Category: Online Special

  • 10 things your Smartphone could do

    10 things your Smartphone could do

    Most people don’t know the usefulness of their Smartphone, some people just think is only meant to call, receive calls, browse etc.

    Some people build their entire lives around their smartphones. Others use them just to make calls. But no matter where you fall on the spectrum of tech users, there are new apps as well as hidden features built into the phones that can make your life easier and more enjoyable.

    Smartphone Extra functions

    1. Monitor your heart. Many people check their heart rates often for signs of a medical problem or to help determine fitness levels. The app ­Instant Heart Rate has more than 5 million ­users. You place your fingertip over your phone camera lens for 10 seconds. Using the camera sensor and flash, the app detects a colour change in your finger from blood flow each time your heart beats and then calculates your pulse rate. Instant Heart Rate keeps a ­record of your tests so that you can share them with medical professionals and/or monitor the effects of your physical workouts.

    2. Measure height and distance. These apps are useful if you need to check the dimensions of a room or the distance across your yard or determine whether a piece of furniture will fit through your door.

    3. Translate foreign languages. Point your phone’s video camera at any printed material such as a road sign. The app replaces the words in the live picture on your screen with its English translation. It covers major languages including French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish. The Android and Windows versions even work without an Internet connection.

    This is a free feature in the Google Translate app for Android and iPhone. Windows Phone users can download a similar visual translator that is part of the free Bing Translator app.

    4. Mail a postcard. Now your phone gives you a way to easily create your own custom paper postcard and have it mailed. The Postcard on the Run app allows you to take a snapshot and ­personalize it with a message and your signature. You send it via text message to the company, which prints and mails your card for you to anywhere in the world.

    The app is free for the three major phone operating systems. Postcards cost $2.49 to $2.89 each, including postage, depending on the destination.

    5.  Digitize documents. ­CamScanner ­allows you to take a picture of any document, receipt or photo and instantly convert it to a high-quality PDF or JPG file format. The ability to “scan” on the go without a cumbersome office scanner can be very useful. Features allow you to enhance scanned images, adjusting for low lighting and for documents with light print or handwriting. Free for all three major phone operating systems.

    6. Allow you to create a high-security password. Instead of using a simple four-digit code to unlock your phone, you can create a more complex password with a mix of letters, numbers and special characters.

    iPhone: In the Settings menu, tap Touch ID and Passcode (or just Passcode on older phones), then Turn Passcode On. Turn off the switch that reads “Simple Passcode.”

    Android: In Settings, tap Screen Security, then Screen Lock. Select Password, then type in the password you want.

    Windows: In Settings, tap Lock Screen, then Password. Type your password.

    7. Take a screenshot. There may be times when you want your phone to capture a picture of what appears on your screen and save it—for example, detailed ­information on a web page that has constantly changing content.

    iPhone: Press and hold the Home button, along with the Sleep/Wake button. The screenshot will appear in your Camera Roll section. If you have an operating system earlier than iOS 6, consult Apple.com for directions.

    Android: Hold down the Power and Volume buttons at the same time. The image is saved to the Screenshots folder in your Gallery app. Note: This works only for Android OS 4 or later. If you have an earlier version, you’ll need to download the free app, AirDroid.

    Windows: On Windows Phone 8.1, press the Power and Volume Up buttons at the same time. The screenshot is stored in the Screenshots album in ­Photos Hub. For Windows Phone 8, press and hold the Start button and Power button at the same time. The shot also is stored in your Screenshots album. Earlier Windows Phone versions do not have screenshot capability.

    8. Enable you to see text more easily. If you’re having a difficult time reading from your phone’s small screen, you can change the size of the text.

    iPhone: In the Settings menu, tap General, then Accessibility, then Larger Text and/or Bold Text.

    Android: In Settings, tap Display, then Font Size.

    Windows: In Settings, type Ease of Access. Under Text Size, move the slider to change the size of the text. This works only in Windows Phone 8 or later. Earlier versions do not allow you to change the text size.

    9. Let you customise vibration mode patterns. With iPhones and Android phones, you can set your phone to vibrate in a different pattern depending on who is calling you—so you can tell, say, that your spouse is trying to reach you, even if your phone is not set to ring.

    iPhone: Go to Contacts. Tap on a contact name. Tap Edit, then Vibration to choose or create a pattern.

    Android: Go to Contacts, and tap on a contact name. Under Vibration Pattern, tap Default and choose a preset pattern.

    10. Turn off music automatically. Many people like to fall asleep listening to ­music. You can set your phone to turn off the music automatically after a certain period of time in order to avoid draining the battery.

    iPhone: Go to the Clock feature, and tap Timer. Set the desired length of time you want the music to play. Tap the phrase When Timer Ends. Scroll to the bottom of the screen and select Stop Playing.

    Android: Open the music player, tap Menu, then Settings. Tap the phrase Music Auto-off, and set it to however long you want the music to play.

    Windows: There is no built-in feature to turn off music automatically. Instead, you can download and install the free app Stop Music. It works with Windows Phone 7.5 and later.

  • Seven classic career disasters, lessons learned

    Seven classic career disasters, lessons learned

    Being a member of any workplace is replete with instances when things just turn out badly, those are the times when people reveal their true selves, the times that bring out either the best or the worst in us. Making mistakes is part of the human experience, it’s called learning, but only if you learn from past mistakes, if not you will risk making the same mistake over and over again, and that is a recipe for disaster. Here is a list of ten mistakes I have made in the course of my career and lessons learned.

    Watch your leader.

    My first job fresh out of university was as PA to the chairman of a firm with several business interests. It was one I enjoyed to no end as it gave me the opportunity met lots of people (which I love doing) , a chance to help them, and use my brains as well. Unfortunately, every cloud has a silver lining, as they say, in this case, it was my boss, a man old enough to be my dad, and my mum’s townsman no less. His idea of running a business was co-opting all, and I mean all the women in his companies into his harem; every female from the middle-aged cleaning lady, to the female guards, the  clerks, to the higher ups. So it got to the point where I dreaded going to work because I was going to continue the distasteful discussion about when I would become his, go on a weekend etc. What broke the camel’s back was when an acquaintance asked if he had raped me as it was part of his reputation. That was when I decided to quit, as a professional, no job is worth losing your peace of mind or reputation for.

    Getting a public dressing down

    At this other job at a research institute, my boss gave me a dressing down for not having important information about a forthcoming program at a Monday meeting. It was only later on he discovered it wasn’t my fault, it was a case of failure to share information, you know that colleague who refuses to share information for whatever reason.

    Weak performance appraisal.

    One time at work, I got this dismal appraisal rating, and I was really shocked because I thought I was doing really well. On enquiring from the management, I discovered that it was in the course of moving departments, I was doing the same thing I had been doing in my old department as I was not given a new job description. Imagine that! After realigning my JD with my boss’s expectations things got much better. Oh! and I got promoted too.

    Ignorant boss.

    This one is probably familiar to many Nigerians, you know the Naija factor. So I had this boss who was the MD’s cousin (actually living in her house) whose idea of business is dating every boss in any organisation she represents the company at. I don’t know if it had anything to do with the fact that she was ignorant, she could not use the computer, write a simple official letter, or even read or write a simple report, but would watch movies while at work. Of course, she did not have much to report as achievement so resorted to badmouthing her subordinates, is it surprising I left?

    Micromanager boss.

    This Oga just loved to micromanage, not giving one space to do the job, even as he starved me of resources to do the job. I simply left to avoid feeling strangled to death at work.

    Getting laid off.

    Yes, it actually happened to me once, felt bad at the office politics and wrangling that led to it at the time but I left calmly. It was for the best as the company’s coffers were empty. At least I got one month’s salary in lieu of notice, those I left behind worked for over eight months without being paid before the company folded up.

    Very public crisis.

    As HR manager of a facility management firm I got my first taste of high visibility crisis when the company moved to a new line of business closely related to our core business, and I had managed to head hunt and hire professionals who not only sat in negotiations to help get contracts but actually executed the projects successfully, but only after the company had made a huge loss  and risked losing the contract because the management chose their oldest staff, who had zero knowledge to implement the projects so we ended up using ninety-nine percent of the contract sum to do the job, I kid you not.

  • We need oil to get out of oil -Osinbajo

    We need oil to get out of oil -Osinbajo

    Remarks by His Excellency, Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, GCON at the presentation of three books by Honourable Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu in Abuja, on November  14, 2016

    I am especially pleased to be here this morning to celebrate the major intellectual and policy achievements of Dr Ibe Emmanuel Kachikwu, in his three texts on oil & gas law and policy in Nigeria.

    One, is the Compendium of Oil and Gas Cases in Nigeria, two, Legal issues in the Nigerian Petroleum Industry and the Petroleum Industry Bill: Getting to the Yes.

    These books are important, first, because oil and gas law and policy in Nigeria is notoriously underserved with quality materials. There just aren’t enough scholarly materials on the subject.

    But perhaps of greater importance is the pedigree of the author, a first class scholar, an industry expert of 30 years standing and now possibly the foremost policy person in the sector today, in his capacity as Chair of NNPC, former GMD of NNPC and the Honourable Minister of Petroleum and perhaps one should add his current position at OPEC.

    With this type of antecedents, it should be expected that the quality of thoughts and insights and the solutions that should be on offer should be unique indeed.

    I am pleased to say that from my assessment of one of the books: Legal Issues in the Petroleum Industry– which I had the pleasure to peruse, he did not disappoint.He took on the difficult issues of the defining items in the Nigerian oil and gas industry.

    The law is the law, policy is what it is, but how do they work on a regular day? What are the unspoken or subtle rules? In order words, what are the practical implications of policy and legislation? How did the subsidy regime for example redefine our downstream sector and perhaps the whole industry?

    You will not find the insights that Dr Kachikwu offers in the chapters on marketing and transportation of petroleum products, divestments, negative trends in the Nigerian petroleum industry and ministerial discretion in any text book or policy manual on the subject.

    Dr Kachikwu clearly took full advantage of the rare convergence of scholarship, contemporary experience and policy wisdom to deliver what are probably today the most significant contributions to our understanding of the major issues and nuances of the Nigerian Petroleum industry. It is this uniquely versatile background that makes this publication on the subject a must read for serious participants in one form or other in the industry.

    But I will not be surprised if one of the books – The Petroleum Industry Bill: Getting to the Yes – attracts considerable attention.

    The industry has awaited this all important bill for so long and many would hope at least that they can get a sense of how the minister’s mind is working.

    (I am afraid I cannot help much on that score as I was unable to read the book before now.)

    However, I think it might be important to say that the federal government has had to deal frontally with the critical issues bedeviling the sector: the deregulation of the downstream sector and its continuing challenges, vandalism of pipelines and export facilities and the critical drop in production, gas to power issues, the urgent imperatives of local refining, cash call problems and the plans to exit that regime and empowering indigenous operators.

    As we move to diversify our economy we are acutely aware that we need oil to get out of oil. Yet our window of opportunity to benefit maximally from the petroleum industry is narrowing.

    The development in shale oil which the author spends considerable time on, the increasing breakthroughs in renewable energy use, the incredible speed of the expansion of the use of electric vehicles, -Japan now has more electric charging stations than gas stations- all point inexorably to the fact that the party might be over sooner than we expected.

    But let me just go to another issue. Very few people here know that the author, Dr Ibe Kachikwu is also a great writer of fiction. I wonder how many people know that Dr Kachikwu was the publisher of the famous Hints magazine. Hints magazine, by the way, was a romantic magazine and several of the romantic stories there, were personally authored by Dr Kachikwu himself. I am sure for those who read fiction, you might have read the Cocaine Connection which he wrote, Beneath the Boardroom and the wonderful book, Peace at Last, which really is a book about himself and his childhood.  And I think it is the book that we all ought to read because, again it deals with some of the types of problems of young people that are growing up, especially when we have issues with our parents.

    Dr Kachikwu has always proved to be a multi-tasking individual and when you look at some of the works of fiction that he has written and just the way that he has written them, -and they are such good books to read, -I am sure that many of us would agree that if he had not made a success of his first love, which is oil and gas, he probably would have been quite successful as a writer of fiction.

    Let me say that having read his latest works, especially the one that I have read, I think that we must really commend him for the very excellent work that he has done.

    Once more, let me congratulate the author. I am sure he knew that when he finally decided to write on the industry, we would not tolerate one book from him. Three books at once is certainly in keeping with his immense talents. Congratulations indeed.

  • RED CARD, GREEN CARD – Notes Towards the Management of Hysteria

    RED CARD, GREEN CARD – Notes Towards the Management of Hysteria

    Nobel Laurete, Professor Wole Soynka response to the reported threat that he would tear his green card if Donald Trump wins the US presidential election.

    I shall begin on a morbid note. One of the horror stories that emerged from the Daesh (Isis) controlled parts of Iraq was the gruesome tale of the mother who had a daughter affected by wanderlust, even in that endangered zone. One day, when she looked for her to attend to some home chores, she found that she had gone missing yet again. As she searched, she shouted in frustration: ”As Allah is my witness, I’ll kill that girl when I catch up with her”. A neighbour overheard and reported her to the Hisbah. The mother was summoned by the mullahs who ordered her to put the child to death, since she had sworn by Allah. She refused, so they took the child by the legs and smashed her head against a wall. End of story. True or false? It certainly was published as true testimony. That is all I have to say to the ”literalists” who obsess over a time scheme of their own assessment. Thus, failure to have torn my Green Card ”the moment” that I learnt that Mr. Donald Trump had won the presidential elections of the USA. It did not matter what I was doing at the time – teaching, eating, swimming, praying, under the shower or whatever. Or a family member saying, ”Wait for me!” – speculatively please, no such disturbance ever took place. If it did however, I am supposed to contact the Nigerian media – to whom I have never spoken, and who never contacted me – except one – to beg permission to pursue a realistic definition of ”the moment”. Media fascism is however a subject for another day,
    For now, that moment having passed, I must be culpable of breaking a solemn promise. By the way, since we are on the terrain of literalism, has anyone attempted to ”tear” or rip apart a Green Card? Even a Credit Card? For the average hands, that would take some doing! I have actually considered garden shears for a dramatic resolution, this being closer to my real profession.
    I have been asked several times – interestingly only by the foreign media, with the exception of THE INTERVIEW – whether indeed I did make such a statement at any time, and whether I still intended to carry it out, abd the answer remains a categorical ’Yes’. Not recently, mind you, nor, in the inaccurate blazing PUNCH headline of Thursday Nov. 16 , but in the accurate wording that is contained in the actual story on page 9. So, where and when did I first notably make that declaration. Answer: Addressing a group of students at Oxford University and fielding questions. It was NOT a public lecture. I have never summoned a press conference on the issue. The organizers did not invite the (unregistered) Association of Nigerian Internet habituees. It was the accustomed student seminar format that moved from the light-hearted to the serious, the ridiculous and (hopefully) the profound and back again. I even used the encounter to compare my threat with the public antics of a former president – unnamed, I assure you – who tore up his party membership card of a moribund ruling party. Whatever my failings, I do not lack originality, and I was not about to be find myself indebted to that contumacious general!
    Nonetheless, did I mean what I said – that is, ’exiting’ the USA? Absolutely, and that is the very theme of this address. It will not attempt to deal with the notion of an exit time-table as conceived by others, as if even the incumbent US president and his replacement are not even permitted over two months to pack their bags and prepare to move in and out of the White House, but must exchange positions the very moment that a winner was proclaimed. Anyone would think that the Brexit Vote made it imperative for the Brits to plunge into the English Channel instantly, instead of negotiating two years for an orderly withdrawal. Plebians like me of course need far less time, nevertheless they do not uproot overnight. Any other proposition speaks of a permanent agenda, of frustration and hidden histories – such as opportunities to rehabilitate themselves in the public eye. There is also recession in the land, and I can understand the psychology of impotence and thus, transferred aggression. Let it be understood – before I move even one word further – that I interrupted my present commitment in the United States solely for an urgent meeting with the Ooni of Ife on an ongoing project. I am obliged to return to the US in a matter of two or three days to complete my interrupted mission. Fortunately, that mision is guaranteed to end long before the United States becomes Trumpland Real Estate.
    And now we move from absurd, frankly idiotic distractions to Substance. Why, in any case, am I pulling out of the United States? Why – as demanded of me by some of my genuinely concerned and sober interlocutors around the world – why such an extreme reaction? Why the terminal response to the elections of another land? Also, and perhaps most crucially, why am I left virtually mouth agape at the furore my stance has engendered? I simply fail to understand why this has gone beyond a flurry of public commentary and hilarious cartoons, and turned into a masturbatory for some, a vomitory for others, and an epilleptic sanatorium for a self-reproducing number? Why, in genuine bafflement, do I experience astonishment? Why do people find this commonplace, accessible-to-all act so extraordinary?
    The answers to all the forgeoing can be summed up in a familiar expression: a life of environmental sanitation, or call it – sanity. My temperament requires a certain minimum level of environmental health to function properly. I use the word ’temperament’ as a historical fact, a personality development that first manifested itself all the way back to student days, and has remained consistent all my life. Nowhere is perfect, certainly not all the time. Nonetheless, every human being has this need, however approximate, some perhaps with objective awareness, others intuitively, some more acutely and intensely than others, especially when defined by their professions, occupations, social and other involvements. The craving is common to all humanity – if I am wrong, then I must have dropped from Mars.
    Here now is a potted history of the choices made by this contributor over the years in pursuit of this need, all the way from student days. Read carefully and learn!
    As a student in Leeds University, one of whose subjects was Spanish, I steadily refused to accompany other students on long vacation job opportunities in Spain, designed to make us master the spoken part of the language. Apart from the Isle of Man, I went to France and Holland instead, whose languages were not part of my studies. And yet I had already fallen in love with flamenco music – played for us from records by our Spanish lecturer, and was dying to watch flamenco dancing in the flesh. Language study however involves, as we all know, the study of a people´s history and culture. I had encountered the history of the Spanish Civil War, the violent overthrow of a legitimate Republican government, and the ’white terror’ of the Falangist leader, General Franco. I identified with the volunteer soldiers of the International Brigade. Spain was under boycott in parts of Europe, so there was a choice to be made. I refused to step into Spain until years after I had graduated and returned home, and General Franco was certified dead and buried. A personal choice.
    Australia: It is now some twelve to fifteen years since I issued a Red Card to Australia, unannounced. That Red Card subsists till today. The occasion was a conference of PEN International, and I had made the usual visa application. When the forms arrived, I found the requirements for applicants over 70 years (I think) so obnoxious, intrusive, and degrading that I refused to fill them. Negotiations with the Australian government by Australian PEN led to an exception being made for me. When it was communicated, I wrote back: Absolutely Not. I refused to be the token geriatric. That application document was highly disrespectful of age and I wondered what kind of mentality had crafted it, wondered if the Australians themselves knew what image was being projected in their name. I said to our go-betweens: Not for a moment am I equating myself with Desmond Tutu or Nelson Mandela, but they are older. Does it mean that, if they decide to visit Australia, you would subject them to this form of degradation?
    Till today, I have routinely declined any invitation to Australia, a country I had visited years earlier to sumptuous hospitality. I learnt some time ago that the obnoxious requirements have been removed but have not bothered to check. The reason was this follow-up: a journalist heard about my absence from the PEN conference and made enquiries. He interviewed me and I told him the cause. After visiting the Australian embassy for their side of the story, he reported back that the diplomat in charge responded to his questions with the comment that the embassy was too busy with more important matters. did not make a fuss. My position was based on principle but, basically, it was a personal affair between me and Australia. It remains so till today.
    China: I did not, could not visit China for years after Tienanman Square. I was dying to visit that remarkable nation of culture and history, itching to go with every invitation. The Chinese ambassador in Nigeria tried to win me over after the ousting of the Gang of Four. I declined, but accepted the books he had told me did not exist while the Thought of Chairman Mao ruled the waves. Even when, years later, one of the top American travel agents organized a visit of Nobel laureates with mouth watering honoraria, I could not bring myself to join others. Constantly swimming before my eyes was the image of armoured trucks and tanks running over students encamped in Tienanmen Square, leaving behind rivulets of blood. Before I eventually accepted an invitation from the University of Beijing, I checked with some of the dissident poets – was it a decent time to visit? Had sufficient time passed for the average survivor of that carnage to obtain closure? Until they gave me the green light, I refused all invitations. Again I did not fuss. I did not call an international press conference in the interim.
    Back home to our continent – this time, post-Apartheid South Africa. How many of these hysterical purveyors of Internet obscenities – including some printed media – are aware that for nearly two years, I handed South Africa the Red Card? And why? Because of her then astonishing display of xenophobia, most notably against Nigerians. I was a personal recepient of that treatment which took place – of all occasions imaginable – on the occasion of my visit to deliver a three-part memorial lecture in honour of the late Nelson Mandela. Undoubtedly, on that very occasion, there had been a misunderstanding over visa issuance. Nonetheless, taken in the context of the rampant humiliation of Nigerians at the hands of South African authorities, and the South African civic pockets also, I went to the final lecture with my luggage. The moment I concluded the last of my lectures, I insisted on being driven to the airport, silently shaking off the South African dust off my feet for ever. It was only to my hosts that I uttered the declaration that they were seeing me in their nation for the last time. Until I withdrew the Red Card, I did not summon the Press.
    Now, how did that boycott end? It is a remarkable story which deserves its place in the narratives of sheer serendipity. It involved Dennis Brutus, the South African poet, an enlightened Head of Nigerian Immigration and, indirectly, Archishop Desmond Tutu and Albie Sachs, former chairman of the South African Constitutional Court. Also, retrospectively, the role played by Nelson Mandela’s widow, Graca Machel, during my ordeal at the airport. While the boycott lasted however, I declined between seven to nine invitations to South Africa, including a UNESCO event that was however billed to take place there. The ending of that boycott, like the beginning, was ultimately my private and personal decision.
    Shall we take Cuba, that revolutionary island where I was personally decorated by Fidel Castro with the Felix Valera medal of honour? Despite all efforts by the then Cuban ambassador to Nigeria, and very valued friends and colleagues in Cuba, I issued her my usual silent card some years ago. I found the execution of those ill-fated adventurers who tried to escape on a raft excessive, not forgetting the shooting down of a hi-jacked plane. Were their acts condemnable? Indisputably! Did the punishment fit the crime however? My answer is obvious – No. Jose Saramago, the late Portuguese Nobelist had apparently taken the same position, as I found out when we both met at a subsequent event in Cuba when our Cuban boycotts eventually ended. Were we wrong or right? That is immaterial. The point is that neither called a press conference or publicised our individual decisions. They were personal decisions, made independently.
    And so on, and on, and on….brief to prolonged, reluctant to instant boycotts of places of normally congenial roosting, for a variety of reasons, and dictated by individual temperaments. And so we come finally to Donald Trump, and the sometimes travesty of collective choice.
    I was in New York during the run-up to elections. I watched this face, its body language, listened to his uncouth, racist language, his imbecillic harangues, the insults to other peoples, other races, especially the Hispanics, Africans and Afro-Americans, even citing once – I was told – Nigeria as an instance of the burdensome occupation of global space. I watched and listened, disbelievingly, since this was America, supposedly now freed to a large extent – as we like to believe and have a right to expect – from its lamentable history of racism. But I saw, not only this would-be president but – enthusing followers on populist a populist roll at the expense of minorities! I followed the fluctuating poll statistics. I began to warn my colleagues, friends, my family: listen, this thing is happening right before our very eyes. This is how it begins, how humanity ends up with Cambodia, with Rwanda, with Da’esh. We are watching a Hitlerite phenomenon. We are witnessing history in reverse, unravelling before a complacent world. I said to them, if this man wins, I am relocating. It had gone beyond a joke. They all said, it will never happen. Even a day to elections, some Nigerians, with whom I had a meeting in New York, waved off the possibility. The entire world goofed – T.B. Joshua and other pundits, charlattans and experts alike. A colleague at Harvard mentioned the celebrations that would follow the election, but shortly after, confessed his concerns, cursing the FBI man who had chosen to intervene at an unprecedented stage in the elections.
    Again, I said to him, I shall relocate if Trump wins. He said, I’m coming with you, echoing numerous other colleagues to whom I had sounded the same alert. I promised them all political asylum! So, it was nothing new, the Oxford comment. Whatever language I used is my familiar language, not the language of Da’esh or its local impotent surrogates.
    Finally, here is something very personal, but I have to answer the question of my genuine interlocutors in matching sincerity.
    Our US base and family home in California – Abacha instigated – faces a rockhill known as Mount Baldy. It has survived the menace of fires, so close to disaster that we were placed on evacuation alert a number of times and were once actually bundled out by the police for over forty-eight hours. A fireball overflew the house on one occasion, landed some distance from ours and consumed that unlucky home. Not too far away, an escaping family took a wrong turn and lost their lives in the flames. Nothing of such menacing interludes ever brought to the fore the remotest consideration of relocating! However – and let this be stressed to all those who are strangers to the world of images – for this individual called Wole Soyinka, the superimposition of the Trumpian face on those bare mountain slabs began to take on reality, a reality that probably became even three-dimensional, like the massive faces of those former US presidents that remain gouged into the peaks of Mount Rushmore in South Dakota, visited by millions. My environment, albeit a substitute one for our authentic home in the forests of Ijegba – had become compromised. That is all I shall write on the reality of superimposition – the notion of waking up every day of habitation and seeing on that mountain slab the face of Donald Trump on my borrowed preserve, where, from upstairs, I sometimes stood in bouts of contemplation, especially whenever the house was empty.
    For me, something is gone. Again, I speak for myself, not for my family who are, in any case, also American citizens, an acquisition that I have declined I cannot recall how often. Let me repeat, even that portion of empathy that comes from intimate occupancy and usage over the years, and where the products of my ”extra mileage” were born, has become violated. It is still home, second home, but one individual named Donald Trump – and his cohorts – have ruined its hard-earned companionship and serenity, built up over the years. As I keep repeating, these issues are personal.
    And so, back from our quick excursions to Asia and the Antipodes, what is so special about America that an agenda of abandonment creates such hysteria? I am incapable of double standards in these matters. Why do individuals feel threatened? I have never invited anyone to join me in my purely personal odyssey, begun before most of these sniveling upstarts were born. Is it the Green Card that sets America apart? Then perhaps it iis time to repay the compliment with a Red card, as in soccer. I am not aware that the world’s oxygen storage tanks are located in the US of A, so that we cannot breathe away from it. I shall always compliment the American success story on many fronts, including the fact that millions of migrants derive their very living – including crucial send-home remittances – from her generosity. Many of us will always be grateful to her government at the time for sheltering both our persons and our mission during the Abacha years. However, we are also individuals, with specific needs, different sensibilities, and definitions of productive environments and thus, up to this moment, my Wolexit stands.
    It is a personal thing. Perhaps it will help even further if I remind you of what I wrote in my memoirs: YOU MUST SET FORTH AT DAWN. There I confessed that my greatest – and irrational – fear in exile was that if I died outside Nigeria, my well-meaning family, colleagues and friends, would bring my body home. I took firm steps. The thought of resting within that earth while it was trampled over by a despotic monster whom I thoroughly despised, was the absurd but all-consuming fear that I had all through that deadly struggle. Obviously that fear has been eliminated, but then, having watched this American Wonder rise to power through a contemptible denigration of my sector of humanity, through mockery and jeers of my origin, I no longer find that environment congenial either for work or leisure, and I have signalled my unambiguous intent to exit. No one else is invited.
    Well now, a remarkable development. I stated earlier that the issue is not just one individual called Donald Trump, but the human environment that he and his ilk have spawned, one that contributes to a toxic environment across the globe, with the rise of ultra-nationalism and exclusionist politics. That environment is however engendering counter aspects to that created by Trump’s lowest common demonimator in followership. Spontaneous protests have sprung up across the country. Too late, I’m afraid, and ineffectual, since Demoracy has the last word, and its rituals have been concluded. The law of the land will prevail. However, I have been considerably cheered by the spontaneous manifestation of this rejection of the shame and horror that a ”majority” has imposed on the totality. Americans will have to live with it, but there is hope. Even before the street protests, something rather strange had taken place.
    On the very morning of the conclusion of elections when I switched away from one news channel to the next, the screen went suddenly blank. Then came a scrolled message that called for a quiet, peaceful revolution. It went on and on, without voice or images, and it was non-partisan, since it rejected not only Trump but Clinton as befitting candidates but declared American democracy a sham. It went on to complicate matters by identifying an individual – Bernie Saunders – by name as an acceptable leader of a new movement. It excoriated past governance policies, dismissed even Obamacare as a failure – I disagree by the way – and urged viewers again and again to LET’S TALK ABOUT IT. LET’S MEET ON THE INTERNET. LET A PEACEFUL REVOLUTION BEGIN etc. etc. It could have been Channel 33 or 34, I am no longer sure. A serious, viable movement? Maybe not sustainable under the present system, but it goes into that multi-faceted network that leads to the eventual sanitization of any socio-political environment. And then, latest of the latest, the state of California has mounted a referendum for secession, within her constitutional rights. Quite an unpredictable prospect but, much as I am predisposed to upheavals by vox populi, I prefer to be out of the environment, being a non-citizen.
    Let me end with a Red Card to those noisome creatures, the nattering nit-wits of Internet: maybe Trumpland is not as despicable as the Naijaland you impose on our reality from your secure cesspits of anonymity. Go back to school. Your problem is ignorance, ignorance of whatever subject you so readily comment upon. Learn to study your subject before opening up on issues beyond your grasp. Sometimes you make one feel like swapping one green for another, out of embarassment for occupying the same national space as you. But don’t get nervous, or start jumping for joy too soon – the Nigerian passport is just as tough to rip, physically, as is the Green Card, so I’ll stay put in my private Green Belt – the one I have named the Autonomous Republic of Ijegba. I negotiate my relations with both peoples and nations from its internal protocols – yes, that is indeed arrogance for you, but an arrogance of several decades’ principled growth. I carry that patch of green with me, everywhere, in a secure, invisible, and inaccessible pouch! It is that warehouse of ingrained sensibilities that engendered my decision.
    WOLEXIT stands – I coined that deliberately, to signify repossesion of my space of legitimate decisions. The media can nitpick over details – that is your profession. At long last, totally oblivious of the ongoing cacophony that had sprung up in my absence, I finally did receive for the first time a brief questionaire from a Nigerian journal, The INTERVIEW, and one other. I responded. My exit time schema applies, not yours. If it even becomes convenient to bring it forward, I intend to do so, but please don’t come at me with plaints of time imprecision. ! never discussed it with you, nor invited you to a private decision whose execution was already in the making. Do not try to browbeat me. It’s a waste of time – all you have to do is immerse yourselves in my antecedents.
    Wole SOYINKA

  • Gemology uses precious stones to make creams -Chiedu

    Gemology uses precious stones to make creams -Chiedu

    More and more men suffer from things like high blood pressure, hypertension, cancers, heart attack and stroke at younger ages than was previously found, Tokunbo Chiedu.

                                                           

    Lawyer turned Beauty entrepreneur, and Consultant, with a bias for international business, Mrs Tokunbo Chiedu talks to Jane Kolade about her foray into the world of international business, becoming a beauty entrepreneur, and her world view. She also shares her passion for training, and how she brings that to bear in the running of her business, and day spa, which advocates the Gemology premium brand, and lots more. Excerpts:

    What is your take on the craze of Nigerian women with bleaching their skins?

    I’m not sure I can pinpoint why people bleach, because people have their different reasons for choosing to do that, but it may have to do with what you are exposed to, whether as a child. It might also have something to do with how you feel about yourself , and how they define beauty, or who is defining beauty. So I’m sure there are a myriad of reasons why people do that, I can’t speak for them.  But I think it’s important that you have to know that you are beautiful the way God made you.

    Of course, you know that there are people who suffer from skin conditions like acne; terrible ones that didn’t actually want to bleach their skins but some of the chemicals in the products used in treating their skins have that side effect and before they knew it, the entire skin colour has changed. Some people have a problem of having vey reactive skins, many people struggle with that, because it’s  a confidence thing that many people suffer from, which is why I don’t want to judge anyone. Having said that there are people choosing to bleach their skins, they are saying that they don’t like their black colour, and it is not a beautiful sight. We really don’t have that many experts who can advise, even going way back. Many people are seeking information on what to use, and end up using the wrong things on their bodies that are downright dangerous, and highly detrimental in the long term. But I think the ultimate advice is to say “you only have one self, and you have the responsibility to get the right information to ensure that you are not endangering yourself, because there are all sorts of chemicals in these products.

    Why do you think that Gemology is the better way to go?

    Gemology is actually from France and they are leaders in that sector, they are more natural than chemical because the formulations in products in the range are botanical. Gemology is a mineral based skin care brand formulated with trace elements from precious and semi-precious stones. The active ingredients in it are nature’s gifts to us, and trace elements are actually nutrients, the skin tends to absorb more when applied directly to the skin. Trace elements are the source of nutrients that you find in the food you eat, except that you find that when you ingest, your skin is the last part to gain from it. Technology now informs us that actually directly applying nutrients on your skin is more beneficial. There are a lot of health and anti-aging benefits attached to that because your skin gets to absorb the nutrients directly. So its undiluted, and it is not the residual form of the nutrient but the full essence.

    We advise a beauty prescription to start with, of course, our company represents the brand, and we work with trained therapists who have been trained by the brand. The brand is about education, its about elevating the standards in terms of the quality of care that consumers will see in the spa, and also the quality of products used on the skin. It’s a premium brand, one associated with luxury, and it is fantastic.  I have really reactive sensitive skin, and struggled with my skin for the better part of my adulthood, even from my teens, I have always had acne and blemishes. My dream is not to wear makeup, and now I can. I’m really happy with that. I am happy to not have to do make-up, but I am a

    Tell us a bit about the Gemology wellness weekend?

    tukunbo-chiedu-3

    The Gemology weekend will hold on the twelfth and thirteenth of November, twelfth is the men’s event, and thirteenth the women’s event. The Gemology Wellness weekend is actually our way of raising awareness about a good skincare regimen. We have set aside two days in November when we are just going to talk about wellness. It is about empowering people with information, during the programme there will be some services being delivered to the attendees. So they can have their shaving done, haircut, facial massage, body massage, manicure/pedicure. And we are working with professionals; therapists, barbers, beauty consultants who can advise. Day one will focus on male grooming, health, and fitness. We will have a medical doctor coming in who is an expert in the prevention of certain life threatening ailments; cancers, and so on. Especially because sometimes we don’t pay attention to these things, but it has become more important as increasingly people more and more suffer from things like high blood pressure, hypertension, cancers, heart attack and stroke at younger ages within the male gender than was previously found. Doctor Femi Olaleye is well known in that area and will talk to men about taking care of themselves, early detection signs and so on, while Gemology will talk about skin care.

    Day two is about women it’s the same thing- the doctor will be here to talk about the different ailments that women are plagued by, and steps to take to avoid those health pitfalls. The Nigerian woman is very much into great presentation, the average Nigerian woman loves and takes care of herself. We pay attention to personal branding, and sometimes the attention goes more on one thing than on the things that are most vital, so you get women who love hair, and pay attention to their hair, but don’t use anything particularly great on their skin. However, as a beauty entrepreneur I ask people to take a long term view, your skin is an asset and you should take good care of it.

    You presently have multiple interests in products and services that have to do with hair and skincare, how did that come about?

    Our core business is international trade and we are the go to brand for companies looking for access into the Nigerian market. We get invited to a lot of international events for the beauty sector. So we get to interact with international brands, at least on an annual basis. When we are approached for access into the Nigerian market, we typically look into the idea; some of the initial market intelligence was to advise the brand. And actually Gemology did some work to see if there was anything similar within the marketplace and all of that. That is our core business. We are a market entry market penetration international trade consulting firm. We have access to brands, and do all that is necessary to help promote them, and give them market access when they are ready for it. Prior to that, we provided advise to companies, and actually represent quite a number of brands in different sectors/ subsectors in the beauty industry.

    Do you care to mention any?

    Design Essentials is one. They are a leading brand, but they are also a training brand, which means that as a professional brand they provide training to support their stylists. They are the leading brand, both at home and abroad. We represent a food and beverage brand called Fosters Traditional Food, UK. They are a leading supermarket supplier, and also a leading brand supplying to the well known chains in the UK; Tesco, ASDA. They took an interest in the Nigerian market about three years ago, and we have done some work to try and support them, especially with NAFDAC registration, finding sub-distributors for the distribution of the brand, because we don’t actually distribute brands, though a brand we represent does. So we have affiliates for the brands we have worked with. Our work with brands is certainly interesting, quite a departure from the usual with firms which is more corporate. Usually developing international connections for brands, we went into the beauty sector because of the demand, as Nigeria is developing as an exciting place for lifestyle brands.

    Tell us about your educational background?

    I have a degree in Law and Social sciences, and a Masters in International Development. Both from institutions in the UK.

    So where are you from?

    I am a proudly Ijesha lady, married to a Deltan. Ijeshas are entrepreneurial by nature, intellectual, and we are trades people.

    How did you become a Beauty Entrepreneur?

    We organize international exhibitions, and it became a platform for brands. And the brands we represent found us because of the work we had done. It just became a natural progression for us to take an interest in representing some of the brands that have approached us. Especially because Nigeria is a big market, we like to have the best. We like to be on the same page as the rest of the world, and like to have access. The face of lifestyle here is changing so that we on par with a lot of global business destinations. Nigeria is welcoming a lot of business, and is involved in different sectors of the economy. These people who are coming into Nigeria with their business interests have needs, and some of them can be satisfied with what we have.

    Tell us the secret of your trim build and youthful looks in spite of being a mum in her forties.

    I think its my genes, I have good genes. Thank my mummy and daddy. And thank God. And then i love to eat. I really don’t believe in diets. But I like to eat good food, and also like to eat well. I have a sweet tooth as well. So I like my cakes and all that. But my work is very demanding, and I do a lot of things. I am an active worker, I wish I could exercise more, but I love swimming, and dancing; Salsa especially and it keeps you fit. But apart from that I would say exercise.

    Do you have a beauty routine?

    Oh yes, I do.

    Please share it.

    I have always have problematic skin, which I think is more hormonal.  So my skin tends to be reactive, even to touch. I discovered Gemology a year ago, I used it on myself and the result was amazing! Transformative actually. I wear make-up most days, so at night I remove my make-up with the Gemology Make-up remover, then I use the foam cleanser , then I use the toner. After that I apply a serum, during the day I apply an anti stress serum, and at night I use the calming serum. There are a bunch of serums, the anti stress serums, brightening serums, calming serums, those for sensitive skins and so. I love the fact that there are options to tally with what you might be going through. Your skin might be dealing with stress, too much aircondioning, dryness and so on. So it’s a beauty product tailored to what your skin is going through, although we usually don’t think of what the skin is going through. So if you are feeling tired, your skin maybe tired. At different times I use a repairing serum when my skin is going through stuff and needs repair so I use that. At times, I use the Diamond cream because my skin is dull, and diamond is known to be luminous, and it helps in oxygenating the skin, and makes you naturally radiant. It actually depends on what my skin tone is saying. So its good to keep a regimen, but introduce certain products at different times to address relevant concerns.

    At the Gemology stand during the last Beauty Africa conference, I noticed they did something called ‘face mapping’ tell us a bit about it?

    It really is facial skin analysis using a magnifying glass to look at your skin in a way that the natural eyes can’t to determine likely present, and future concerns. For instance, whether you are likely to lose skin elasticity because of your skin type. It is more like a deeper skin study in order to recommend the appropriate product, or what to do; like drink more water. It can prompt your beautician to ask you the right questions so they can help you. Many people don’t know about this, they just ask what their friends are using , and use same, simply taking recommendations from friends.

    So where can one get Face mapping done?

    tokunbo-chieduA good spa, or beauty consultant should be able to help with that. And we offer the service in our day spa. The Gemology day spa offers it as the first step in determining your beauty prescription.

    You carry a head of beautiful, natural hair, have you had any challenges with weaves like traction alopecia  to prompt going natural?

    I struggled with my hair because I have coarse hair. But I generally tended to reach for the more protective styles like weaves because I don’t have too much time on my hands to be sat in a place for too long. My hair kind of went natural because I was always in protective mode, but I love hair, whether relaxed or naturally textured. I think women should do whatever works for them.

    You wear so many hats, CEO, Director, yet you are a wife and mum. How do you manage your business with being a home maker?

    I think I’ve always had great family support. And I’m not just talking about just today as a married woman. But it goes way back to when I was a girl, my father was very supportive. He was a major influencer of who I am now, my mom too. My mum was extremely entrepreneurial, and strong. But I’m saying that whatever you able to do now is not just about today, but where you are coming from, what you have had put into you. So even from within my family, I had a lot of family support, like my siblings. People are always rooting for me. If I had to pin point what helped me do what whatever I have done, its because people were rooting for me, that’s my main driver. After God who propels me. And there is nothing more humbling and inspiring to have people who believe in you. And my husband is my biggest fan. He supports me a lot, and believes in me a lot. I also have a great team at work.

    Tell us some of your challenges starting out?

    Many. I’ve dropped many balls.  I made many mistakes, and have not picked my battles. I am very heady, and Nigeria doesn’t take kindly to that.

    In women, or everyone?

    Everyone. I just think that you have an opinion, not that you are being rude. And you believe in something.

    Are you completely satisfied with your life and career right now?

    I’m happy with all the highs and lows of my career. I’m happy with every part of the journey. I embrace everything, I embrace all my achievements and learning curves, I won’t say  mistakes because I think it’s a part of learning. Its an opportunity to learn how to and not to do certain things. In business you go through so much, sometimes there is no script. You have a business plan, but it doesn’t mean anything beyond that, it’s just that, a plan. And how responsively you react to what comes determines your survival. There are things you will go through that you would want to do differently should the opportunity arise, everyone has that. I do too, its part of my journey.

    What prompts your giving back to society?

    I’m a people person, I love people. I think that God has given me a lot. And I am not talking about material means. I’m talking about my intellect, and gifts. Everyone has gifts, I like to share that. Share my ideas and be part of forward thinking and progress. Its our Nigeria, and life is really not well lived until we’ve shared, until you’ve made a difference, until you’ve touched somebody. I think it was Maya Angelou that said “Its not what you say that people will remember but how you made them feel.” That is always going to make a lasting impression because people won’t forget what they hear, its authentic. Its real. We want to be able to do more.

    If a young lady walked up to you and said, “I would like to be like you” what would you advise?

    I would tell her to be herself. You don’t know the pain, you only see the glory.  I learnt that you have to be comfortable with your pain to be truly successful. You have to overcome it. I say pain, but it could be difficulty, or challenge. Its not going to go away, you to master it and conquer it. If they say, “I want to be like you”. I would say, “Which you? You don’t know anybody.” If they say, “I aspire to do …” I can live with that, but not be like you. In life we assume that we are all writing the same test, but everyone has a different question paper. My journey is so different from yours, some challenges I have faced others won’t face. Life is so personal and experiential. We can’t duplicate our experiences. Our responses to the same experience will be so different. We can be in the same situation, yet our reactions will be so very different because we are different. I would offer the young lady the few words of wisdom I could muster, the first would be find yourself because when you know you it’s the beginning.  To know what you know  what you want and what you don’t.

    What are the things her not to do or stay away from?

    I would say that you have to know yourself, and how certain things impact you, don’t throw yourself into situations. Don’t take anything for granted. Learn from anything going on around you. Be aware of predators, not everyone around you wants the best for you. You have to ascertain who is for you, and who isn’t.  Its about being in touch with the world.

     

     

     

  • Boko Haram Funding and demands of Patriotism in Nigeria

    Boko Haram Funding and demands of Patriotism in Nigeria

    Much of the initial mysteries which beclouded Boko Haram operations in Nigeria have been cleared. It is now in the open how the deadly terror group acquires arms and ammunition’s, how it recruits, its funding, its agents and links to other terror sects around the world.

    Boko Haram permeation of all segments of the Nigerian society, including the armed forces and para-military organizations is public knowledge. Intelligence experts also know of their presence in the police and their unassuming agents in the communities they most often tend to torment. It tricks of disguised striking of targets, the manufacture of their explosive devices, in some parts of the country and the extent of estrangement afflicting their residues at the moment is equally known.

    The Nigerian state has made tremendous effort  in taming the sect in the country. That it has been defeated is no fresh news. And that no Nigerian territory is under their control is a story long foretold. But what has remained intriguing is the recalcitrance of agents and sponsors of these terrorists who have mixed and blended, so perfectly with the sane society.

    The Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Gen. Tukur Buratai is a man of few words. He believes more in action than flippancy. This much can be gleaned from his handling of the Nigerian army and the prosecution of the anti-terrorism war in the country.

    But days back, Buratai made a striking statement that was more like invoking the conscience of Nigerians and the veiled agents and sponsors of the sect. It was a plea to reason and loyalty to one’s country.

    Buratai had lamented; “We need to work together and synergize together, fighting insurgency in Nigeria is a situation whereby, they have melted into the society and we have some elements within the society still supporting them clandestinely.”

    The Army  Chief vented his spleen in an interview during a two- day seminar on Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria,  with the theme;  “Assessing the Threat of Boko Haram Insurgency in Nigeria.”

    Nothing can be further from the truth. It is glaring that some Nigerians have appetite for bad news and it appears they go to bed every night, hoping to delightedly wake to confront the ugly side of the world. It is pertinent to presume that the remnants of Boko Haram occasionally tormenting Nigerians would long have been flushed, if all Nigerians were patriotic to understand that acting as agents of this cruel terror sect offends all certified standards of morality.

    The feeling of the continued sponsorship of the sect within was reinforced pungently with the November 4, 2016  carefully planned attacks on the Military Command Center of ”Operation Lafiya Dole” in Mallam Fatori, Borno State. The incident led to the death of five gallant soldiers of the Nigerian Army, notable among them was Lt. Col. Muhammed Abu-Ali.

    Some media reports pointed to leakage of information and strongly alluded to the possibility that the terrorists’ co-ordinated attacks must have been informed by information at their disposal on the military command center on troops movement.

    The timing of insurgents’ attacks and the boldness in confronting the soldiers lent credence to the suspicion that an insider must have informed them about the withdrawal of an officer and 49 combatants by Army authorities or reduction in the number of troops in Mallam Fatori.

    But beyond such posturing, one is infinitely amazed at the manner some Nigerians celebrate the terrorists atrocious outings on the people in the traditional media. They use superlative lexicons to qualify the terrorists, inflate or exaggerate their strikes on targets, sometimes, outrightly invent their incidents of terrorists’ attacks, just to create the psychological torment that Boko Haram are very present and potent in the country, much like yesterday.

    Ironically though, the same characters display an overt reluctance in singing songs of defeat of the sect by Nigerian soldiers.  When terrorists’ hideouts are punctured or raided by the military, it is not worthy of their attention; when soldiers foil any bomb blast attempt, they look the other way; it infuriates rather than gladden their hearts and when release of hundreds of Boko Haram abductees is effected by soldiers, they plot fresh schemes to publicise fake fresh incidents of abduction by the terrorists.

    When they deviate a little from this path, these same elements blatantly politicise the anti-terrorism war, castigating President Muhammadu Buhari for failure to fulfill one of his APC campaign promises to crush the insurgency within a time frame. Or they take a swipe at the Nigerian Military, accusing them of feigning control over Boko Haram, while it smoulders.

    That’s how they feel about their own country, preferring it never extricate itself from the chains of terrorists. Americans tasted the bitter pill of terrorism before Nigerians, with the terrorists attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon House. America itself is yet to absolutely free itself from terrorists yoke, as recent explosions bear testimony.  But hardly do you read an acerbic comment from any American which bear any imprint, denoting support for the terrorists.

    But wishes can never be horses; if they were horses, beggars too would ride. When Gen. Buratai emerged on the scene of terror war as COAS and bent on ending insurgency as directed by President Buhari, most Nigerians doubted him. He was not given a chance to prove himself. But today, he has proven that Nigerian soldiers under his leadership can do more than crush terrorists.

    Let these veiled agents bow to the power of conscience by openly appreciating Buratai and Nigerian soldiers for this rare feat of gallantry. Had his predecessors done an inch of what he has accomplished in the terror war, Nigeria would have buried Boko Haram long before President Buhari administration came on board.

    So, one unalterable fact is that these terrorists who have caused sleepless nights to Nigerians have been defeated by the military and no amount of ill-feelings by its agents or sponsors can resuscitate them. It is a blighting era in the history of Nigeria long consummated by Nigerian Army.

    The only noble and patriotic option now is for the majority of Nigerians who believe in this cause to work collectively to wade off the orchestrated psychological warfare, which Boko Haram and their sponsors/agents tend to promote, through the instrumentality of the media.

    And if the defeat of Boko Haram is the only signpost President Buhari has flaunted before Nigerians as his footprint in governance in the last one year, Nigerians have every reason to eulogize God Almighty and celebrate him and Buratai. President Buhari is to Nigerians, what out-going President Barack Obama is to Americans for pinning down global initiator and father of modern terrorism, Osama Bin Laden.

    Bukar Raheem, a public affairs analyst writes from Kaduna State.

  • Sacrifices Against Terrorism And The Burden of Appreciation

    The dead from the latest Boko Haram ambush on Nigerian troops have been buried. Emotions spilled over and tears flowed freely at that burial. Even the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt Gen Tukur Buratai teared up remarkably when one would have expected that years of being battle hardened would have made him incapable of such expression.
    Tears from the generals’ general  have been decoded from different perspectives. Top among the insight offered was the pains of losing gallant soldiers like Lt. Col. Muhammed Abu Ali with other troops that died with him.
    But in Buratai’s tears I see the pains of serving a nation where appreciation is the last thing that will come the way of those that give their all – including the ultimate of giving up one’s life so that fellow compatriots can live secured.
    True, a few people are asking for posthumous promotions, honours, awards and all other forms of our usual pontification that were forgotten within hours once the results of the US Presidential Election, won by Donald Trump, started pouring in. This shows on hand that the seeming kind outpouring of grief might have been a mere show off by people who merely went through an expected motion for the sake of keeping up appearances.
    The real mind of these detractors was revealed in the efforts to immediately manipulate the troops deaths in a way that fit into a long running campaign to undermine what has been achieved in the anti-terror war. Suddenly, the plague of short memory that has always afflicted Nigerians took root as few now remember that the terrorists used to  take their attacks to military barracks and armory, which they are no longer capable of.
    Human life, especially one committed to the service of the nation and humanity is precious and can never be quantified in terms of loss neither should it be reduced to mere statistics for that would be making us lose what sets us apart as a specie. But the current casualty rate is nothing compared to the previous years’ casualties.
    Someone in the service once let slip at a private gathering that right thinking Nigerians would demand for the execution of officials of the previous administration if the casualties figures for 2013, 2014 and early 2015  were released.
    This is in spite of the fact that since the coming of President Muhammadu Buhari’s government and the strategic military appointments he made, efforts had been in the right direction reducing the casualty rate in operations against Boko Haram over 500 per cent.
    Something else changed. This government has been more open and transparent while military operations have been responsive to the best of my knowledge judging by media reports. This appreciation is instructive because the distortion around casualty from the war theatre risk politicizing the military to a point where top brass would be pressured into lying like politicians. That certainly is not what we want.
    The recent practice whereby the army became forthcoming with information under the present leadership could also be negatively affected if those in charge begin to have concerns that facts supplied in good faith are twisted to suit political posturing. Again, this is not something Nigerians want.
    The COAS must dry up his tears. There are those who would not appreciate even if their immediate families get killed in the course of fighting Boko Haram insurgents. We must not allow such people define who we are and definitely the army must not allow them to influence how it relates with Nigerians as an institution. He should take pride in the fact that through him, President Buhari has kept his promise to degrade Boko Haram and if it is the only thing that has been achieved in the last one year then we have every reason to sing praises to God.
    One’s expectation is that the troops’ deaths that people want to use as the latest arsenal against him are actually a basis to renew appeal for more funding to buy equipment and compelling argument  to international partners to lessen the restrictions on arms deals with Nigeria.
    Nigerians on their part must realize that we did not give Buratai any chance that he could win this fight against insurgency and terrorism, but now he has basically won. Let us be charitable enough to appreciate the much he has done.  Even if his efforts would not be appreciated, to attempt using this recent tragedy as an opportunity to castigate the COAS or the Buhari administration is nothing short of spitting on the graves of the departed. That is sick.

    Okanga writes from Agila, Benue State.

  • Hilary Clinton’s concession speech

    Hilary Clinton’s concession speech

    Transcript of Hilary Clinton’s concession speech she made on Wednesday.

    Thank you. Thank you all very much. Thank you so much. A very rowdy group. Thank you, my friends. Thank you. Thank you.

    Thank you so very much for being here. I love you all, too. Last night I congratulated Donald Trump and offered to work with him on behalf of our country.

    I hope that he will be a successful president for all Americans. This is not the outcome we wanted or we worked so hard for, and I’m sorry we did not win this election for the values we share and the vision we hold for our country.

    But I feel pride and gratitude for this wonderful campaign that we built together. This vast, diverse, creative, unruly, energized campaign. You represent the best of America, and being your candidate has been one of the greatest honors of my life.

    I know how disappointed you feel, because I feel it too. And so do tens of millions of Americans who invested their hopes and dreams in this effort. This is painful, and it will be for a long time. But I want you to remember this.

    Our campaign was never about one person, or even one election. It was about the country we love and building an America that is hopeful, inclusive, and big-hearted. We have seen that our nation is more deeply divided than we thought. But I still believe in America, and I always will. And if you do, then we must accept this result and then look to the future. Donald Trump is going to be our president. We owe him an open mind and the chance to lead. Our constitutional democracy enshrines the peaceful transfer of power.

    We don’t just respect that. We cherish it. It also enshrines the rule of law; the principle we are all equal in rights and dignity; freedom of worship and expression. We respect and cherish these values, too, and we must defend them.

    Let me add: Our constitutional democracy demands our participation, not just every four years, but all the time. So let’s do all we can to keep advancing the causes and values we all hold dear. Making our economy work for everyone, not just those at the top, protecting our country and protecting our planet.

    And breaking down all the barriers that hold any American back from achieving their dreams. We spent a year and a half bringing together millions of people from every corner of our country to say with one voice that we believe that the American dream is big enough for everyone.

    For people of all races, and religions, for men and women, for immigrants, for LGBT people, and people with disabilities. For everyone.

    I am so grateful to stand with all of you. I want to thank Tim Kaine and Anne Holton for being our partners on this journey. [Cheers and applause]

    It has been a joy get to go know them better and gives me great hope and comfort to know that Tim will remain on the front lines of our democracy representing Virginia in the Senate. [Cheers and applause]

    To Barack and Michelle Obama, our country owes you an enormous debt of gratitude.

    We thank you for your graceful, determined leadership that has meant so much to so many Americans and people across the world. And to Bill and Chelsea, Mark, Charlotte, Aidan, our brothers and our entire family, my love for you means more than I can ever express.

    You crisscrossed this country, even 4-month-old Aidan, who traveled with his mom. I will always be grateful to the talented, dedicated men and women at our headquarters in Brooklyn and across our country.

    You poured your hearts into this campaign. To some of you who are veterans, it was a campaign after you had done other campaigns. Some of you, it was your first campaign. I want each of you to know that you were the best campaign anybody could have ever expected or wanted.

    And to the millions of volunteers, community leaders, activists and union organizers who knocked on doors, talked to their neighbors, posted on Facebook — even in secret private Facebook sites.

    I want everybody coming out from behind that and make sure your voices are heard going forward. [Cheers and applause]

    To anyone that sent contributions, even as small as $5, that kept us going, thank you. To all of us, and to the young people in particular, I hope you will hear this — I have, as Tim said, I have spent my entire life fighting for what I believe in.

    I’ve had successes and setbacks and sometimes painful ones. Many of you are at the beginning of your professional, public, and political careers — you will have successes and setbacks too.

    This loss hurts, but please never stop believing that fighting for what’s right is worth it.

    It is, it is worth it. [Cheers and applause]

    And so we need — we need you to keep up these fights now and for the rest of your lives. And to all the women, and especially the young women, who put their faith in this campaign and in me: I want you to know that nothing has made me prouder than to be your champion.

    Now, I know we have still not shattered that highest and hardest glass ceiling, but someday someone will — and hopefully sooner than we might think right now. [Cheers and applause]

    And to all of the little girls who are watching this, never doubt that you are valuable and powerful and deserving of every chance and opportunity in the world to pursue and achieve your own dreams. [Cheers and applause]

    Finally, finally, I am so grateful for our country and for all it has given to me.

    I count my blessings every single day that I am an American, and I still believe, as deeply as I ever have, that if we stand together and work together with respect for our differences, strengthen our convictions, and love for this nation, our best days are still ahead of us.

    Because, you know, I believe we are stronger together and we will go forward together. And you should never, ever regret fighting for that. You know, scripture tells us, let us not grow weary of doing good, for in good season we shall reap. My friends, let us have faith in each other, let us not grow weary and lose heart, for there are more seasons to come and there is more work to do.

    I am incredibly honored and grateful to have had this chance to represent all of you in this consequential election. May God bless you and may God bless the United States of America.

  • Why We Must Allow Our Fallen Heroes Rest in Peace

    The death of Lt Col. Muhammed Abu Ali and six other troops cast a pall on the nation, opening the month of November on a sad note. Those deaths were preceded in September and October by some other casualties in the war theatre. Before them, other gallant soldiers had paid the supreme price in the war to rid Nigeria of Boko Haram terrorists. And before that there have been thousand others that died securing the fatherland.
    One’s thoughts are often with the bereaved families considering the state of our socio-cultural evolution and the fracture that the death of breadwinners can inflict on families – oftentimes young families with the older children barely out of primary school. The fallen soldiers could have opted for less risky and more lucrative careers – lifting crude, padding budgets, inflating contracts and other vices that have all but received national absolution, rather they opted for the noble choice of serving the nation with their lives.
    This is why the raving frenzy around the death of the troops in Boko Haram ambush leaves a nauseating feeling. On the surface it appeared to be a nation united in grief as people take to the social media to share the photos of Lt Col Abu Ali – sadly that created the impression that only one officer has died in the half decade insurgency.
    The sad reality beneath the impassioned sense of national mourning is that the greater part of the population were acting out in a zombie-like manner – they hit the share button because that is the way they have become conditioned, think of a cyber crow that click like on photos of mutilated bodies at accident scene, the mindless horde that type ‘lol’ (laugh out loud) in response to an update of someone losing their loved one or a robotic gang that share links without reading.
    The installed capacity of the crowd in question is further understood if one recalled that they are the same ones that trended the Je Suis Charlie hash tag when terrorists struck in France yet they had prior to that never declared their Nigerian patriotism. It is the assemblage of people that have changed their profile pictures to the national flags of other nations undergoing crisis but barely know what just transpired in their neighbouring such that asking them to understand what happened nationally would be an unfair task. The population represents folks who do not know the name of the chairman of their local government area council but yet are obsessed with voting against Donald Trump as US president, a country to which some of them would never get visas to visit in ten lifetimes.
    Suddenly the story has shifted from the tragedy of human loss to that of political posturing. The mass opinion has moved from thinking of that uncertain moment of the soldiers being on the threshold of death and knowing they are dying. The focus is now using these great lives for advancing perverted political goals. No one is pondering how the loved ones left behind by these gallant troops would survive knowing that offers of extended support are drying up in a world suffering the fallouts of declining economies.
    Instead, the sacrifices of these souls is being leveraged as the entry point to reopen attacks on the military leadership, especially Lt Gen Tukur Buratai, the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), who is now being pitted against President Muhammadu Buhari. The lies are rolling out faster than Boko Haram insurgents are being defeated. As would be expected the online drones are replicating the lies without the knowledge to process and appreciate that they have become unwitting fighters against the state in the new phase of the anti-terror war and that their misdirected posts in essence constitute fighting the late soldiers they thought they were revering.
    In our various national cultures and beliefs, the tenet is not to speak evil of the dead. Why then must we use the deaths of people that died in service of the nation as rags to mop up the mess of failed political louts?
    Those who are truly touched by the sacrifices of these soldiers would at this point be interested in using crowd funding for setting up a foundation that will cater to the needs of the vulnerable persons soldiers leave behind when they die in the line of duty – aged parents, wives and children. This will be a more productive approach than moaning in cyber space while ignorantly spreading the propaganda of those that have sustained the terrorists for their own selfish reasons.
    By all means there should be outrage over the deaths and a good suggestion for expressing that outrage is to make contributions and suggestions on how to continue the fight against terrorism at a time when the economic situation is making the funding of anything possible. Since Boko Haram constitute a greater threat to the collective, the suggestion will include asking the handlers of the Niger Delta militants to call their boys to order while the threat of extremism is dealt with since the government is looking into their 16 points demand.
    Those backing the Boko Haram terror group must not be spared a dose of the national outrage. For as long as they are there to sponsor, recruit, radicalize and deploy more youths as terrorists it is becoming apparent that the insurgents will continue to get regenerated after every wave of defeat. The military will take out the terrorists but only the stakeholders in the north east and clamping down on the sponsors would turn off the tap at the source in this instance.
    Pending when any of these happens, Nigerians must take lesson. Social media are shutting down accounts connected with terrorism but the everyday user is dumbly becoming the channel for spreading the message and propaganda of the terrorists with each like, share and comments that further terrorism in the most innocent form conceivable. This kind of behaviour is nothing short of dancing on the graves of our fallen heroes and could not have been what we have in mind when we prayed that they continue to rest in peace.

    Ola writes from Germany.

  • Torrents of Tributes on Fallen Heroes, Signs of national rebirth – Group

    Torrents of Tributes on Fallen Heroes, Signs of national rebirth – Group

    A human rights advocacy group, Centre for Social Justice, Equity and Transparency (CESJET) has said the show of emotion and barrage of tributes that greeted the death of Lt. Col Abu-Ali and six others is a testament that Nigerians recognize Boko Haram and its sponsors as a common enemy.

    Addressing a press conference in Abuja, Executive Director of CESJET, Joyce Adamu said such tributes and high accolades are the best tonic that every nation needs to give to her heroes.

    She however, cautioned those she described as mischief makers who are trying to cash in on the death of the soldiers to create disunity among Nigeria.

    She said, “We are beginning to see that there are people manifesting their loss of humanity and see nothing wrong in attempting to cash in on these tragedies by making insinuations that have no place among right thinking people.

    “Most of this depravity is manifested in claims that the Army suffered casualty in the Boko Haram attacks because present conditions are worse than what obtained under former President Goodluck Jonathan. One would have expected that the Army and the Ministry of Defence would be allowed to properly investigate what went wrong to account for such casualty instead of jumping to conclusion.

    “We observed that these claims are being attributed to people who are not bold enough to reveal their identities and their so called interviews are mostly reported by cloned sites that attempt to pass off as objective, hardworking and credible news organisations. To say the least, this is the height of irresponsibility.

    She said the deaths of gallants soldiers who laid down their own lives to keep the rest of us safe should not be reduced into parodies and the subject of falsehood.

    According to her, those desperate to undermine President Buhari, and the COAS, Lt Gen Tukur Buratai should at least allow the graves of these great ones lie undisturbed by this sacrilegious act of desecrating the memory of the departed.

    She said, “in the wake of these national losses and those before them we should rather as a people be asking for who are the people that are helping Boko Haram terrorists to regroup, re-arm and launch attacks on the scales on which they have done between late September and now.

    “We should be demanding for the exposure of those that feeds the cells of the terror group with information on troops movement and deployment to the extent that they know when to attack.

    “Patriotic citizens that are genuinely interested in the wellbeing and future of the country would be giving encouragement to our troops not to lose courage but to be buoyed by the fallen soldiers in defending their fatherland.”

    Adamu called on soldiers to reinvigorate their fighting spirit and to continue to see their undertaking as service to God, nation and humanity.