Category: Online Special

  • Mixed reactions trail ministerial list

    Mixed reactions trail ministerial list

  • UK court seizes Diezani’s £27,000

    UK court seizes Diezani’s £27,000


    The Westminster Magistrates Court in United Kingdom (UK) has seized £27,000 (N815,400) from former Minister for Petroleum under the Goodluck Jonathan's administration, Diezani Alison-Madueke. The court on Monday seized the money in the case versus Alison-Madueke and the cash is detained until April 5 2016. In addition, an application for detention of the cash seized under the Section 295 of the Proceeds of Crime Act was made versus Madueke. However, this does not mean that she has been charged with anything, except that the cash seized until later date.  

     

  • Nigeria @55 : Heroes to remember

    Nigeria @55 : Heroes to remember

    By Femi Akinpelu Joseph

    Today, October 1 , 2015, Nigeria celebrates the 55th anniversary of her independence as a sovereign nation.
    There are some notable personalities that are worth remembering and celebrating as their efforts during the pre-colonial era greatly contributed to the freedom attained by the nation.
    Worthy of mentioning also, are other national heroes whose efforts have helped to sustain and advance the gains of independence.
    On the list of those Nigeria’s heroes and heroines are the following individuals.

    Herbert Macaulay
    Herbert Macaulay on June 24, 1923, founded the Nigeria National Democratic Party (NNDP), the first Nigerian political party. The NNDP won all the seats in the elections of 1923, 1928 and 1933.In the 1930s, Macaulay took part in organizing Nigerian nationalist militant attacks on the British colonial government in Nigeria.
    Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe
    Chief Benjamin Nnamdi Azikiwe, usually referred to as Zik, was one of the leading figures of modern Nigerian nationalism. He was head of state of Nigeria from 1963 to 1966. He served as the second and last Governor-General from 1960 to 1963 and the first President of Nigeria from 1963 to 1966, holding the presidency throughout the Nigerian First Republic
    After a successful journalism career, Azikiwe entered into politics. In 1944, Macaulay and NYM leader Azikiwe agreed to form the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC). A part of Cameroon was incorporated into the British colony of Nigeria. Azikiwe increasingly became the dominant Nigerian nationalist leader, he supported Pan-Africanism and a pan-Nigerian based nationalist movement.
    Chief Obafemi Awolowo
    Chief Obafemi Jeremiah Oyeniyi Awolowo, GCFR (who lived between 6 March 1909 and 9th of May 1987), was a nationalist and statesman who played a key role in Nigeria’s independence movement, the First and Second Republics and the Civil War. He is most notable as the outstanding first premier of the Western Region but was also a successful federal commissioner for finance and Vice President of the Federal Executive Council in the Civil War and was thrice a major contender for his country’s highest office.
    A native of Ikenne in Ogun State, he started his career, like some of his well-known contemporaries, as a nationalist in the Nigerian Youth Movement, where he rose to become Western Provincial Secretary. Awolowo was responsible for much of the progressive social legislation that has made Nigeria a modern nation.

    Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa
    Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa was born late in 1912 in Bauchi. He was the son of a Bageri Muslim district head in the Bauchi divisional district of Lere.
    He was a vocal advocate of the rights of northern Nigeria, and together with Alhaji Ahmadu Bello, who held the hereditary title of Sardauna of Sokoto; he founded the Northern People’s Congress (NPC).
    Balewa entered the government in 1952 as Minister of Works, and later served as Minister of Transport. In 1957, he was appointed Chief Minister, forming a coalition government between the NPC and the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC), led by Nnamdi Azikiwe. He retained the post as Prime Minister when Nigeria gained independence in 1960, and was reelected in 1964.
    However, as Prime Minister of Nigeria, he played important roles in the continent’s formative indigenous rule. He was one of the leaders in the formation of the Organization of African Unity and creating a cooperative relationship with French speaking African countries

    Sir Ahmadu Bello
    Sir Ahmadu Bello KBE (June 12, 1910 – January 15, 1966) was one of the foremost early Nigerian politicians, and was the first premier of the Northern Nigeria region from 1954-1966. He was the Sardauna of Sokoto and one of the prominent leaders in Northern Nigeria alongside Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, both of whom were prominent in negotiations about the region’s place in an independent Nigeria.
    As leader of the Northern People’s Congress, he dominated Nigerian politics throughout the early Nigerian Federation and the First Nigerian Republic.
    In forming the 1960 independence federal government of the Nigeria, Bello as president of the NPC, chose to remain Premier of Northern Nigeria and devolved the position of Prime Minister of the Federation to the deputy president of the NPC Abubakar Tafawa Balewa.

    Chief Anthony Enahoro
    Chief Anthony Enahoro, born 22nd July, 1923 was one of Nigeria’s foremost anti-colonial and pro-democracy activists. He became the editor of Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe’s newspaper, The Southern Nigerian Defender, Ibadan in 1944 at the age of 21, thus becoming Nigeria’s youngest editor ever. He later became the editor of Zik’s Comet, Kano from 1945 to 1949; associate editor of West African Pilot, Lagos and editor-in-chief of Morning Star from 1950 to 1953.

    Professor Wole Soyinka
    Akinwande Oluwole Soyinka, born 13th July, 1934, is a Nigerian playwright and poet. His work, “A Dance of The Forest” (1960), a biting criticism of Nigeria’s political elites, won a contest that year as the official play for Nigerian Independence Day on 1st October, 1960. In 1986, Soyinka was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, becoming the first African to be honoured. His Nobel Prize acceptance speech, “This Past Must Address Its Present”, was devoted to South African freedom-fighter, Nelson Mandela.

    Mrs. Fumilayo Ransome-Kuti
    Mrs. Fumilayo Ransome-Kuti, born 25th October, 1900 in Abeokuta, Nigeria, is the mother of the legendary Fela Anikulapo Kuti. She was a very powerful force advocating for the Nigerian woman’s right to vote and has been described as the doyen of female rights in Nigeria. In 1947, she was described by the West African Pilot Newspaper as the ‘Lioness of Lisabi’ for her leadership of the women of the Egba clan in a campaign against arbitrary taxation. That struggle led to the abdication of the Egba high king, Oba Ademola II in 1949.

    Aminu Kano
    Aminu Kano was born to the family of an Islamic scholar, Mallam Yusuf of the scholarly Gyanawa fulani clan, who was a mufti at the Alkali court in Kano. He attended Katsina College and later went to the University of London’s, Institute of Education, alongside Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa. While in Bauchi, he spoke freely on political issues and extended his educational horizon by engaging in some various political and educational activities beyond his formal teaching duties.
    He was also a secretary of the Bauchi Discussion Circle, a group whose activities were later constricted as a result of an attack on indirect rule by Aminu Kano.
    During the pre-independence era, a new progressive union led by Aminu Kano and composed of progressive leaning teachers and some radical [intellectuals] such as Magaji Dambatta, Abba Maikwaru and Bello Ijumu emerged to fill any vacuum in political radicalism in the region.
    He was Kano State governor in the second republic under the Peoples Redemption Party (PRP).

    Taiwo Akinkunmi
    Akinkunmi was born Michael Taiwo Akinkunmi in Ibadan, of Yoruba origin. He was the designer of the Nigerian (Green White Green) flag. He had worked some years before gaining admission to the Norwood Technical College in London where he studied electrical engineering. While studying there, he designed the Nigerian Flag. He entered the competition which he came across in a library.
    He always wears the colours of the flag he designed as part of his attire, usually wearing a green Yoruba cap, and painted his house with a green-white-green pattern.

    M.K.O Abiola
    Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola, CFR (24 August 1937 – 7 July 1998), often referred to as M. K. O. Abiola, was a popular Nigerian Yoruba businessman, publisher, politician and aristocrat of the Yoruba Egba clan.
    He ran for the Presidency in 1993, and is widely regarded as the presumed winner of the inconclusive election since no official final results were announced. He died in 1998, after being denied victory when the entire election results were dubiously annulled by the preceding military president Ibrahim Babangida because of alleged evidence that they were corrupt and unfair.
    He overwhelmingly defeated his rival, Bashir Tofa of the National Republican Convention. The election was declared Nigeria’s freest and fairest presidential election by national and international observers, with Abiola even winning in his Northern opponent’s home state.
    The fact that Moshood Abiola (a Southern Muslim) was able to secure a national mandate freely and fairly remains unprecedented in Nigeria’s history. Moshood Abiola sprang to national and international prominence as a result of his philanthropic activities. Chief MKO Abiola’s memory is celebrated in Nigeria and internationally, on 12 June.
    MKO Abiola has been referred to as Nigeria’s greatest statesman.

    Fela Anikulapo-Kuti
    Fela Kuti (born Olufela Olusegun Oludotun Ransome-Kuti, lived between 15th October 1938 – 2nd August 1997. Also known as Fela Anikulapo Kuti or simply Fela, he was a Nigerian multi-instrumentalist, musician, composer, pioneer of the Afrobeat music genre, human rights activist, and political maverick. He was famed for being the pioneer of Afrobeats music as well as a controversial figure, due to his unusual music style and personal lifestyle. Kuti thought the most important way for Africans to fight European cultural imperialism was to support traditional African religions and lifestyles.
    He was a candid supporter of human rights, and many of his songs are direct attacks against dictatorships, specifically the militaristic governments of Nigeria in the 1970s and 1980s. He was also a social commentator, and he criticized his fellow Africans (especially the upper class) for betraying traditional African culture.

    Chinua Achebe
    Chinua Achebe, born Albert Chinualumogu Achebe; 16 November 1930 – 21 March 2013) was a Nigerian novelist, poet, professor and critic. His first novel Things Fall Apart (1958) was considered his magnum opus, and is the most widely read book in modern African literature.
    Achebe has been called “the father of modern African writing”, and many books and essays have been written about his work over the past fifty years. Achebe was promoted at the NBS to the position of Director of External Broadcasting. One of his first duties was to help create the Voice of Nigeria network.
    The station broadcast its first transmission on New Year’s Day 1962, and worked to maintain an objective perspective during the turbulent era immediately following independence.

    Gani Fawehinmi
    Chief Abdul-Ganiyu “Gani” Oyesola Fawehinmi, (22 April 1938 – 5 September 2009) was a Nigerian author, publisher, philanthropist, social critic, human and civil rights lawyer, politician and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria.
    With his boundless energy he tenaciously and uncompromisingly pursued and crusaded his beliefs, principles and ideals for the rule of law, undiluted democracy, and all embracing and expansive social justice, protection of fundamental human rights and respect for the hopes and aspirations of the masses who are victims of misgovernment of the affairs of the nation.
    He was beaten up time after time and was deported from one part of the country to another to prevent him from being able to effectively reach out to the masses among whom he was popular.
    In 2008 Mr. Gani Fawehinmi rejected one of the highest national honours that can be bestowed on a citizen by the Nigerian Government – Order of the Federal Republic (OFR) – in protest of the many years of misrule since Nigeria’s independence.

    Alhaji Abdulsalami Abubakar
    Alhaji Abdulsalami Abubakar is a retired Nigerian Army General who was military President of Nigeria from 9 June 1998 until 29 May 1999. He succeeded Sanni Abacha upon Abacha’s death. It was during Abubakar’s leadership that Nigeria adopted its new constitution on 5 May 1999, which provided for multiparty elections. Abubakar transferred power to president-elect Olusegun Obasanjo on 29 May 1999.
    A few days after assuming office, Abubakar promised to hold elections within a year and transfer power to an elected president. He established the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), appointing former Supreme Court Justice Ephraim Akpata as chairman
    Surprising some critics of the country’s military, Abubakar kept his word and transferred power to elected president Obasanjo on 29 May 1999.

    Ameyo Adadevoh
    Ameyo Adadevoh was born Ameyo Stella Shade Adadevoh, born 27th of October 1956, was a Nigerian physician. Her great-grandfather, Herbert Macaulay, is one of the most celebrated founders of modern Nigeria.
    She is credited with having curbed a wider spread of the Ebola Virus in Nigeria by placing the patient zero, Patrick Sawyer, in quarantine despite pressures from the Liberian Government. On 4 August 2014, it was confirmed that she tested positive for Ebola virus disease and was being treated.

    Attahiru Jega
    Professor Attahiru Muhammadu Jega is a Nigerian academic and former Vice-Chancellor of Bayero University, Kano. He was appointed as the chairman of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in 2010.
    Jega is a former President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), and was an opponent of the Babangida military government in the early 1990s. He is widely seen as an astute intellectual with a strong sense of ethics and morality.
    In spite of the fierce criticism he faced during the campaigning for the 2015 general elections from both the opposition and the ruling party, he went on to deliver a historic and successful elections.
    On the 28 of March 2015, under his leadership, elections were conducted in what Nigerians and the World see as free, fair and credible which declared the APC Presidential candidate General Muhammadu Buhari as winner defeating the Incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan.

  • Buhari’s 55th Independence Day speech

    Buhari’s 55th Independence Day speech

    55th Independence Day Speech by President Muhammadu Buhari

    October 1st is a day for joy and celebrations for us Nigerians whatever the circumstances we find ourselves in because it is the day, 55 years ago; we liberated ourselves from the shackles of colonialism and began our long march to nationhood and to greatness.

    No temporary problems or passing challenges should stop us from honoring this day. Let us remind ourselves of the gifts God has given us. Our Creator has bequeathed to us Numbers – Nigeria is the ninth most populated country on the planet. We have in addition:

    • Arable land
    • Water
    • Forests
    • Oil and gas
    • Coastline
    • Solid minerals

    We have all the attributes of a great nation. We are not there yet because the one commodity we have been unable to exploit to the fullest is unity of purpose. This would have enabled us to achieve not only more orderly political evolution and integration but also continuity and economic progress.

    Countries far less endowed have made greater economic progress by greater coherence and unity of purpose.

    Nonetheless, that we have remained together is an achievement we should all appreciate and try to consolidate. We have witnessed this year a sea change in our democratic development. The fact that an opposition party replaced an entrenched government in a free and fair election is indicative of the deeper roots of our democratic system. Whatever one’s views are, Nigerians must thank former President Jonathan for not digging-in in the face of defeat and thereby saving the country untold consequences.

    As I said in my inaugural speech, I bear no ill will against anyone on past events. Nobody should fear anything from me. We are not after anyone. People should only fear the consequences of their actions. I hereby invite everyone, whatever his or her political view to join me in working for the nation.

    My countrymen and women, every new government inherits problems. Ours was no different. But what Nigerians want are solutions, quick solutions not a recitation of problems inherited. Accordingly, after consultations with the Vice President, senior party leaders and other senior stakeholders, I quickly got down to work on the immediate, medium-term and long-term problems which we must solve if we are to maintain the confidence which Nigerians so generously bestowed on us in the March elections and since then.

    As you know, I toured the neighboring countries, marshal a coalition of armed forces of the five nations to confront and defeat Boko Haram. I met also the G7 leaders and other friendly presidents in an effort to build an international coalition against Boko Haram. Our gallant armed forces under new leadership have taken the battle to the insurgents, and severely weakened their logistical and infrastructural capabilities. Boko Haram are being scattered and are on the run. That they are resorting to shameless attacks on soft targets such as I.D.P. camps is indicative of their cowardice and desperation. I have instructed security and local authorities to tighten vigilance in vulnerable places.

    On power, government officials have held a series of long sessions over several weeks about the best way to improve the nation’s power supply in the safest and most cost effective way. In the meantime, improvement in the power supply is moderately encouraging. By the same token, supply of petrol and kerosene to the public has improved throughout the country. All the early signs are that within months the whole country would begin to feel a change for the better.

    Preliminary steps have been taken to sanitize NNPC and improve its operations so that the inefficiency and corruption could be reduced to a minimum. Those of our refineries which can be serviced and brought back into partial production would be enabled to resume operations so that the whole sordid business of exporting crude and importing finished products in dubious transactions could be stopped.

    In addition to NNPC, I have ordered for a complete audit of our other revenue generating agencies mainly CBN, FIRS, Customs, NCC, for better service delivery to the nation. Prudent housekeeping is needed now more than ever in view of the sharp decline in world market oil prices. It is a challenge we have to face squarely. But what counts is not so much what accrues but how we manage our resources that is important.

    We have seen in the last few years how huge resources were mismanaged, squandered and wasted. The new APC government is embarking on a clean up, introducing prudence and probity in public financing.

    At an early stage, the federal government addressed the issue of salary arrears in many states, a situation capable of degenerating into social unrest. The APC government stepped in to provide short-term support to the owing states and enabled them to pay off the backlog and restore the livelihood of millions of Nigerians.

    Fellow Nigerians, there have been a lot of anxiety and impatience over the apparent delay in announcement of ministers. There is no cause to be anxious. Our government set out to do things methodically and properly. We received the handing over notes from the outgoing government only four days before taking over. Consequently, the Joda Transition Committee submitted its Report on the reorganization of Federal Government structure after studying the hand over notes. It would have been haphazard to announce ministers when the government had not finalized the number of ministries to optimally carry the burden of governance.

    Anyway, the wait is over. The first set of names for ministerial nominees for confirmation has been sent to the senate. Subsequent lists will be forwarded in due course. Impatience is not a virtue. Order is more vital than speed. Careful and deliberate decisions after consultations get far better results. And better results for our country is what the APC government for CHANGE is all about.

    I would like to end my address this morning on our agenda for CHANGE. Change does not just happen. You and I and all of us must appreciate that we all have our part to play if we want to bring CHANGE about. We must change our lawless habits, our attitude to public office and public trust. We must change our unruly behavior in schools, hospitals, market places, motor parks, on the roads, in homes and offices. To bring about change, we must change ourselves by being law-abiding citizens.

    HappyIndependence Celebrations. Long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

  • Lee calls for implementation of cessation of war convention

    Lee calls for implementation of cessation of war convention

    The Chairman of Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL) Man Hee Lee has appealed for the implementation of an International Convention on the Cessation of War and Achievement of World Peace.
    He made the call at the 1st Annual Commemoration of September 18th World Alliance of Religions’ Peace Summit (WARP) held in Seoul, Republic of Korea on 17-19 of September.
    Chairman Lee emphasized that “our future generations can inherit peace only if the international law experts do their part,” and urged them to “make good laws to make the world a better place.”
    The Summit was attended by about 300 people including not only those in the various fields that had participated in the summit of the previous year but also international law experts.
    In order to create an institutional framework for the realization of peace, a draft convention on the cessation of war was presented. This presentation was witnessed by the youth, women, and journalists, as each group holds an important role in achieving peace.
    The Summit 2014 was attended by about 2,000 guests including former and current heads of state, religious leaders, youth, women, and journalists from around the world and its outdoor events (World Peace Walk and Pre-event) by about 30,000 people.
    It was a summit of an unprecedented scale, where all participants came together and made promises that laid the foundation for world peace. Notably, former and current heads of state and religious leaders showed their determination to realize world peace by signing the Agreement to Propose the Enactment of International Law for the Cessation of Wars and World Peace and the Unity of Religions Agreement respectively.
    Below are the four highlights of the summit :
    1. Moving forward – International law experts modify the draft convention on the cessation of war
    To fundamentally resolve international armed conflicts, HWPL invited international law experts, as suggested by Chairman Man Hee Lee, and presented the Convention on the Renunciation and Cessation of War and International Armed Conflicts, which was drafted by members of the HWPL Peace Advisory Council. Through discussion and modification by the HWPL International Law Peace Committee, the draft convention will be improved into a complete and applicable international convention. Furthermore, HWPL aims to send the final convention to heads of state around the world and have it ratified, and to go through the deliberative process of the UN so that the convention will be fully adopted and implemented. Also, it was proposed that UN agencies should monitor and oversee the enforcement of the convention by each state. The convention will include provisions on inter-religious conflict as well.

    Group photo of all attendees
    Group photo of all attendees

    At the afternoon session of the international law conference, Chairman Lee emphasized that “our future generations can inherit peace only if the international law experts do their part,” and further requested them to “make good laws to make the world a better place.” Moved by Chairman Lee’s earnest appeal, the international law experts suggested setting a specific schedule for drafting and finalizing the convention.
    1. -Launching the HWPL International Law Peace Committee
    This day, twelve international law experts including Dr. Fathi Kemicha (former member of the UN International Law Commission), Prof. Ibrahim Aljazy (President of the International Law Association, Jordanian Branch, and former Minister of State for Legal Affairs of Jordan), and Prof. Enver Hasani (former President of the Constitutional Court of Kosovo) were appointed as members of the HWPL International Law Peace Committee. They pledged to work together for the implementation of an international convention on the cessation of war. As the first step for this purpose, the participants discussed practical ways to draft the most essential provisions based on the draft convention that HWPL prepared in advance.
    2. Inter-religious conference for resolving religious conflict

    During the HWPL World Alliance of Religions’ Peace (WARP) Office Presentation Meeting and Religious Leaders’ Conference, the role that religious people hold in the peace movement and the current state of the religious world were addressed. The HWPL WARP Office is a gathering of religious leaders and scholars where they study religious texts and realize that peace can be achieved in the religious world only through religious unity and the answer to peace is within the Creator who gives life to this earth. To find that answer along with people of all religious backgrounds, HWPL began to hold dialogue sessions at HWPL WARP Offices for comparing religious texts. As of September 11th 2015, 104 offices have been established in 53 countries. This day’s session stressed the role and importance of religious figures in achieving world peace and further instilled in each participant a sense of responsibility and commitment to world peace through the unity of religions.
    3. Establishing roles of the youth and women in the direction of the implementation process of the international convention
    Chairman Lee addressed the importance of the youth and women in the implementation of the international convention on the cessation of war. He stressed that they should raise their voices to monitor the implementation process of the convention. For this purpose, the IWPG and IPYG presented the Statement to Urge for the Implementation of an International Convention on the Cessation of War, which all participants signed to strengthen their determination. A worldwide online signature campaign will be launched soon as a means of implementing and expanding the project. Ms. Nam Hee Kim, the chairwoman of the IWPG, said in her speech that, “When the ability of international law experts, heavenly wisdom of HWPL, and work of the youth and women come together, all wars on earth will be brought to an end. Along with all women of the world, members of the IWPG will support the work of international law experts.”

    4. Discussing the mission of journalists for peace
    A total of 17 journalists from 13 media organizations in 14 countries attended the 1st Annual Commemoration of the WARP Summit. During the press conference on the 17th and HWPL Media Forum on the 18th, they shared the publicity work they have done as HWPL Publicity Ambassadors and discussed the mission of journalists in achieving peace. The journalists in attendance, who swiftly deliver the news of peace to the world, said that issues that the media of each country face should be resolved for such good news to be spread more widely. Also, they brought up the necessity of creating various TV and radio programs to arouse the youth’s interest in peace. Furthermore, they suggested that media coverage on international law that the public can easily understand is needed.
    For the 1st Annual Commemoration of the WARP Summit, high-tech filming equipment including helicopter cameras were used to broadcast historical moments where prominent leaders discussed world peace, enabling over 30,000 people in 60 countries to watch them live online. On the 19th, the last day of the event, “Inside WARP Summit,” a newsletter that introduces about the programs of the first day, was provided to each participant and delivered the news regarding the opening ceremony and each session. This event was more than just an international peace conference; it was a harmonious combination of culture and technology that took the cultural events to the next level.

  • Timeline: Saraki vs CCB

    The Code of Conduct Bureau recently filed a 13- count false declaration of assets charge against Senate President, Dr Olusola Saraki. Here is a timeline of the trial which has been adjourned till October 21st and deface by Saraki who did not honour the invitation of the tribunal until September 22nd.

    On mobile, swipe to navigate; on PC, click on the arrows.

  • 2face Idibia @ 40

    2face Idibia @ 40

    Innocent Ujah Idibia better known as 2face or 2baba is one of the most decorated and successful music artistes ever to come out of Africa.

    2face, whose music career began in the mid 90s with his former group Plantashun Boiz, has won several local and international awards which include; The Headies, the Nigeria music awards, AMEN Awards, Sound City Awards, MTV European Music Award, MTV African Music Awards, Kora Award, Channel 0 Music Video Awards, BET Award, MOBO Awards, amongst many others.

    2face has had collaborations with a number of international music stars such as Wyclef Jean, R.Kelly, Beenie man, Reggie Rockstone, T-pain, Mary J. Blige, and recently had a rare collaboration with Nigerian highlife music legend, Victor Olaiya.

    Mr. Idibia got married to his long time girlfriend Annie Macaulay, in May, 2012, and this has helped him to stabilize his celebrity status in the eye of the media, after several cases of flimsy affairs with a fleet of ladies, which made him become a father to at least five children outside marriage.

    Outside music, 2face as a person, has over the years been through thick and thin, subjected to many attacks, both verbal and physical, but interestingly, he is still going on strongly.

    On Friday, 18th of September, 2015, 2face Idibia celebrated his 40th birthday, a stage where it is believed that life just beginning.

    As we celebrate this music icon, we take a look at those things that have made him to stand out as a person and also exceptional as a music star. These lessons are highlighted below.

    [ad id=”403656″]Humility personified

    It will not be out of place to say that 2face is humility personified. He is an individual who often exudes a very humble personality whenever he is in a public place, despite his many achievements.

    He has also exhibited this trait a lot of times when he has agreed to do music collaborations with relatively up and coming artistes even at a time when he was at peak of his career, something many other artistes would not oblige to unless there is going to be a huge monetary gain attached to it.

    Artistes who have benefitted from his magnanity include Solid Star, Bracket, and many others. He relates easily with the rest of his colleagues and everyone he comes across when in the public, in spite of his status. He is always in smiles. He also never goes about bragging about his achievements; rather all that he preaches to everyone is “one love”.

    Unique music style

    2face Idibia is not one of those artistes that do popular demand kind of music, his music often comes with a message, even when he decides to do a party song he still makes it very inspiring, and that is what has kept him going for decades even after many of his contemporaries have left the music scene.

    He has got a couple of songs that gives inspiration whenever one listens to them.

    He has Songs like Africa Queen, U No Holy Pass, Ifana Ibaga, Right Here, Only Me, E Be Like Say, Rain Drops, Be There and even party track like Implication.

    These are quality songs that not many music (past or present) in Nigeria can boast of producing.

    He has as a result of that proven that one can decide to be different, positive, do what is morally right and still be accepted by many.

    Strong personality

    He also stands out as a very good example of someone who does not go about the different social media platforms to showcase his wealth and material possessions like cars, houses, awards and the likes, just like many others do, and they refer to it as a PR stunt.

    He believes his strong and positive personality and image is good enough to keep him in high esteem in the minds of people and make him remain relevant in the media.

    His being non-materialistic has also helped him to manage his resources sensibly well and thus being able to invest and multiply them.

    Responsible father

    2face was not just a lover-boy to the ladies in his life, but he was also a very responsible man and father to his children, as he has proven by actually accepting and taking care of all of the children born to him by his ladies (his four baby mamas).

    2face has taken responsibility of all the kids, even before getting married and has been taking care of them all.

    Annie Idibia once confessed about being married to the music superstar, 2face Idibia, she said “No, I’m married to Innocent, one of the most amazing men in the world. I want to believe our marriage is almost like every other marriage. He’s a good person, a good dad, great husband, a wonderful brother-in-law and son-in-law, and he’s all that I thought he would be as a husband and more.”

  • Solidarity for a water wise world

    Solidarity for a water wise world


    Global leaders gathered in Stockholm in August to find solutions to increasingly decreasing global access to clean water, sanitation and hygiene. Assistant editor, Seun Akioye who was at the conference reports

    There were many questions that dominated discussions at the recently concluded World Water Week (WWW), organized by the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) in Stockholm, Sweden. Should water be free, how do we balance the provision of affordable water supply against the notion of water as human rights and what is the relationship between water and climate change?
    The WWW which has been organized every year celebrated its 25th anniversary this year, it was a milestone conference according to Torgny Holmgren, the Executive Director of SIWI who acknowledged that there is a greater awareness about the importance and the central role water plays in development. That informed the theme for this year’s conference: “Water for Development.”
    The United Nations recognized this fact when in drafting the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) which is aimed to build on the global achievements of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), proposed in goal six that : “ By 2030, universal and equitable access to safe and affordable drinking water for all, and access to adequate and equitable sanitation and hygiene for all and end open defecation, paying special attention to the needs of women and girls and those in vulnerable positions.”
    Holmgren said the role of water in the development of nations cannot be underestimated as it is the foundation for all aspect of human progress. “From the Horn of Africa, over the Sahel, to São Paulo, California and China, people’s perseverance is being tested. We can no longer take a steady water supply for granted. The many local water crises today combine into a severe global water situation of great concern to all of us,” Holmgren said at the opening plenary.

    A grim statistic
    There were grim statistics relating to water supply especially in sub Saharan Africa and Asia. According to the United Nations World Water Development Report 2015, around 748 million people globally still lack access to improved water supply while water demand for manufacturing is expected to rise by400 percent between 2000 and 2050 globally.
    Further to this is the growing concern about population growth and rural urban movement which has been a major contributor to water stress. A higher rate of urbanization leads to increased competition between agricultural, industrial and municipal water use. Growing cities in Africa and Asia will need to provide services to 70 million more people each year for the next 20 years further increasing the challenges of providing access to water supply and sanitation.
    Adding to this depressing news is the fact that groundwater supply is diminishing with an estimated 20 percent of the world’s aquifers currently over-exploited and 52 countries are currently under water stress.
    Water and climate change
    For the scientists, water experts, policy makers and activists, the most critical aspect of discussions at the conference was getting the water agenda into discussions at the Climate Change, Conference of Parties 21 which will hold in Paris, France in December. According to Holmgren, water is so critical to climate change that it is a shock it is yet to be on the policy agenda of climate change talks.
    “ Water needs to be part of climate negotiations because the larger impact of climate change will be felt through water. Focus should be changing from energy to water and when we look at the Sustainable Development Goals, we see that water is related to many of the goals. Water efficiency should be as common as energy efficiency,” he said.
    The conference has reasons to be worried about climate change and water. Rising sea levels, ocean acidification, progression of drought all associated with climate change has negative impact on water supply.
    At the opening plenary, the President of Marshal Islands, Christopher Loeak broke the hearts of the participants when he painted a picture of the wreckage climate change has caused in his country. “ There is no issue in the world that is closer to my heart than the issue of water. We are a small country quite literarily contemplating a future where we are being wiped off the world map. Yet, as the leader of my country, I cannot look my people in the eye and in good conscience say that everything will be ok, when I know the world continues to travel down a destructive part,” Loeak said.
    The people understood the enormity of Loeak’s statement. Marshall Islands consists of more than a thousand small islands sitting at an average of two metres above sea level. Loeak said water surrounds his country and sustains its economy with fishing being the main source of income. Ironically, the water that sustains the Marshallese economy is now threatening to its very existence.
    For Karin Lexen, director of the WWW, integrated water resource management is central to the implementation of the SDGs. “ Water scarcity posses significant risk to every sector and efforts to mitigate climate change needs to be addressed with water issues, implementing climate change policies will involve increasing water infrastructure,” she said.
    Prof. Benedito Braga, Secretary of State for Sanitation and Water resources for the state of Sao Paulo Brazil said while the impacts of climate change will be felt to the greatest degree in water, its adaptation should be central to t he climate debate. He urged the conference to be more focused on the Action Day during COP 21 to press home demands for the inclusion of water in climate debate.

    African governments and Water Policy failure
    There are few cheering news coming from the African continent however, this was the submission of African Ministers of Water at the Africa Focus Day which had the theme: “ Water Resources and Sanitation Management in Africa.” The Ministers said Africa has failed to meet its objectives in terms of water and the MDGs. Already about 488million people still lack access to sanitation and 200million do not have safe clean water. According to Amadou Faye, Minister for Hydraulic and Sanitation, Senegal, Africa must establish a harmonized monitoring and reporting system for water sector.
    Hon. Eugene Wamalwa, Minister for Water and Irrigation, Kenya told The Nation : “ What we want to do is persuade our government to invest more in water and irrigation sector. From Abuja to Maputo declaration, we want to put aside 15percent of our national budget on health for water.”
    Wamalwa said more investment in water will lead to great savings in the health and security sector. “The time has come to walk the talk and direct the focus on water,” he said. However, the issue of water pricing remains a major debate among the stakeholders with consensus favouring providing infrastructure for water management, creating innovations that would reduce water use and support entrepreneurs that will create new technology.
    The general impression from the participants is towards the provision of affordable clean water . “Water is a right, but we need to pay for our right,” says one participant. According to Wamalwa, for water to be available, it must be paid for. “ Nothing is free or should be free, we must pay and make it affordable and accessible through the development of our infrastructures, this is not about free water, but affordable water.”
    Walk for water, mingle and dance and other events
    On Monday August 24, 2015, Stockholm Water Prize winner Rajendra Singh led delegates to the conference on a two kilometre walk from the City Conference Centre to the City Hall. The walk which was termed World Water Walk for Peace is to” raise awareness so that young people can learn how to pay respect to water, love it and understand the relation between human health and water health,” Singh said.
    But if the walk appears too strenuous for you, the night of mingle and dancing would be the perfect remedy. A stand in band named “The Visitors” which sings only songs from Swedish Pop group ABBA treated the delegates to an unforgettable night of music.
    Nigerian delegates to the conference include officials from the Ministry of Water Resources, members of the academia and water activists. Mrs. Temitope Adeniji Adele, Deputy Director, Water Supply said Nigeria will take the matter of the SDG more seriously as water is highlighted. “ We need to develop an indicator that will measure drinking water and sanitation, we will be going back home with a view to take charge of the whole water sector,” she said.
    Also Adeyinka Oludiran, Programme Director Wateraid Nigeria said participation at the conference should help deepen knowledge especially for policy makers and take charge of policies and programmes in Nigeria’s water sector.
    For Babatope Babalobi, a water activist, about 60 percent of patients in sub Saharan Africa are suffering water borne diseases. “ So if we can provide access to safe water in Nigeria, incidences of water borne diseases should be prevented and we can depopulate our hospitals up to 60 percent.”
    The meeting ended with much optimism which is captured in the goals set by Holmgren: “ It is my goal that in 25 years from now, we will no longer talk about global water crisis.”

  • Human Trafficking: My life as a victim

    Human Trafficking: My life as a victim

    Burdened by the many cases of Nigerians trafficked overseas, Bukola Oriola, a former victim, is back home on sensitisation campaign, reports Sunday Oguntola 

    THE tears are still flowing. They came in torrents just less than five minutes into the chat. “I found myself in a situation where I don’t even trust my family members any longer,” she broke down.

    “I may trust a friend this moment but the next I don’t trust him or her anymore. So, this is a part that strikes a chord in me that could strike anytime.”

    Ten years after, the psychological and mental scars of her ordeals remain indelible. She’s healing but the traces of the battered psyche are still fresh.

    “The thing is the wound is inside and it is hard to heal,” she sobbed.  “I’m tearing up not because I’m sad but because it’s always an open wound that is there. You heal through the process but it’s not a healing that happens once,” she explained last week.

    Down the memory lane of miseries

    In September 2005, Bukola Oriola, an award-winning journalist with the defunt New Age newspapers, went to the United States of America on “I Class” visa to cover the 60th anniversary and General Assembly of the United Nations.

    As it turned out, she ended up staying put after Tade, who she was engaged to, persuaded her to raise a family with him. The duo had completed traditional wedding rites in October 2004.

    That was how she was baptised into the world of human trafficking and forced labour. Tade, her hitherto amiable spouse, turned against her. He practically subjected her to psychological and mental torture. In what was supposed to be her matrimonial home, Bukola literally became an imprisoned slave.

    Tade not only abused her but also neglected their only child, Samuel. With the support of his friends and relations overseas, he stripped her of all dignity as a wife and human being through constant tearing down. For two years, Bukola couldn’t step outside their apartment; she could only peep through the windows. Her supposed home had become a detention camp.

    Tade threatened her with the law and police, forcing Bukola to suffer in silence. On several occasions, she was at the verge of suicide. She was so convinced that dying would be more honourable than the maltreatment her supposed husband was dishing to her but in a foreign land.

    “I suffered isolation for two years. I could not go wherever or whenever I wanted. I was at the mercy of my husband, who took me whenever he felt it was necessary, or, on his own condition, and sometimes, for sex. I suffered through pregnancy.

    “I could not eat wherever I craved. And, sometimes, I was at home in pain with little or no help. He pretended to care for when others were around. When I worked, he took most of my money, leaving me with virtually nothing to survive on.

    “It was a situation of a slave at the beck and call of her master. It could be described as the Israelites in the hands of Pharaohs and the Egyptians,” Bukola wrote in her book titled Imprisoned: The travails of a trafficked victim.

    Left with no dignity, self-worth or anyone, Bukola could only turn to God. The law couldn’t help her. Two law firms actually turned down her brief. It was by sheer providence that she managed to escape to a shelter for battered women from where she was granted legal stay in America.

    Life as an advocate

    Her ordeals in the valleys of the shadow of death have since become a reference point with many speaking engagements across America. Bukola has met with diverse groups and organisations to speak on the challenges and dangers of human trafficking.

    On TV, her show, Imprisoned, has become a household name in the human rights community with very interesting episodes on diverse issues surrounding human trafficking. Through her organisation, many victims have been receiving help, rising from the rock bottom back to the position of prominence.

    From a victim, Bukola has become a survivor and then an advocate. This, she said, makes her fulfilled and glad. “I’m grateful to God that I have moved from a victim to a survivor and then a helper. I relate with the story of Joseph, who was sold into slavery by his siblings.

    “I can look back and use my story to help others. I feel happy when I put my hands into someone who was where I was and is now happy. It takes time but people are being helped. It gives me joy that I can use an experience that almost took my life to help others now,” she stated.

    Like the Biblical Joseph, Bukola believes she was saved to help others undergoing harrowing cases of deprivation and subjugation from familiar foes. Had she not gone through the pain, she reckons her current role as an advocate wouldn’t have arisen.

    When she spoke up, Bukola was described in glowing terms in Nigeria and America. Minnesota Women’s Press even gave her award as Change maker in 2009 for her courage. Many stated she was courageous and resilient to have spoken up against her abusive husband. But Bukola will be the last person to take such credits.

    “I wouldn’t say I’m courageous,” she began.  “It was just God that I had. My child was just 11 months old. I told God that if I get help, I’d take the shame by putting my face on the case. That was what helped me to come out. It had nothing to do with courage but the grace of God.”

    Back home with a message

    Since she left in 2005, Bukola had never been back home. But last Monday, she exchanged pleasantries with some of her old journalism colleagues at the Lagos headquarters of Vintage Press Limited, Publishers of The Nation newspapers.

    She said she decided to return home after ten years because she has a strong message for Nigerians planning to relocate overseas. Having gone through the path of pain in the process of relocation, Bukola is determined to prevent as many Nigerians as possible from experiencing the same. Travelling, she said, remains the best form of informal education. “I encourage people to travel because it is educative. It broadens your worldviews and exposes one to different global cultures,” she stated.

    But most Nigerians, she pointed out, travel overseas with too many assumptions. They believe the pasture is greener over there and expect to make it big once overseas without realising things are not as they seem. Many of them, she lamented, become victims of trafficking, forced labour and sexual harassment.

    Expatiating, she said everyone has a level of vulnerability that abusers or traffickers could exploit. “It can happen to anybody, not just illiterates or anything. I was educated, even a journalist when it happened to me.

    “The fact that you have a two-year visa does not mean you will get a job. Who is going to give you a job? Even those who won the green ticket can hardly get jobs.

    “People who send their children to schools and think they have relations they can stay with have to be careful. If you have a student’s visa and do not get enrolled at a certain period, you will lose your status.

    “Many students who left to go to schools are in some houses as maids. Staying for free with someone can turn you to a slave because the person can claim you owe him or her.”

    While at home, Bukola will be addressing students of selected tertiary institutions on the dangers of trafficking and how to avoid becoming a victim. Her ultimate goal is to form a coalition of International Association of Students against Abuse and Slavery.

    For spouses going overseas, Bukola advocates counselling sessions to understudy their new environment, culture and status with a view to avoiding damaging marital misunderstanding. A new environment, she explained, changes people in unexpected ways, throwing up challenges for relocating couples.

    So, what are the tell-tales for would-be trafficking victims? One, she said perpetrators always begin by isolating their selected victims.  “When the person is not letting you interact with people, it is a red flag. When your spouse or partner is isolating you then that is a red flag.”

    From isolation, the abusers always move to psychological tearing down. In her case, Tade constantly spoke her down before people. One day while with guests, he commented that he dislikes Nigerian journalists because they were dummies. “That was meant to bring me down.”

    She continued: “If he is supposed to conclude your documentation and he keeps postponing, that is a red flag. If you go on finance’s visa, you have 90 days to get married.

    “If you don’t, you lose your status and you cannot marry another person until you return home and come back. If you are with someone who cares about you, there shouldn’t be problems about that.

    “If you have a child overseas, always call to check up on them because they could be with someone as maids. Their uncles could have turned them to be baby-sitters.

    “Some grandmothers could also be labour slaves. They are isolated and could not go anywhere. There are so many people kept in some houses. Those abroad need to be calling home too to tell people what they are going through.”

    Video:

    https://goo.gl/F8Yj20

     

  • Ram dealers record low sales in Jigawa

    Ram dealers record low sales in Jigawa

    Less than two weeks to the Eid-el-Kabir celebration, ram dealers in Hadejia, Jigawa are recording low patronage, a check by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) has shown.

    A NAN check at Hadejia and Kumsa cattle market on Friday, showed that prices had fallen by about 20 per cent, compared to the same period last year.

    The low patronage had also pushed prices down, few days to the Sallah festivities.

    Eid-el-Kabir celebration is marked on the 10th day of Zul-Hajj; the 12th months of the Isalmic calendar during which Muslims faithful make animal sacrifices.

    NAN checks indicated that an average ram was sold for N20, 000, as against its previous price of N25, 000, while sheep attract as low as N 10,000 as against N15, 000 it sold last season.

    Cattle prices was also affected, as a well-bred bull was sold at N140, 000 as against its old price of N170, 000.

    [ad id=”403656″]Dealers at the market attributed the situation to low purchasing power of buyers.

    Alhaji Ari Usman, a ram dealer, said that the market condition was not encouraging due to the low sales recorded in the last few days.

    “We are not making good sales, as very few people are buying the animals at the market,” he said, adding that sales were low this year.

    However, another trader, Baba Jibril, expressed the hope that the market condition would improve in the coming days.

    Malam Buba Audu , a resident, described the drop in prices as a “welcome development”, noting that, the situation would enable most families to slaughter rams and celebrate the season in a happy mood.

    NAN also reports that Kumsa market is one of the major animal trading centre in the state; where goats, cattle, sheep, camel and donkeys from Yobe and Niger Republic are transported to other parts of the country.