THE jacket which is a hip or waistlength garment for the upper body looks great when worn with colorful or matching camisoles with trousers and skirts. A jacket typically has sleeves, and fastens in the front or slightly on the side. This jacket is generally lighter, tighter-fitting, and less insulating than a coat is brought out the creativity of our designers in a unique way
Category: Saturday Magazine
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Thrill with leather accessories
THE desire to look gorgeous at any event is something ladies crave for all the time. To be the toast of everyone, it is important to look out for items that are unique and keep them in your collection. This way, you are likely to feel complete and proud at special events. Getting the right accessories to complement your outfits can be a delight. You can make your dreams come true once you know and understand the effect that you want to achieve for a particular event.When it comes to choosing accessories with panache, leather accessories readily come to mind. For so long, it has proven to be the accessory for ladies with class. And unlike what we had in the past, there is a lot of creativity and variety available. These include belts, bags, shoes, bracelets, wrist watches, pendants, neck accessories and more. It connotes elegance and high fashion. Interestingly, a number of customised leather accessories are made by local designers and they are a must have. The leather collection interestingly reflects on modern life, particularly the normalcy of high-tech objectswhose existence couldn’t have been imagined 60 years agoexisting side-by-side with artifacts and concepts that have formed part of our daily lives.The Ankara fabric has been around for a while and it is still making fashion statements within and outside the country. One design that has been getting lots of attention is the Ankara jacket which comes in a variety of unique designs.
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Wedding bells toll for Raji Rasaki’s son
Former Military Governor of Lagos State, Brig.-Gen. Raji Rasaki (rtd). is one of the lucky retired top military officers who have continued to have it rosy even in retirement. The man has refused to go into oblivion in spite of threats to consign him to the dustbin of history.
In Lagos this weekend, it promises to be a big and statement-making wedding when Habeeb Olasunkanmi Rasaki walks down the aisle with his heartthrob, Braibbi Boma Horsfall. Habeeb is the son of Brig.-Gen. Raji Rasaki (rtd), while the bride is the daughter of Chief Albert Korubo Horsfal, a Kalabari high chief and South-South leader.
Our Saviour’s Church, Tafawa-Balewa Square, Lagos, will be hosting guests and dignitaries for the holy matrimony of the couple on January 25, 2014. The social angle to the ceremony will take place at The Ark Centre, Block 2, Plot 3, Okunde Blue Water Zone, where the couple will be hosted to a classy reception.
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From Kuwait with shocking discoveries
After cruising aboard an Egytian Airline from Abuja, Nigeria, for eight hours and landing safely at the Kuwait International Airport, simply referred to as KWI, my negative impressions about the oil-rich small Arab country fizzled out, even at my first feel of the country.
I had nursed a lot of negative impressions about the tiny oil-rich country all my life. Would you blame a first-time visitor like me? Pardon my initial wrong judgment. It is typical of a first time visitor. Your negative or positive impression about a place may not change until you are there yourself.
After my visit, I started wishing that my new Kuwaiti friend, Niyaz, could also visit my country, Nigeria, some day to see things for herself to reverse her low opinion about the country.
The decision to spend part of my 2013 annual vacation in Kuwait was borne out of curiosity to explore and see things for myself. My fear of being ignored and looked down upon as an unwanted guest from a black continent of Africa and, indeed, Nigeria in particular, through possibly hidden resentment and snobbish glances at me gradually dissolved into strong confidence and courage, following my sudden discovery of Kuwaiti with black skin! My initial fear had arisen from the fact that racial discrimination the world over has been a serious issue; an embarrassing nightmare.
Socio-culture
Kuwait, which has about 10 per cent of the world’s oil reserves, with a population of about 2.7 million, is a country with citizens who are naturally lively, courteous, friendly and quite accommodation. And the foregoing attitude is in tandem with my own unreserved, communicative and interactive nature. Hence I found myself blending and relating well with my hosts so much so that I developed sudden affection for the country and its people.
If you have too much love for money, men and women, do not go to Kuwait, because you would be tempted. Men and women mix freely. A typical Kuwaiti man or woman spends money lavishly, and Kuwait remains the best and the cheapest place for shopping in the world. The average Kuwaiti man and woman is given to a flamboyant lifestyle. They like talking big and hardly leave Kuwait for other countries to seek employment, except for further studies or holiday.
Armed with enough money, they can easily fund their social lifestyles. Who says the Arabs don’t party? It is necessary to repeat the warning: do not go to Kuwait if you have a self-control challenge with money, men and women because you might be in trouble. Little wonder the country has a very high number of foreign nationals.
Both men and women tend to have equal rights and freedom. The women, who are commonly seen in their black attire or ‘abaya’ with or without the head cover, do most of the things their male counterparts do. Unlike most other Islamic societies, their women occupy political offices, drive their own cars and engage in business activities like their male counterparts. Some of the women even believe that they work harder than the men.
Miss Niyaz, an official of Bayan Palace, the seat of power and official residence of the Amir of Kuwait, said: “My dream is to visit Nigeria, which is in Africa, but I am afraid of the news I hear about Nigeria every day concerning corruption, bombing and insecurity.”
But after educating her properly about Nigeria, Niyaz said: “I am surprised and happy to meet a person like you to change my ugly perception of Nigeria.”
She added: “Some of our men tend to be lazy. Our women are more hardworking than some of our men. I wonder if you have the same experience with your men in Nigeria. But we are still very proud of our culture.”
The writer visited one of Kuwait’s biggest and most popular malls, called ‘Avenue’, where all the designers often meet. Besides, my visit to one of the country’s local old markets, Al-Mobarakia, in Kuwait City, the country’s capital, exposed me to some of the local delicacies of the people, and I did not hesitate to savour or help myself to some of them. Some of the most enjoyable Kuwaiti delicacies include the traditional flat bread called khubz, normally served with Mahyawa fish sauce and biryan, prepared from rice with spices. It was gathered that biryani is the national cuisine of Kuwait.
Every meal served is usually accompanied with pure natural green tea in a small glass cup, an equivalent of a cup we popularly refer to in our local parlance as ‘short’, used in serving our local gin commonly called shepe, ogogoro, kai kai or Sapele water. In fact, I had more of the delicacies in the hotel I lodged in: Courtyard Marriott Kuwait City. Interestingly, they would serve you in one fell swoop a minimum of five delicacies and maximum of 15; an illustration of the prosperity and affluence of the country.
It was understood that the Kuwaiti revel in affluence so much so that they hardly do menial jobs. They leave those for foreign nationals.
Commenting on life expectancy of the average Kuwaiti, a Kuwaiti government official who identified himself simply as Mr. Khaled, said: “Our men have lower life expectancy than women due to comfortability and lack of physical exercise. It is the opposite in Nigeria where you see both men and women on their feet walking, jogging and engaging in all kinds of physical activities. Nigerian men find the time to go to the gyms in spite of their tight official schedules.”
Economy
Until my visit to the country, I did not know that the Kuwaiti currency, Dinar, written simply as KD, is the highest in value in the world. 1 KD, for instance, exchanges for N600, 2.16 pounds and 2.59 Euros respectively. At the Bureau de Change in old market Al-mobarakia, you can see the nation’s currency openly displayed in showcases.
Right from the Kuwait International Airport, you begin to see the names of famous designers, ranging from the designers of jewellery to those of perfumes and clothes, with Arab translations. I also gathered that even though the country’s 80 per cent gold is 22/24 carat, it is where you can buy the cheapest gold and diamond.
The minimum wage a public servant earns monthly is equivalent to N1.5 million and it is tax-free. Tax-free wage is not enjoyed by Kuwaiti nationals only but also by foreigners who work in the country. The banking system and the national policy governing the ownership and use of motor vehicles is very favourable and encourages people living in Kuwait to acquire new cars with very flexible payment terms that make it difficult to find old cars on the roads.
The commonest brands of cars are mostly the latest American cars, from Lamborghini and Ferrari to BMW, Toyota to Ford. Kuwait is among the 10 richest countries in the world with high income economy, according to a World Bank report.
Housing
It is also gathered that in every 15 years, houses are demolished and replaced with new ones.
Nigerians in Kuwait
The total population of Nigerians resident in Kuwait, according to my findings, stands at about 500, as at today, including professionals and artisans. Investigations further showed that they are so handsomely paid that they are not interested in returning to Nigeria or going to any other country of the world.
Nigerians there are obviously not complaining. Apart from being economically comfortable, they are accepted heart and soul, appreciated and respected by Kuwaiti people, as they continue to live and work within the ambit of the country’s laws.
The special regard the Kuwaiti society has for black people is believed to have stemmed from the uncommon bravery and commitment the blacks in the US Army and the Allied Forces displayed in reclaiming the independence and sovereignty of Kuwait from Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, which occupied it in the 90s, during which 773 Kuwaiti oil wells were destroyed.
Kuwait, which got its independence in June 19, 1961, was annexed by the deceased and ex-president of Iraq who was chased out of Kuwait and humiliated out of power by the United States and Allied Forces in 1991. He died shortly after.
The media
The Kuwaiti media is regarded as the most vocal and transparent in the whole of the Middle East. In 2013, Kuwait was adjudged the 77th freest country in the world for journalists to operate, out of 179, according to Reporters Without Borders, in the Press Freedom Index list. Thus, Kuwait remains the freest regarding the freedom of the press in the Middle East region.
Some Kuwaiti citizens are very excited about Nigeria, agreeing to the fact that this most populous black nation is, no doubt, the giant of Africa. Hence it is part of their life-time dream to visit Nigeria.
According to Bandar Al-shellahi, Managing Director, Kuwait News Agency, “I have travelled all over the world but have not come across a Nigerian journalist. I look forward to meeting one, and even visiting the country someday, for I believe also that Nigeria is the giant of Africa because of its enormous positive impacts on its continent and on the globe in general”.
Religion
As would be expected, majority of Kuwaiti people are Muslims, and very good ones for that matter. They exemplify true love and peace, even towards people of other faiths. Kuwait has a native Christian community with a large number of expatriate Christians estimated at 450,000. Indeed, there is no difference between the faithful of the two religions in Kuwait, as they mix freely.
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Folorunso Alakija denies governorship ambition
It is no more news that the posters of one of Africa’s richest women, Folorunso Alakija, adorned some strategic places in Lagos last week. In fact, unlike speculative politicians who keep to their chests the position they would be vying for in a coming election, the message on the Alakija poster was specific and direct: she would be vying for the seat presently occupied by Governor Raji Fashola of Lagos State.
As would be expected, the subject became a big media issue and many asked what could have inspired such an ambition from a woman known for her enterprise and wealth. But the Forbes Magazine-profiled billionaire businesswoman has reached for her pen and vehemently denied the rumoured ambition. She also did not have kind words for those who had gone to town with her posters.
She reiterated her dedication to her “divine calling” to look after widows and orphans through her Rose of Sharon Foundation.
“God has not called me into politics and I have never been involved in politics. Please ignore whatever you may have read portraying me as a governorship aspirant,” she said.
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Trace of destiny (3)
We were talking on the phone one day when Rachel said:
“Are female visitors like girlfriends allowed in your hostel?”
“Of course it’s allowed- we are not kindergarten, you know! But there are visiting hours,” I replied.
Then it struck me.
“Have you accepted my proposal?” I quickly asked.
“Yes, Julian. I will be your girlfriend,” she stated. That day, I was so happy I went round for the rest of the day with a big smile on my face.
“At last! Why did it take her so long to accept you?” my friend and roommate, Philip said when I told him the news.
“Better late than never!” I rejoined smiling adding: “I don’t care how long it took as long as she has agreed to be mine!”
“So, when is she coming to visit? I can’t wait to see this babe that has made you so happy. I’ve never seen you this excited over a lady before!”
I simply smiled and picking up my soap case went to the communal bathroom to take a shower.
Because of her mother, Rachel’s visit to my school which was in another town was postponed for a few weeks. Later, when her cousin Betty came to stay for sometime, Rachel was free to come. She arrived some days later and I was so glad to see her. She put up with her uncle and his family who lived in the town and after lectures, I would pick her up in a friend’s borrowed car and we would go out. We visited many fun places in town and had a very nice time.
Time flew and soon the one week Rachel was to stay was over. The morning of her departure, I took her to the motor-park and as I stood waving as the vehicle drove away, I knew within me that I never wanted to be parted from her again. I had found my Eve…
Five years later…
Time went by, the seasons came and went. I graduated, started work and began to make plans for my future. Rachel, who had gained admission to former school, was a strong part of that future.
Our relationship had been going well and in her final year, I proposed to her. I had made up my mind that she was the one I wanted to spend my life with, that there was no one else for me.
As I slipped the ring on her finger that day, I said:
“Please be my wife, my future, my everything. I love you Rachel.”
“I love you, too, Julian,” she said as she slipped her arms round my neck. I hugged her tightly to me and kissed her sweet lips.
My parents were happy with us when I broke the news to them.
My mother especially liked Rachel and stated that I had picked the right ‘one’. “At least it’s not the older sister who is all over the place with different men,” she said (sarcastically) as she and my Dad sat talking about the engagement and Rachel’s family.
“So, when are you two getting married?” Rachel’s mother asked about four months after our engagement. The woman wanted us to set a date for our wedding as soon as possible, stating there was no need to delay it.
“Ah, Mum! It’s too soon! Besides, I’m still in school,” Rachel said.
“What do you mean? You are both of age. I was 22 when I married your dad. And you are much older than that. The earlier you marry, the better, don’t delay too long,” she stated.
I assured her that we were already making plans, that as soon as Rachel completed her studies, we would tie the knot.
Truncated plans
I kept to my words. As soon as she left school, we began making wedding plans. We chose a date about six months ahead so that we could have enough time to make our plans.
It was during this period that something happened that put in jeopardy my carefully laid out plans.
Unknown to me, Tony, my fiancé Rachel’s ex- boyfriend had returned from his base abroad. He had also contacted her and they had started seeing again. I was blissfully unaware of all these until much later when we had gone far in our plans, when I was already dreaming about our great future together.
How could this happen, you might wonder? Why would Rachel do that to me, someone that I loved so much and I had planned my whole future around? Well, that’s life; you make plans and something you never expect comes along to truncate them. In my own case, Tony was the enemy, the villain who put a fly in the ointment of my happiness…
•To be continued
•Next week, the return of Rachel’s old flame creates an air of uncertainty round their future. Don’t miss the sizzling details!
•Names have been changed to protect the identity of the narrator and other individuals in the story.
•Send comments/suggestions to 08023201831(sms only), psaduwa@yahoo.com or psaduwa007@gmail.com
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WE SAW HELL
The peak of harmattan is the worst period for anyone to be displaced in Plateau State. But that is the fate that has befallen about 3,000 residents drawn from 77 families in a Plateau community. They are currently sleeping in the cold following an attack on their village by unknown gunmen. YUSUFU AMINU IDEGU writes on the humanitarian challenges created by the attack in which no fewer than 40 residents were murdered.
THE attack on Shonong village in Bachit District, Riyom Local Government Area, Plateau State, on January 9, 2014, which led to the death of about 40 Berom people, shares some similarities with the attack on Dogo Nahawa in July 2010. In both cases, the casualties were mostly defenceless women, children and the aged who could not run fast enough to escape the assassins’ bullets. And like in the Dogo Nahawa attack, Special Task Force (STF) soldiers are being accused of aiding the people who attacked Shonong.
No fewer than 23 people were reckoned to have been roasted to death in a single room during the attack. Even the survivors of the attack have told whoever cared to listen that they “saw hell”. What made the Shonong attack peculiar was the fact that it took place during the day, lasting from about 7 am till about noon in a village where the STF is based.
There were claims that in spite of the presence of STF troops, no fewer than 34 people were killed, 77 residential houses razed, two vehicles burnt and about 3,000 people were rendered homeless to face the cold weather in the state.
It was an attack whose success could not be comprehended by many, considering the presence of soldiers deployed in the state to maintain the peace and save lives. The incident left in its trail a very serious humanitarian crisis in the state, even as many mourn their loved ones who were killed in the attack. Their houses were razed and they are now left to shiver and gnash their teeth in the cold weather of Jos, which has been at its peak since the beginning of the New Year.
There are fears that the displaced persons could suffer pneumonia and other weather-related ailments or die if nothing urgent is done to provide shelter for them in the next few days. Some children below the age of five but whose parents are rendered homeless were seen shivering due to the effect of the cold weather since they were forced to sleep in the church after the attack two weeks ago.
Nursing mothers among the displaced persons heaved a sigh of relief when officials of the Plateau State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) and Riyom Local Government Authority appeared with blankets and mattresses to be shared to them.
But with or without relief materials, most of the survivors have already resolved to quit the village, as they expressed lack of confidence in the soldiers. They believe that many of the soldiers deployed in the area may have teamed up with their tormentors.
One of the victims, Mathew Dadu, said: “These STF men have lived with us for about three years now. They know the terrain and we are already friends with them. We had so much confidence that they were here to protect us until the attack.
“Our frustration and fear in this village are that if these soldiers can fail to defend us and we are being killed like frogs, then the fear is justified. People have no confidence in them any longer, hence they (people) are moving out of the village.”
Gunmen suspected to be Fulani heardsmen allegedly attacked Shonong on January 9, this year, barely a week into the New Year. The villagers must have danced and sung glorious songs in their various churches during the pass-over night in anticipation of the New Year as it is the tradition among the Christian population.
Therefore, the people did not envisage that anything untoward would befall them soon after they successfully crossed into the New Year. But nine days into the New Year; they went to bed and woke up, praising the Almighty for making it possible for them to witness yet another new day. As the daily routine in the village, the men left for their farms, leaving their women and children at home. But while the women were thinking of what to prepare for their children as breakfast, all hell was let loose by gunmen.
Shoma Toma, a survivor of the incident who sustained gunshot injuries and was receiving treatment at the Vom Christian Hospital, said the attackers stormed the village in their hundreds at about 7 am when most of the villagers had gone to farm, killing mostly children, women and the aged.
Toma said: “I escaped narrowly from the attackers because I was at home moulding blocks when they invaded the village. They came from four different directions to invade us. They started shooting at anything they saw. While trying to run, a bullet hit me in the back and I fell down. They rushed after me and I pretended that I was dead. They left me and went after some other residents.
“The gunmen operated for more than five hours, killing our people as I lay down there. As God would have it, they never came back to me to confirm if I was really dead. That was my saving grace. I only got up when my relations came to me and started crying, thinking that I was dead. I got up to show them that I was alive. When I got up they told me that the attackers had left. But I fainted shortly after. I don’t know how I was brought to this hospital.”
One of the community members who went to farm before the attack, Gyang Bala, said: “Maybe we made a mistake by accepting an official of the unit to lead the soldiers here. He was driven from Barkin Ladi LGA. He was also rejected in Jol and Fan. Our mistake was that we allowed him to stay.”
The Majority Leader of the Plateau State House of Assembly and the member representing Riyom Constituency, Hon. Daniel Dem, said in this particular attack, the STF soldiers have questions to answer because they are based in the particular village and the attack ought not to have happened under their noses.
“If the military men were there in the village and the attack took place at about 8 am and lasted till after noon, then the military have so many questions to answer,” he said.
Hon. Dem, who condemned the attack during his visit to survivors who were receiving treatment at Vom Christian Hospital, lamented: “We have security men there. If the attack started around 8 am and lasted till afternoon, I think something must be wrong. What are the military men there for? If we suffered an attack from morning till afternoon and people were killed and houses were burnt, I think the military should be asked why they were sent there to protect the lives and property of the people.”
He added: “We have tried to get in touch with them and they said they were on ground. What then happened from morning till afternoon that more than 30 people were killed and many others are lying in the hospital?”
The Plateau State Chapter of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) expressed disappointment with the performance of the militrary in the face of the killings that are going on in the state. The union noted that in spite of the establishment of a Special Task Force to stop killings in the state since 2010, thousands of people had been killed and more were still being killed under the watchful eyes of the task force, code named ‘Operation Safe Haven’
Rising from a congress meeting held at the state secretariat in Jos penultimate Wednesday, its communique reads: “Members of the Plateau State Council have noted with regret that for the past four years, the state has been engulfed in sectarian violence and has through the years reported the events according to the dictates of our profession.
The communique added: “We have noted that through these years, one commander or the other has been deployed to the state as head of the Special Task Force on internal security.
The task force is made up of the three arms of the military, including the police, Department of State Security and the National Security and Civil Defence Corps. Yet, through the years, ceaseless attacks have been going on in some parts of the state without efforts to curb the trend.
“These attacks take the same pattern in style and sophistry, where members of the same family are wiped out in one fell swoop. These communities have more often than not accused members of the task force of culpability in some of these attacks, which they alleged were sometimes carried out by men in security uniforms.
“Yet, not even one person has been caught and brought to book. We are left with STF’s often rehearsed and quoted sobriquet ‘our own troops repelled the attackers.’ How can these attackers be repelled without any of them being arrested?
“And we have noted the disparity in the number of casualty figures often given by the security agencies in the state with a view to downplaying the severity of the attacks.”
The union resolved thus: “We may be forced to withdraw from reporting the activities of the task force if urgent steps are not taken by the STF to stop the senseless killings and bloodshed in the state. We ask the commander of the task force to investigate all allegations of possible culpability and connivance against his men in some of these killings.
“We implore the Federal Government to, as a matter of urgency, release and implement the reports on Jos crises, especially the Solomon Lar Presidential Committee set up by the present administration.”
The state chapter of the union had in 2012 threatened to boycott the state government’s activities over the unending bloodshed, but Governor Jonah Jang defended himself by stating that the security of lives and property in the state had been taken over by the Federal Ministry of Defence with the establishment of the Special Task Force in 2010.
Narrating how the soldiers allegedly aided the mass killing in the Shonong attack, the community leader of Shonong, Da Yohanna Ciroma Dangyang, said: “While the gunmen began to shoot sporadically to scare our people, the soldiers came and asked them to hide in one room so that they would protect us there. The people obeyed and many people ran into the room for cover, not knowing that it was a ploy to gather residents for the attackers to kill.
“As soon as the attackers approached, the soldiers disappeared and the attackers set the house ablaze and all its occupants of about 23 women and children were burnt to ashes. Even some people who ran to take cover at the primary school hosting the STF were shot dead. The closest compound to the STF base was attacked and five people were killed there while the soldiers were just watching the action.”
He said the soldiers were not there to defend the village but to aid the attackers to achieve their mission. “Our cry to government now is that they should withdraw these soldiers and send us policemen. These soldiers will wipe us out very soon,” he said.
Da Dangyang leveled the allegations earlier in the week when the Plateau State Emergency Relief Agency (SEMA), led by the Sole Administrator of Riyom Local Government, Mr Samdah Ishaya Matawal, came to deliver some relief materials to survivors of the attack.
Presenting the relief materials to the displaced people who sought shelter at COCIN Church, Shonong, Matawal appealed to the people to remain calm as the state government was taking stock of burnt houses with a view to bringing in building materials for their reconstruction.
He said their mission to the place was to present relief materials to the people whose houses and foodstuff were burnt to ashes in the area. He encouraged the people to remain steadfast and not abandon their houses for another place, as the main purpose of the attackers was to take over their land for grazing.
Matawal urged the STF Commander to as a matter of fact deploy more security personnel in Shonong, adding that the few ones on ground were grossly inadequate to curtail the activities of Fulani militias. He added that there should be a synergy among the various security operatives in the area to nip in the bud the incessant Fulani attacks.
The Plateau State Emergency Management Agency presented relief materials worth N2 million to the displaced people, according to Binta Wuyep, the Director, Relief and Rehabilitation unit of the agency.
However, the special task force (STF) preferred to remain silent over all the allegation against it’s men. The only reaction so far since the attack was on the figure of casualties. The STF has not commented on the alleged culpability of it’s men. All efforts to get the spokesman of the STF Captain Salisu Mustapha to comment on these allegation failed as he declined comment.
But families of victims believed as the police step in to find the remote cause of the attack, the level of involvement of the STF troops will be unveil as the end of the police investigation. One thing that is clear is that, the STF will not hesitate to court marshal any of it’s members found to have aided the attackers in the killings in Shonong as they have done in the past.
The spokesman of the STF, Captain Salisu Mustapha, however, declined comments when contacted over the alleged culpability of soldiers in the attack.
However, a source, who pleaded not to be quoted, said the STF would not hesitate to court-marshal any of the soldiers found to have aided the attackers as had been done in the past.
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CARNIRIV reaffirms Rivers cultural, tourism prowess
THE perspective that the Rivers State-owned international carnival, The Port Harcourt Carnival, combines the advantage of being a purely cultural carnival and the contemporary Caribbean style carnival is one of the factors that stand it out of its kind. Therefore, many are quick to submit that CARNIRIV as it is popularly referred is a two-in-one carnival.
CARNIRIV is said to be a purely cultural carnival because it offers Rivers people the opportunity to showcase their rich and diverse cultural heritage through headline events such as the International Heritage Parade, Ekere: Rhythm of the Tribes, International Aquatic Fiesta, Egelege and Dance of Fireflies among others. Every year, the heritage parade in particular provides the platform for contingents of the 23 local government areas in the state to engage in a procession through the streets of Port Harcourt to showcase their enthralling dances, masquerade and peculiar occupation. The carnival is said to be contemporary due to its blend of Caribbean style, modern events such as entertainment that give CARNIRIV a wider appeal across geographical, ethnic or political leanings.
Again at the 2013 edition, CARNIRIV sustained its distinctiveness by offering the residents and visitors seven days of superlative rich African culture laced with first class entertainment. Coming as a starter package for the year-end festivities, the week-long carnival made the Garden City the first choice destination for lovers of culture, tourists and leisure seekers. The entertainment offered by CARNIRIV was top-notch ranging from music to comedy, local wrestling to parade and boat regatta to contest for some coveted prizes. Whatever it was worth, those who attended the carnival would rather say that it was better experienced than being told.
Dubbed the ‘Green World Edition’, CARNIRIV 2013 held from December 15 to 21 under the theme, ‘Our Environment, Bedrock for Sustainable Development’ with the intent of raising awareness on responsible behaviour towards nature and the preservation of the ecology.
The fun and pageantry that characterised the carnival was non-stop from day one to the end. The carnival was kick-started on Sunday, December 15 with a fantastic show of skills, colour and style by children who filed out for their own edition of the carnival titled ‘Kids’ Carnival’. Spectacular in their displays, the kids used the occasion to advocate green world and responsible behaviour towards the environment. Speaking on behalf of their colleagues, Miss Elizabeth Ucheawaji and Master Chigozie Obikwere, pupils of Government Secondary School, Elekahia, noted that environmental sustainability was a crucial factor to engender sustainable national growth.
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Yomi Akinruntan, Kunle Odidi, others jostle for Nomiye’s seat
The news from Ilaje/Ese-Odo, the riverine area of Ondo State, in the last few weeks is the battle for the vacant seat of Ilaje/Ese-Odo Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives. Following the untimely death of Hon. Raphael Nomiye, the seat has become about the most hotly contested in the nation at the moment. No fewer than 10 aspirants have indicated interest in the by-election scheduled to be held in a few days time.
Many of the aspirants are said to have literally relocated to the Alagbaka seat of government in Akure, Ondo State, as they seek Governor Olusegun Mimiko’s favour for the Labour Party’s ticket. Others are testing their strength on the platforms of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP).
The sentiment being played up in the contest is that Nomiye, the former occupant of the seat, hails from Ugbo and anyone who would complete his tenure must also come from Nomiye’s Ugbo constituency. Hence, Yomi Akinruntan, Kunle Odidi and Kolade Akinjo are being touted as favourites for the seat.
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Demola Seriki, Wosilat Okoya step out
For those who might be wondering what has become of the union of Demola Seriki and Wosilat Okoya, it remains as intact as ever. Like the nectar and the butterfly, Demola has refused to shed his passion for Wosilat, his retinue of wives notwithstanding. The two were sighted by Celeb Watch at the 74th birthday celebration of Alhaji Razaq Okoya at the Oluwa Ni Sola Villa penultimate Friday, and they sat together, repeatedly whispering into each other’s ears. Like two new lovers, they threw banter and laughed heartily together.
Still radiating with ethereal beauty, Wosilat looked resplendent in her flowing gown popularly called boubou, which sat well on her tall, sexy frame. One could tell she was at peace with herself. But for the occasional burst of laughter between her and Seriki, the sociable sister of the Eleganza boss was all calm while the event lasted. Seriki, on the other hand, was everywhere at the event. If he was not being called by one of his in-laws, he was in the midst of the clerics paying attention to whatever they had to say.
