply on your skin. You could also read product reviews online or the ingredients on the package.

     

  • Fact sheets on Nigerian wonderkid, Samuel Chukwueze

    Adeyinka Akintunde

     

    The Super Eagles of Nigeria got through to the semi-finals of the ongoing Africa Cup of Nations in Egypt, after beating South Africa 2-1 at the Cairo international Stadium.

    A certain Samuel Chukwueze got his name on the score sheet alongside William Troost-Ekong. That goal was Chukwueze’s first international goal for Nigeria and it also made him the youngest player so far to have scored in the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.

    Speaking after the match in Cairo, Chukwueze, who replaced Moses Simon, in starting the match, said the night was a dream come through for him.

    According to him: “I feel so happy to be named as man-of-the-match because it has not been easy for me and the team. I have been working so hard.

    “This is my first international outing with the Super Eagles as well as my first senior goal. It is a dream comes true for me. This makes me feel so happy and don’t know how to express it.”

     Fans of the Super Eagles have since been calling for the head of Coach Gernot Rohr, for failing to play Chukwueze since the start of the competition especially considering the dismal 2-0 loss to Madagascar during the group stages.

    Read Also: First goal for Nigeria excites Chukwueze

    This is because the 20-year- old thrilled Nigerians with amazing displays against the Bafana Bafana, which he toppled with a goal.  He is always compared to Arjen Robben because of his tremendous skills.

    It is hard to forget his dazzling show against FC Barcelona in Aprin 2019 where he scored and helped Villarreal come from a 2-0 deficit, to a stunning 4-4 draw against the Catalans.

    But who really is Samuel Chukwueze?

    Samuel Chimerenka Chukwueze was born in Umuahia Abia state on 22nd May, 1999. He was brought up in a Christian family with a younger brother and a younger sister.

    He attended Government College Umuahia and Evangel Secondary School.

    He started playing football when he was eight years old and he admired Nigerian legend, Austin Jay-Jay Okocha as his football idol growing up.

    Chukwueze joined Villarreal CF youth setup in 2017 from local side Diamond Football Academy. He made his senior debut with the reserves on 15 April 2018, coming on as a second-half substitute for Sergio Lozano in a 1–1 Segunda División B away draw against CE Sabadell FC.

    He scored his first senior goal on 20 May 2018 in a 3–1 away defeat of Bilbao Athletic and further contributed with two more goals in eleven appearances during his first season for the team, as his side missed out promotion in the play-offs.

    In April 2019, he won the Nigeria Football Federation’s 2018 Young Player of the Year award.

    Chukwueze first donned the Nigerian colours in 2015 at the FIFA U-17 World Cup in Chile where he scored three goals for the Golden Eaglets, en route to winning the trophy.

    He waited for three years, before receiving his first call-up to the senior team in October 2018.

    He made his debut for the Super Eagles of Nigeria on 20 November 2018 as a starter in a 0–0 friendly draw against Uganda and has gotten his first goal for the Super Eagles against South Africa in AFCON 2019.

    It remains to be seen the exploits the wonder kid has in his sleeves, as Nigeria and the world at large keep their eyes on him

  • Birthday treat: Five must-read Prof Wole Soyinka books

    In celebration of the prolific writer’s 85th birthday, here is a list of his memorable books:

    1. The Trials of Brother Jero.

    Soyinka’s The Trials of Brother Jero is the first of his three “Jero” plays. The play is a farce that focuses on four characters (Jero, Chume, Amope, and a Member of Parliament) over five scenes. The main character, Jero, is a beach prophet who makes his way by prophesying the futures of other working class people in the vicinity. Chume is a messenger who seeks relief from his shrewish wife Amope and predicts advancement in his career. Amope is a market woman to whom Jero owes money.  The Member of Parliament, who appears at the play’s close, is a signal that Jero’s trade is about to have more significant social consequences.

    This satire was first produced in 1960 in the University College, Ibadan.

    2. The Lion and the Jewel.

    One of Soyinka’s first plays in Nigeria, it was performed in 1959 at the Ibadan Arts Theatre.  It chronicles how Baroka, the lion, fights with the modern Lakunle over the right to marry Sidi, the titular Jewel. Lakunle is portrayed as the civilized antithesis of Baroka and unilaterally attempts to modernize his community and change its social conventions for no reason other than the fact that he can. The transcript of the play was first published in 1962 by Oxford University Press. Soyinka emphasises the theme of the corrupted African culture through the play, as well as how the youth should embrace the original African culture.

    3. Ake, The Memories of Childhood.

    Ake, The Memories of Childhood is a memoir of stunning beauty, humor, and perception–a lyrical account of one boy’s attempt to grasp the often irrational and hypocritical world of adults that equally repels and seduces him. Soyinka elevates brief anecdotes into history lessons, conversations into morality plays, memories into awakenings. Various cultures, religions, and languages mingled freely in the Aké of his youth, fostering endless contradictions and personalized hybrids, particularly when it comes to religion. Christian teachings, the wisdom of the ogboni, or ruling elders, and the power of ancestral spirits–who alternately terrify and inspire him–all carried equal metaphysical weight.

    Surrounded by such a collage, he notes that “God had a habit of either not answering one’s prayers at all, or answering them in a way that was not straightforward.”

    READ ALSO: 10 things you didn’t know about Professor Wole Soyinka

    4. Madmen and Specialists.

    Madmen and Specialists is a play by Wole Soyinka, conceived in 1970 during his imprisonment in the Civil War. It is considered Soyinka’s most pessimistic play, dealing with “man’s inhumanity and pervasive corruption in structures of power”. The plot concerns Dr. Bero, a corrupt specialist, who imprisons and torments his physician father.


    5. Kongi’s Harvest.

    Kongi’s Harvest is a 1965 play written by Wole Soyinka. It premiered in Dakar, Senegal, at the first Negro Arts Festival in April 1966. It was later adapted as a film of the same name, directed by the American Ossie Davis. The satire comically shows the degeneration of the potential future.

     

  • 10 things you didn’t know about Professor Wole Soyinka

    Here are some things you may not know about literary icon and Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, who clocks 85 on Saturday:

    · He is related to Afrobeat Legend, Fela Anikulapo Kuti

    Soyinka is the cousin of the late revolutionary African musician Fela Kuti. Wole’s mother, Grace, was a member of the Ransome-Kuti family known for its contributions to Nigerian art, religion, education, medicine and politics. Aside from Fela, his other cousins include activists Beko Ransome-Kuti and Yemisi Ransome-Kuti and former Health Minister Late Olikoye Ransome-Kuti.

    · He has been married three times and divorced twice

    His first marriage was in 1958 to the late British writer, Barbara Dixon, whom he met at the University of Leeds in the 1950s. Barbara was the mother of his first son, Olaokun.

    His second marriage was in 1963 to Nigerian librarian Olaide Idowu with whom he had three daughters: Moremi, Iyetade (deceased), Peyibomi and a second son, Ilemakin.

    He has been married to his third and current wife, Adefolake Soyinka since 1989 and has three children with her. Adefolake is a former student of Soyinka.

    · He lost the Oxford Professor of Poetry

    Soyinka lost the race to be Oxford’s Professor of poetry to English poet, playwright and novelist, Simon Armitage after he was betrayed by Melvyn Bragg. What the Nobel Laureate missed out on is the second most prestigious poetry position in the UK.

    · He fled Nigeria on a motorcycle hounded by Abacha

    During the military reign of General Sani Abacha, Wole Soyinka who spoke out against the junta had to flee via the ‘NADECO’ route. Wole Soyinka fled on a motorcycle to preserve his life. General Abacha pronounced a death sentence on him “in absentia”. With civilian rule restored to Nigeria in 1999, Soyinka returned to the nation.

    The National Democratic Coalition (NADECO) was formed on May 15, 1994 by a broad coalition of Nigerian democrats, who called on the military government of Sani Abacha to step down in favour of the winner of the June 12, 1993 election, M. K. O. Abiola. The members mostly came from the southwest of the country. They quickly became the symbol of mass resistance against military rule.

    · He wrote poems on tissue paper while in prison

    While behind bars despite being denied access to pens and paper, he improvised. Soyinka wrote poetry on tissue paper, which was published in a collection titled Poems from Prison. His experiences in prison are recounted in his 1972 book The Man Died: Prison Notes of Wole Soyinka.

    · He was a Professor at Obafemi Awolowo University

    From 1975 to 1999, he was a Professor of Comparative Literature at the Obafemi Awolowo University then called the University of Ife. With civilian rule restored to Nigeria in 1999, he was made Professor emeritus. Soyinka has been a Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

    · He has been named Commander of the Federal Republic of Nigeria

    This is a Nigerian honor first established in 1964 people who served and benefited Nigeria. Soyinka was awarded in 1986, the same year he won the Nobel Prize for Literature. The medal was awarded in 1986 by General Ibrahim Babangida, a former military ruler.

    On Sunday, July 24, 1994, he threw away his ‘national merit’ medal in Tafawa Balewa Square. He got angry that police halted the march he led for the restoration of democracy, end to military rule and release of Chief MKO Abiola.

    · He does not allow trespassing cars in his forest

    The literary icon is intent on preserving the purity of his surroundings. There are clear signposts with this order in his forest in Abeokuta, Ogun state.

    · He helped found the first confraternity in Nigeria

    While pursuing a degree in English literature, Greek and Western history at University College in Ibadan, Soyinka helped founded the Pyrates Confraternity with six others. It was built as an anti-corruption and justice-seeking student organization, themes that would play into much of his later work.

    · He is not religious although his father was an Anglican minister

    His father, Samuel Ayodele Soyinka (whom he called S.A. or “Essay”) was an Anglican minister and headmaster of St. Peters School in Abẹokuta. His mother, Grace Eniola Soyinka, owned a market shop, was active in the women’s movement in her community and also was a practicing Anglican. Soyinka, on the other hand, is an atheist. His beliefs contributed greatly to his writing.

  • World Population Day: Interesting facts about world population

    Since 1989, the global community has been observing ‘World Population Day’ on July 11.

    The day is aimed at focusing our attention on the importance of population issues. Here are a few interesting facts about population:

    · There are over 7.4 billion people on earth today

    · The most common first name in the world is Mohammed.

    · If Facebook were a country, it would be the most populous nation on earth

    · According to the UN’s data for 2015, around 21.3 million people across the world are refugees.

    · 54 per cent of them come from three countries: Syria Afghanistan Somalia

    READ ALSO: NCF hosts World Population Day

    · 65.3 million have been forced out of their homes. Among the 21.3 million refugees, over half of them are under the age of 18

    · 10 million people have been denied a nationality and access to basic rights such as education, healthcare, employment and freedom of movement

    · It took 200,000 years for humans to reach 3 billion in number and it took 40 years for the next 3 billion.

    · Over 65,000 Japanese are 100 years old or older.

    · The population of London in 2015 exceeds its 1939 population by only one person.

  • #AFCON2019: Nigeria vs South Africa head-to-head stats

    The past days have been filled with intense build-up to what could easily pass as one of the most important games ever between South Africa and Nigeria at the ongoing AFCON 2019 tournament in Egypt.

    Both teams will battle for a place in the semi finals today in Cairo.

    Here are interesting heads-to-head stats ahead of the game at the stadium of horror.

    • Nigeria are three-time African champions while Bafana Bafana won the tournament as hosts in 1996.
    • South Africa beat Nigeria away in their opening match of the AFCON qualifiers in June 2017 and were held 1-1 in the return fixture.
    • Nigeria have not won South Africa in their last five meetings.
    • The last time Nigeria defeated the South African national team was in a CHAN group stage game on August 19 ,2014 where Super Eagles won by 3-1 in Cape Town.
    • Ahmed Musa was the last Nigerian player to score against South Africa. it was in an international friendly in 2015 which ended in a 1-1 draw at Nelspruit.
    • South Africa have only managed to beat the Super Eagles twice in all and only once in a competitive game.
    • Nigeria’s first defeat against South Africa came in 2004. The 2-1 loss in 2004 was in friendly game used to mark Nelson Mandela’s birthday.
    • In 1992, Nigeria thumped South Africa 4-0 in Lagos on their return to international football after years of being banned owing to apartheid rule back. It was their first head-to-head meeting.
    • The most recent head-to-head meeting between the two sides was in August 2013 for the Nelson Mandela Challenge at the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban. Again Nigeria proved too much for South Africa by winning two-nil through Uche Nwofor’s brace of goals.

    Head to Head record:

    • Nigeria 2-0 South Africa, semi-final in 2000
    • Nigeria 4-0 South Africa, group stage in 2004

    Total head-to-head matches played: 13

    • Nigeria wins: 6
    • South Africa wins: 2
    • Draws: 5

    See Breakdown below:

    1. 10 Oct 1992 Nigeria vs South Africa            4-0      FIFA World Cup
    2. 16 Jan 1993 South Africa vs Nigeria            0-0      FIFA World Cup
    3. 10 Feb 2000 Nigeria vs South Africa            2-0     Africa Cup of Nations
    4. 31 Jan 2004 Nigeria vs South Africa            4-0      Africa Cup of Nations
    5. 17 Nov 2004 South Africa vs Nigeria           2-1      International Friendly
    6. 01 Jun 2008 Nigeria vs South Africa            2-0      FIFA World Cup
    7. 06 Sep 2008 South Africa vs Nigeria            0-1      FIFA World Cup
    8. 14 Aug 2013 South Africa vs Nigeria           0-2       International Friendly
    9. 10 Sep 2014 South Africa vs Nigeria           0-0       Africa Cup of Nations
    10. 19 Nov 2014 Nigeria vs South Africa          2-2       Africa Cup of Nations
    11. 29 Mar 2015 South Africa vs Nigeria          1-1        International Friendly
    12. 10 Jun 2017 Nigeria vs South Africa L        0-2        Africa Cup of Nations
    13. 17 Nov 2018 South Africa vs Nigeria         1-1        Africa Cup of Nations