Category: Online Special

  • Ebola: Expert tasks Nigerians on hygiene

    Ebola: Expert tasks Nigerians on hygiene

    Dr Chinwe Abama, the General Manager, Medical Department, Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), has advised Nigerians to embrace hygiene in order to avoid the Ebola virus.

    Abama told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday in Lagos that the recent apprehension generated over the assumed resurgence of Ebola in Cross River State had given cause to the public to be at alert

    “Sanitary hygiene, we need hand washing, very critical, your sanitation very critical.

    “Make sure that you eat the right things, wash your vegetables, wash your food and cook the food properly, your meat especially.

    “And if you have any kind of infections like that, be it fever or some kind of headache, you go and report to the doctor.

    “You don’t go back home and start using agbo (herbs) or self medicating; you must go to the hospital and be treated.

    “The bush animals are reservoirs of this infection of Ebola virus.

    “It is important, however, if people have to eat bush meat, they must wash and cook it properly; roast properly.

    “Not the one that you cut and see blood, no, but the one that is roasted and cooked very well before it is eaten.’’

     

  • What you should know about 2015 MBGN winner

    What you should know about 2015 MBGN winner

    The former Miss Anambra, Unoaku Anyadike was crowned on Saturday, 24th October, 2015 as the current Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria (MBGN).

    There are, however, few more things you would like to know about her.

    • She was born on September 16, 1994.
    • She is a model.
    • She has a Yoruba middle-name “Temitope”.
    • She is from a mixed ethnical background; her father is Igbo and mother is Yoruba.
    • Her family lives in Osun state.
    • She has four siblings. She is the last out of five girls.
    • Her favourite meal is Amala and Ewedu with goat meat.
    • Her man crush is Jussie Smollete
    • Her role models are Sir Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Millen Magnese.
    • Her parents are educationists in Osun state.
    • Her father is a Professor of Literature-In-English, at OAU, Ile-Ife, Osun state.
    • Her mother is a proprietor of a Nursery and Primary school in Ile-Ife, Osun state.
    • Best Music is Hip hop and RnB.
    • She is currently a final year Psychology student of University of Ibadan.
    • She is 5 feet 11 inches tall.

     

  • What people say about new Ooni of Ife

    What people say about new Ooni of Ife


  • The public lies of Daniel, Ogundokun, others – Soyinka

    The public lies of Daniel, Ogundokun, others – Soyinka

    Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, has accused former Ogun State Governor, Gbenga Daniel and a publisher; Chief Abiola Ogundokun, of being “public liars.”
    The allegations are contained in pages 81 and 82 of his latest book, InterInventions, which was formally presented to the public at the weekend in Abeokuta, the Ogun state capital, by Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo state.
    He revealed that Daniel lied to him about his relationship with the publisher of the Conscience Magazine, Chief Abiola Ogundokun.
    He stated further that the ex – governor also lied about his(Daniel) own side of the account of the alleged threat by him( Daniel) to dethrone the Alake of Egbaland, Oba Adedotun Gbadebo, over perceived offensive comments by the monarch.
    On Ogundokun whom he described as “two – legged parasite” and an alleged “fugitive from the United States,” Soyinka claimed the publisher dedicated the maiden edition of his magazine, Conscience International, to the subject ” WS” in bids to disseminate desperate lie.
    Recalling one of his encounters with Daniel, Soyinka stated: “Like calls to like. Gbenga Daniel’s reputation as a public liar was affirmed to me in his own testimony right in my sitting room in Abeokuta. He had called – with his press crew, ambulance, security detail, party chairman and entire cabinet in tow – to explain his side of a conflict that brought Abeokuta close to conflagration as he lashed out against the Egba King, the Alake, and threatened to dethrone him.
    “This governor lied, and lied, and lied! He lied over what the Alake had said – Daniel was not to know that I had obtained a full transcript of the ‘offensive’ statement attributed to the Alake monarch, so it was a great fun to watch him lie his head off.
    “Even when he picked up his mobile phone to ask some disembodied voice for the corroboration of some irrelevant performance statistics, he still lied over the answer he transmitted back to me.
    “I asked this governor why on earth he kept company with a verminous character like (Abiola) Ogundokun – and he lied that Ogundokun was no where close to his environment.
    “Ogundokun had offered his services, he conceded, but he had sent him off to his colleague in Oyo state, who then sent him back saying that he could find no use for him. After which, Daniel stated, he lost complete track of him! Or was it the other way round?
    “No matter, he assured me that Ogundokun had not served him in any capacity, invoking mortal and immortal witnesses. Gbenga Daniel lied again. (Again, the reader is invited to read the Ogundokun pages in the narrative by the insider, Wale Adedayo).
    “Daniel’s recent invocation of my son who was made Commissioner of Health under the administration of his successor is of course typical of the despicable antics of practised blackmailers.
    “The children of critics are not supposed to have careers of their own, on their own merit, but such must be attributed to quid pro quo returns for the political stances of their parents.
    “That another child, a daughter, worked for the undisputed champion of this lying contest right through his ignoble tenure, is of course totally irrelevant. Such cheap, unoriginal diversionary tactics!
    “The real issue – abuse of power amounting to treasonable conduct, with the complicity of presidential might, remains unanswered. The criminal courts however must be answered, and there we shall leave Gbenga Daniel to attend to his charges of corruption.
    “Why did Gbenga Daniel lie over Ogundokun? One answer could be – Guilt, over the ‘Special Duties’ to which Chief Ogundokun was assigned? A need to disown a potential embarrassment in the best tradition of ‘ Use and Dump’?”
    “…It is a notorious fact that Daniel deployed Ogundokun on several errands, many of which will not bear scrutiny. Ogundokun has always made himself available for hire to the most noxious of Nigerian rulers, both at the central and state levels, most notably the infamous rogue and murderer – General Sani Abacha.
    ” Sponsored by that regime specically to vilify and discredit the opposition, Ogundokun launched his glossy journal Conscience International, avidly promoted by his Minister of Foreign Affairs, Thomas Ikimi, its maiden edition dedicated mostly to the subject of WS.
    “This was openly displayed for sale in magazine booths in London, during the struggle. Ogundokun continued his career of smut disseminator even after the death of that monster – indeed defiantly intensified his activities all through the hearing of the Truth and Reconciliation Panel which sat in Abuja, chaired by Justice Oputa.
    “Sued to court for defamation, Ogundokun’s lawyers deployed all technical delays to avoid judgement day, even profiting from election tribunals that saw the transfer of judges to hearings in other states.
    “Ogundokun’s libel case is still listed, to commence de novo – even as this is being written. Perhaps it will finally re – commence after my funeral.”
    Other top Nigerians also mentioned in Soyinka’s InterInventions which is also sub – titled, ‘A Personal Odyssey in The Republic of Liars,’ include, former President Olusegun Obasanjo, former Military Head of States, General Yakubu Gowon, one author; Chinweizu, former Foreign Affairs Minister during General Sani Abacha’s regime and Chief Thomas Ikimi

  • Ministerial Appointees: What Nigerians expect

    Ministerial Appointees: What Nigerians expect

    ACLN wishes to join other Nigerians to congratulate our President, Mr. Muhammadu Buhari and his Deputy, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on taking the next step towards advancing the cause of the nation by appointing men and women who would help the administration to get Nigeria where it needs to be – a nation to be reckoned with in the committee of Nations.

    How would this herculean task be achieved; given the fact that in the past administrations, some of our ministers literally sold Nigerian to the highest bidder.

    The tabloid both national and international is replete with ways these public officers diverted huge amounts of the nation’s wealth into their private accounts, lived larger than life, and was comforted by the fact that the powers that be, of which they were a part, would never audit them.

    Our nation was on a precipice waiting to be plundered into utter oblivion were it not for the divine hand that ushered in a new administration whom Nigerians believe will live to its words of fighting corruption, securing the nation and making Nigeria a better place for all irrespective of their background.

    Under the former administration, our nation was moving in a direction where “stealing” was said to not be “corruption iall spheres of public life.  It was not about the people, nor about the nation, it was about self, and how much can be acquired to oppress everyone around.  The impunity knew no bounds.

    To this end, we would like to list a few expectations from poling a cross-section of Nigerians across the globe.  The people would like to see:

     
    1. A declaration of your assets in line with examples from the President and Vice President.
     
    2. Transparency in all dealings; Nigerian ministers must lead with credibility and accountability.
     
    3. As a minister of the federal republic of Nigeria, your portfolios would require that you spend a greater deal of your time in Nigeria, understanding your portfolio, studying the country and judiciously implementing federal character to the extent that no group or state would be left behind.
     
    4. As a minister you must be accountable to the people being served.  
     
    5. That you uphold and honor Nigeria within and without as your actions positive or negative would directly impact the worlds perception of Nigeria.
     
    6. That you buy into rebuilding our tarnished image by your actions. Fighting corruption should be the effort of all including the ministers.
     
    7. That you will find ways to make Nigeria a better place for all and not just the fortunate few.

    ACLN Global Secretariat,

    New Jersey, USA.

  • REVEALED: An account of Enugu notorious baby factory

    REVEALED: An account of Enugu notorious baby factory

    Eze, as we’ll call him, is an agent involved in Nigeria’s notorious baby trafficking ring. In a local restaurant in Nigeria’s southeastern city of Enugu, where dozens of people gather every evening to eat the city’s popular goat-meat pepper soup, and where all kinds of gossip can be heard, I overheard him talking to a middle-aged woman about the possibility of getting her a newborn child of any sex she requires.

    I walked up to him after the woman had left, and sought to find out if he truly sells babies.

    “Do you want a baby fresh from the womb?” he asked me.

    He thought I wanted to buy a baby, but in fact I was on a fact-finding mission.

    Eze claimed to be able to get me babies in less than 24 hours. He said that a baby, due to be born in a couple of days, was meant to go to a couple in Sweden but could be mine if I paid the cash in full immediately.

    “We’ll get another baby for this couple. They won’t even notice we’ve given them something else,” he said.

    I then told Eze I wanted to be taken to the factory, to be sure if the business was genuine before saying anything.

    “It wouldn’t work that way,” he said to me. “For security reasons, the women are kept in a hidden place. We don’t want any encounter with the police.”

    When I insisted I needed to see the babies before believing him, Eze said he could only take me to the woman who runs the factory, but with a condition that I paid him 10,000 naira (about $50).

    I was eager to find out how this trade was carried out, so I paid the money, and off we went—driving for about 20 minutes in a cab through slum neighborhoods late at night.

    Eze may be the agent for the business, but he isn’t very familiar with the area where his employer lives. On the two occasions he’s been there, it was under the cover of darkness, he said. He told me his boss deliberately took him to her home at night so he would not recognize the location of the place. That suggests some of the secrecy that shrouds this business.

    On the last part of the trip we were guided by a young boy who knew the woman we were looking for. He soon pointed at a gate, saying, simply, “It’s here”.

    We met Eze’s “Madam,” a middle-aged woman who introduces herself as “Madam Sarah” and asks us to follow her to the sitting room. She bid us have a seat and then turned to me. “Welcome, my son,” she said.

    “I have about six girls in my custody, and they are all heavily pregnant and expecting soon,” she said. “They are not here. I keep them in a secret location.”

    As we were talking, a young man walked in and whispered to her. After he had left, Madam Sarah turned to me and said: “That man is the biological father to many of the children we sell,” apparently to convince me that the babies she sells are not stolen.

    “His job is to get the girls pregnant, and he knows how to get the job done,” she said with a big smile.

    She went on to tell me that she charges 400,000 naira ($2,000) for a girl and 500,000 naira ($2,500) for a boy.

    She talked about the cost of caring for the mothers, justifying the price of the babies. “It’s expensive catering for these girls,” she said. “I give them food and shelter and pay the guys who sleep with them, but I let them go after they have given birth”.

    She claims she can arrange court orders and is able to get children of all ages, genders and complexions, and at any time. The police, she said, are not a problem for her.

    “What sex do you want?” she asked me. “A boy or a girl?”

    “He just came to find out if what I told him about this business was true,” Eze told her. She then turned to me and said: “Now you know it’s real. Come back when you’re ready.”

    I stood up and left, winding my way back to the waiting taxi, having glimpsed up close how the child trade mafia operates in Africa’s most populous country.

    Every year, the Nigerian security operatives discover several new baby factories. Young girls are held captive to give birth to babies who are then sold illegally either to adoptive parents, into slavery, or, it is said, for traditional rituals.

    There are rumors and fears that newborns are being sold to witch doctors for rituals in a country where there is a widespread belief in traditional communities that a powder made of infants brings luck. But, such sensational claims notwithstanding, the vast majority of buyers almost certainly are married couples struggling to conceive.

    A huge amount of the trade is carried out locally in Nigeria, but authorities suspect that babies also have been sold to people from Europe and the United States, and despite the controversy surrounding adoptions in Nigeria, many foreigners continue to seek infants here.

    There are several reasons given for the high patronage of baby factories.

    Security agencies say most places where the illegal baby trade occurs masquerade as non-governmental organizations or charitable homes for marginalized women. Operators of these places present themselves as humanitarians who take care of the pregnant teenagers in need.

    Human trafficking, including selling children, is prohibited under Nigerian law, but almost 10 years ago a UNESCO report on human trafficking in Nigeria identified the business as the country’s third-most common crime behind financial fraud and drug trafficking, and the situation certainly has not improved. At least 10 children are reportedly sold every day across the country.

    The scourge has intensified in the southeast, which is populated mainly by the Igbo ethnic group. Security officials have several ongoing undercover operations targeting suspected baby trafficking rings in Enugu State, underscoring the severity of the problem in this region.

    One measure taken by the government to check the proliferation of baby factories in the state has been to set up a committee on child adoption, and its research has suggested that the incidence of child trafficking and illegal adoptions has been on the rise because some security agencies and unscrupulous state officials aided the baby-sellers.

    “They are now being sold like commodities and, as a responsible government, we cannot allow this to continue to exist in Enugu State,” Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, governor of Enugu, said while inaugurating the committee last month.

    “While we acknowledge the right and the necessity for the childless or benevolent couples to adopt motherless children and orphans,” the governor declared, “we believe that there is need for strict compliance with due process and the provisions of relevant laws to guarantee the security and well being of the affected children.”

    Eze and Madam Sarah, of course, have other ideas.

    By Philip Obaji Jr.

    Founder of 1 GAME, an advocacy and campaigning organization that fights for the right to education for disadvantaged children in Nigeria, especially in northeastern Nigeria, where Boko Haram forbids western education.

  • How Nigerians reacted to Amaechi’s corruptions claims

    How Nigerians reacted to Amaechi’s corruptions claims

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  • Stakeholders in retail food business lament challenges

    Stakeholders in retail food business lament challenges

    Stakeholders in the retail food business on Wednesday met in Lagos to identify the challenges currently being faced by supermarkets and other operators in the country.

    They met at a one-day conference on “Nigeria’s Retail Food Development” organised by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).

    Speaking at the forum, a representative of Chellarams Plc, Mr Ashwin Balani,said that his organisation was currently facing the challenge of expired products from supermarkets and other retailers.

    “One of my organisation’s challenges today is the return of expired products by supermarket operators after they must have expired on their shelves.

    “There is also the problem of inefficient supply chain management. Supermarkets do not place orders for retail food products on time,’’ he said.

    The Human Resources Manager of Justrite Ltd, Mr Kadiri Agbola, also said that there was the problem of lack of product awareness among some supermarket operators.

    Agbola also identified “product consistency by suppliers” as another major challenge facing the business.

    Mrs Chukwuma Ogonna of Grand Square SMK and Stores, Abuja, however said that some Nigerians were always coming for expired products in her supermarket because of their cheapness.

    Mrs Margaret Eshiette, Head of Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON), Food and Codex Department identified lack of awareness on the Mandatory Conformity Assessment Programme (MONCAP) as another challenge.

    According to her, supermarkets are not expected to receive products that do not carry the MANCAP logo.

    USDA’s Regional Agriculture Counsellor, Mr Kurt Seifarth, said the conference was organised to sensitise participants on the need to create and sustain superior performance in Nigeria’s retail food businesses.

    Seifarth said that his government was prepared to support Nigeria’s priorities in the development of her agricultural products.

     

  • ‘Investing in adolescent girls is beneficial to all’

    ‘Investing in adolescent girls is beneficial to all’

    Activities commemorating this year’s International Day of the Girl Child ended Tuesday with the investiture of the wife of the President, Mrs. Aisha Buhari as the Grand Patron, High Level Women Advocates for Girls Education in Nigeria.

    This was during an advocacy visit of fifty adolescent girls to her.

    Mrs. Buhari at the interactive session with the girls promised to advocate publicly for legislation against child marriage and encouraged parents to keep their daughters in school for at least 12 years. “No single girl will be left behind in my movement to get every girl into school,” she promised.

    With the theme; “The Power of the Adolescent Girl: Vision for 2030”, UNICEF and other partners including the Federal Ministry of Education focused their activities on the transforming power of education to empower adolescent girls to overcome all challenges that affect their lives and inhibit their prospects of advancement.

    The 2013 National Demographic Health Survey indicate that there are about 20 million adolescent girls in Nigeria and there is very low education rates among them especially those in the lowest wealth quintiles in the society.

    In Nigeria 60 percent of the 10.5million children out of school are girls.

    Data indicate that among other factors one reason for low enrolment and retention of girls in schools especially in the north is the lack of female teachers in the rural areas.

    In response to this, UNICEF with funding from the United Kingdom Department for International Development (DFID) and counterpart funding from five participating States started the Girls’ Education Project.

    The Girls’ Education Project Phase 3 (GEP3) aims to achieve one million enrolment of girls into school by the end of the year 2020.

    The project is currently running in five Northern States of Nigeria: Bauchi, Katsina, Niger, Sokoto and Zamfara.

    Since implementation commenced in 2012, the project has contributed to the enrolment of additional 360,000 girls in primary schools in the five states.

    “Adolescent girls should be empowered through deliberate policies to transform their lives and those around them. Young girls who are educated are better placed to improve their own and their children’s health and chances of survival, and boost their work prospects,” said Jean Gough UNICEF Representative in Nigeria.

    Investing in high quality girls’ education, prepare girls for life, jobs, and leadership.

    It directly translates into the girls being powerful and positive change agents of development.