Category: Saturday Magazine

  • Get that unique  look with an  embellished dress

    Get that unique look with an embellished dress

    THERE is nothing like a touch of embellished dress to give you a sparkling effect. It is the queen of design at the moment. The embellished garbs are in a class of their own. Whether as a top or gown, or as a spaghetti strap, it’s now a must-have item among young and old fashionistas.

    There is no doubt it is the hottest dress for the season, it’s hot and haute. The designs and artwork on most of these dresses are sexy, classic and stylish. The embellishments and artwork detail add just the right touch. They are everywhere and in several imaginative styles and fabrics that include flirty eyelets to well-tailored dinner gowns. Covered, strapless or spaghetti most are heavily embellished from neckline down to the hem (turn up).

    Cute embellished tops will look great on any jeans, trouser or skirt. And you can add a touch class to it if the dress spots a sequence, stones, beads and other colourful accessories.

    Embellished wears can be used to dress up or down, it all depends on the design, occasion and the way they are combined. For the best result, pair your top embellished dresses with jeans or trousers (three quarter or cropped) and for a solid casual look put it on a snazzy skirt for a night out. Whether you are going clubbing, partying or just hanging out with friends for fun, an embellished dress is just for you.

  • Go patchy the african way!

    Go patchy the african way!

    HAVE you ever thought of the different ways you can wear ankara? The likes of Visco and Da viva give fascinating and mind-blowing effects in any design. There is actually nothing you cannot make with the fabric. It’s a new way of looking trendy in the African way.

    Interestingly enough, the ankara fabric can also be patched with jeans, made into a bag and many other lovely accessories. Nothing speaks more African than this

     

    How to care  for Ankara fabric

    IT could be frustrating when your ankara fabric does not come with washing instructions. You don’t know whether to hand-wash or machine-wash, but the task can be made easy by following these simple steps:

    1. Don’t wash with detergent. Use mild soap

    2. Iron gently

    3. Rub gently

    4. Squeeze gently while rinsing.

    As simple as ABC!

  • Kafui’s Top  10

    Kafui’s Top 10

    Ghollywood (Ghanaian) actress, Kafui Danku, reveals her favourite things to Kehinde Oluleye

     

    Favourite shoes designer

    I have more Michael Kors and Jessica Simpson shoes

     

    Favourite bag designer

    I realise I have more Hermes bags than the other designs.

     

    Favourite wrist watch designer.

    I think Rado has more fancy looking watches.

     

    Favourite earrings

    Chandeliers

     

    Favourite car

    I drive a Landcruiser Prado

     

    Favourite perfume

    I like to try different perfumes. I’m currently using J’Adore by Christian Dior

     

    Favorite sunglasses

    I have more Versace sunglasses

     

    Favourite food

    I like Jollof Rice

     

    Favourite undies

    With this, there’s only one way to find out but wait a minute, do you want to buy me underwear? Please just make it Victoria Secrets. Lol..

     

    Favourite colour

    Red

  • ‘African leaders must protect their people’

    ‘African leaders must protect their people’

    Abdul Karim Bangura, a professor of Research Methodology at Howard University, Washington D.C., the United States of America, is unarguably one of Africa’s most educated and sought-after scholars in the Diaspora. He holds doctoral degrees in five different disciplines – Linguistics, Sociology, Political Economy, Computer Science and Mathematics.  In addition, he is a polyglot with proficiency in twelve African languages and six European languages. He has authored about 66 books and contributed more than 550 scholarly articles in academic journals across the globe.  He was in Lagos last week to deliver this year’s Centre for Black and African Arts and Civilisation (CBAAC) public lecture entitled The democratic project and the human condition across the Africa continent. He raised a lot of issues that could help to bridge the yawning gap between the poor and the rich nations. In the courtyard of the University of Lagos Conference Centre  he spoke with Olayinka Oyegbile (Deputy Editor) and Edozie Udeze. Excerpts:

    How do you describe the African condition?

    The African condition, I usually say, is a mixed bag; it is a mixed picture. On one hand, we cannot dismiss the fact that for a continent that is relatively young, that is 50 years old, we need to give ourselves some credit.

    For a continent that has come this far, there must be some good things happening. But it is good for people to develop it further and build on the good things. But sometimes it is very easy to ignore the great things that have happened because we live in the world where we tend to have our ideological leanings. So that’s the good side of it.

    The bad side is equally not too bad. It is not because good people are not doing what they are doing. It is only that very few good people would raise their voices when they see bad things happening. In essence, it is to say that it is the sin of commission as opposed to the sin of omission (laughs). Not that people do not really see bad things happening, but how many voices are there to challenge the bad things that happen? Yes, I think that’s where we have problems and we need to address it seriously, and see how we can overcome it. But the bad sometimes outwit the good, and that is what we end up believing, or remembering.

    Now, there’s this talk that the dominance of the United States of America as the leading world power will soon come to an end, and China will take over. How do you see Africa in this nexus of power?

    The scenario of seeing the decline or declaring that the United States power will soon decline, I think, is a little bit premature. It is always premature because the measurement, or if you like, the yardstick with which we try to describe a hegemonic power decline may be different from that of old hegemonies. What is interesting, however, is that America has made it clear that it is not going to lose its hegemony, and not even very soon.

    They intend, and hope too, to enjoy it in the next two to three hundred years. And that means that whoever occupies the White House is going to be and remain at the game of empire building. What does that mean? It means they are going to be more militarily strong, militarily powerful; it is therefore not something they are willing to let go in a hurry.

    So the measurement may be wrong. People usually look at economics – that sort of rivalry which you’d say is where China has today become a strong issue and force. Yes, in that regard China has built its economic domain. But to be a dominant power, it is not just economic power, but it is also the ability to influence the world and effect a change four times over. There have been some other measurements people have been using to assess these power indices between America and China. But America would not let go, not that soon.

    Then where you also look at the rise of Chinese economic power, one of their major markets, interestingly, is the United States. Which means, also that the US can equally put a check into how fast China rises economically. What I have always said is that African governments should strategise in a way that they negotiate for their people.

    What has happened is that there are these very callous ways of some of our governments in which they allow the Chinese to sell the whole chaff to African people. The fact that the Chinese can even have a project or even import or bring their labourers to Africa, that project tells me that African employees, African people, will not even get some of these jobs. Is it good enough for Africa?

    But African leaders have to negotiate very well and provide those jobs for the people. This way, you also empower the people. This shows even that China is now playing a major role in African development, in African growth. To me, that’s a welcome one. For the first time, the US is giving loans, talking about infrastructural development in places where they are involved; in Africa specifically, because why, they’ve seen the Chinese do that. You know that has made them to be more competitive. What African leaders should do and say is that we have to protect our people. When the African governments begin to empower their people first, there will be no limit to how this great continent can be and that’s a fact we must face.

    The late Kwame Nkrumah noted in his days that where the working class and the peasants meet at a point in African situation, there might be a revolution. Do you foresee that given what you said in your lecture?

    Well, the interesting thing is that one of the places the great Kwame Nkrumah, whose dreams many of us are still aspiring to, that some day we will have this continent come to its senses, and realise that it is better off to be united, giving themselves a united front and then working as one unit… You see, we have tried to work as a separate entity or as separate countries all these years, and so it never worked; it has not got us anywhere. Yes the Nkrumah dream will only be realised if we all do what it takes to have a united front.

    If the workers will one day rise to have a revolution,? Well it is a little bit apprehensive, only because at the end of the day, you will still need the technocrats, you are still going to need the intelligentsia that will help to direct any development and move it away from the peasantry or the workers. Unfortunately, those who are supposed to be on the vanguard and to help the workers and the peasants, have aligned themselves with those who are the exploiters of the economy and of the people.

    It is now difficult. We need to retrain intellectuals to also retrain the minds of those who are supposed to be the technocrats, who are supposed to be the intelligentsia and so on.

    In view of the theory of the ‘Tipping Point’ you mentioned in your lecture, can you elaborate on what it means and how it will work in Africa?

    This ‘tipping point’ is a mathematical formulation. And what we do is that we look at structures. In every structure there are major points. And like we know in life there are push and pull factors. And the push factor often tends to overwhelm the pull factors. Where it becomes like that and you cannot manage it, what do you do? This is so because you can’t stop or control everything in the universe. It is impossible to do so.

    This is just the law of nature, things are going to happen. Yes, they will happen. If you are not cognisance of where you have to put the break, then at that point you discover there is no point of return. That is a philosophical debate. The question then is: Are we experiencing, are we seeing certain natural things happening, compounded by things we cannot control? These are some of man-made effects. But we can try to avert serious disasters in future. This will give us the necessary equilibrium so that we cannot tip over.

    This is what we really mean by tipping point. In essence, we can also look at the society and say oh, this country is having too many strikes; this country is having so much poverty. This country is having so many projects, or so many disagreements. Is there a point where the system may eventually tip? I think we need to look at this so that we can develop and then say the possibilities are there that it will not happen. This is where we are if we do not put the necessary mechanisms in place to take care of our people, then we are going to tip over. And we should do well to avoid this.

    We see that especially in the area of employment. What we have discovered is that any society where you have high rate of unemployment, it means what? It means there will be more youths who are going to be more galvanised, idle; more restless and do things that are not productive. There is already a group of people who are ready to jump at anything and do anything.

    When and how will we have this calamitous outcome? Then one says, okay, do we only create jobs only when they are profitable? What about creating jobs now to save our societies? This is the area where the tipping point comes into play. And we need to do more to avert it.

    In the late 70s, the clarion call was that democracy would save Africa. Over the years, almost all countries in Africa have democratic governments in place. Has democracy really improved Africa?

    No! No! (raises his voice). Not at all. This is one of the most mysterious things I discovered because if you read what we call pedestrian literature, you think democracy is taking place. Oh, people have more to say in this democratic affair; people have more freedom, people can criticise; they can do this, they can do that. We have to give credit where credit is due. But the fundamental question is that, is there also democracy of the belly – where people have enough to eat; where people have employment and are fully engaged?

    What we are discovering is that when we look at these democratic indices, which are developmental issues there is no nexus between the two. Unfortunately, this was what all of us hoped when we had democracy. Africa went through its own problem before the Arab Spring even started. So it was sort of ironical when people said Arab Spring would spread to Africa. African Spring, to me, is what spread to those Arab people. Ours had come and gone since. But this is again how history is conjectured.

    However, for me who has been in international peace and conflict resolutions, the issue is that the most disturbing aspect is that there is really no coloration between democratic indices and peace indices. It is so discouraging because one tended to believe that this democracy is really the panacea to cure our illnesses. We should have less conflicts, less headaches, less issues to resolve. Is that not the belief we had in democracy? Today, we have the reverse which does not go too well to solving our issues. It tells us that people are able to compete for elections which is the measurement to judge democracy. But once you get to power, what do you do? That’s the ten million dollar question, as they say.

    Julius Nyerere of Tanzania once said it was only homegrown socialism that could help Africa. Looking back today, can we say that the Tanzanian situation justifies that stand?

    I think one of the most unfortunate things was that many of us, especially in the academia, have not understood much what Julius Nyerere stood for or said. We were too much in a hurry to dismiss him. Or to say that it did not grow by this economic bound or that Ujama itself did not succeed. Ujama did not fail, because the reality is that it was never allowed to grow, as it was postulated. Again, you could see the overwhelming British influence never to allow it to grow or prosper. This was the major setback. This was so, because the global economy has always been tied to capitalism. And this international capitalism tends to influence a lot. So, no matter what you have as a system, at the end of the day, you still have to work with this system. There is this belief that you have a conflicting ideology that is working against each other.

    So, we can also look at Ujama and say okay how did it succeed? We know the linguistic one is the greatest example. Today Kiswahili is very powerful and has given Tanzania the greatest asset as a nation. It has given the nation the highest literate rate which has today spread to more parts of Eastern Africa and still spreading. In these places Kiswahili is being taught and people are catching up. It is amazing really how culture and language can form the core indices for development and growth.

    Even in the United States we have courses in Kiswahili simply because they realise that in those major countries the knowledge of this language opens doors. The knowledge of it, like they know, will pay dividends later on. Therefore, they need to have people trained who are fluent in it, that will be negotiating and doing business on their behalf. And this is one of the blessings of what Julius Nyerere started.

    Again, Tanzania is one of the few African countries that no military take-over has happened there before, or a civil war. That tells us that there is something indigenous, something very good about Nyerere’s approach to governance or the economic and political ideologies that he propounded.

    In other words, if there is one central language, African communities will do better in terms of development and growth?

    Yes, check that out. As a matter of fact, African languages are just too powerful. You can see that Europe is now borrowing some of our languages, to grow their vocabularies. They are constantly growing their languages. Even the French do it a lot so that they can keep the French language alive.

    It is only we who are falling into this trap. Language is indeed a unifying factor because again if we as Yoruba, Igbo and others come together, you know how strong we can be. Even before the white man came, how did we communicate? This is again the myth they used so that they can further marginalise us. But we need to look at language as a weapon for development, for unity and togetherness.

    What those of us in the mathematics and sciences know is that there’s no theory that cannot be taught or understood in any language. It does not have to be only European languages. Even when we talk of quadratic equation or even all other mathematical tools, if you take the Yoruba language system, it is so sophisticated to handle issues there on. But if you do not even know square root, or you cannot even speak or understand the Yoruba language effectively well, how can you do that?

    Why don’t we use that language for our students to be the greatest Mathematicians in the world? This is so because we marginalise the Yoruba language and now resort to English. And now we are having great difficulty and we know that tracking these young ones into the sciences is not easy. This is indeed part and parcel of the leader outcome. You do not have exciting people anymore because they cannot relate to their culture or language any more. If you teach the people the counting problem in the language other than their own, soon they will begin to forget it and so on.

    You have proposed the Union of African States to be adopted by African leaders. How does that differ from African Union (AU)?

    Well, you know the AU is a continuation of Organisation of African Unity (OAU). Up till today it remains the big boys’ club. And at the end of the day it remains a talk shop. I think it is time we moved beyond the talking shop and do things more concrete to move Africa forward. It is time for action and this means you have to have leaders who say in order for us to unite, we need to give up some of our sovereignties. If you like, take this as a marriage relationship. When you marry your wife, even as powerful as the husband may be in African culture, there are things you negotiate with you wife, either you give up some certain rights or realign such to make the marriage work.

    So if there is a country that can give up some sovereignty may be because it has some economic powers, they have to do so to help others. But if that is not happening, then we will have lot of problems, because no one will make sacrifices for others. There must be room for genuine love and unity.

    If we can come to that we then know that the benefits will outweigh the disadvantages. We see it in the European Union (EU). Now we are learning from EU but we should be teaching them. You can think that the US was one nation before? They began with a few states to what we have today.

    You have your feet in both Christianity and Islam. Do you think the clash of religions can tear Africa to pieces?

    Religion can never be the end of Africa. One thing, as I tell people, they always point out the case of Nigeria. And I always have to caution people, you don’t need to generalise. Religious problems only happen in a part of Nigeria and not all. Given the size of Nigeria, it is a very small part where religious problems emanate. We still have the majority part of Nigeria living in peace, absolute peace. Here we have Moslems and Christians living peacefully together. Also, we have to be honest that most of the times it is not the average people who get caught up in these things but the leaders for their own hegemonic tendencies. They stake the fires of religious problem for their own selfish end.

    And in most parts of Africa, we already know we do not have that sort of problem. I have done a lot of research in most of these places. It does not matter whether we have more Moslems or Christians on the continent. We need to go back to our old ways; the ways Africans used to live their communal lives.

    In fact, I remember reading Professor Toyin Falola’s book (A mouth sweeter than salt) where he is so emotional about this issue. There was a time in Ibadan where Christians would pray for Ramadan to come, so that they would eat good night food. And Moslems would pray for Christmas to come so that their parents would buy new shoes and clothes for them. Then Christians would go to Moslem ceremonies and vice versa. This is the kind of thing we really have to work on right now to nip religious violence in the bud. What we have in Nigeria is that discussion is not taking place. People already hold their positions and therefore will not let so. Therefore, leaders have to emerge to take us to paradise. That means we have to be very honest about all these things.

    It is not only religion. There is also the problem of ethnicity. There is also economic issue and until these three things are tied together and resolved, and we have serious discussion, we will continue to have problems. I am not worried that religion will tear our societies to pieces. At the end of the day, the African is spiritual; one has to respect that spirituality is bigger than religion.

    If we do that, there is nothing wrong in saying that, I am an Igbo, a Christian, but I am also African, and the next person there, a Moslem, is my brother. In Europe, they can be Catholic, they can be Anglican, but in the end, they say I am European and let’s come together as one. I have no problem with these multiplicities of identities so long as we all realise we are one. I think that way it will work out. Those of us who are also interested in those things should not also keep quiet. We need to discuss it in public discussions and fora so that the message can go across. Who wants his son, her daughter or husband to be dying for a senseless thing that will not put food on his table? But again, it comes to education. The more we educate our people, the more we talk about these things to the younger ones, the better we are for it. That’s one of the ways we can go to guarantee peace in Africa and the world. But the triple issues of economy, religion and ethnicity have to be properly addressed and handled for the benefit of all.

  • Weird, wild world of Dan Gbana girls

    Weird, wild world of Dan Gbana girls

    To what length can the youth be trusted with the salvation of the nation’s bleak future? The question has become pertinent in the light of findings that a great number of the nation’s youths are turning into hard drug addicts.

    The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mallam Sanusi Lamido, might have seen through this when he recently proposed that any Nigerian seeking to occupy a public office should first be subjected to drug tests.

    In the past, consumption of hard drugs, particularly Indian hemp, was done in hiding. In those days, those who indulged in the act moved far away from the prying eyes of security agents and family members to avoid arrest or rejection by the society, which generally resented the habit. Parents and family members made conscious efforts to dissuade their children from engaging in such acts for fear of the stigma it would bring on them.

    Today, the story has changed. At motor parks, brothels, streets and institutions of higher learning where future leaders are expected to emerge, hard drugs have become like regular meals without which there would be no life.

    Checks at a community, a lecherous environment along Lagos/Badagry Expressway, showed that some young people, male and female, live on hard drugs. A visitor to the area does not need to be told the kind of business that the residents engage in; their appearance says it all. They look dingy, brutal and frightening. The females wear all kinds of tattoo on their bodies while the males happily expose sizeable scars on their bodies.

    From every corner of the area ooze all kinds of unpleasant smells, with smokes from thickly wrapped Indian hemp pervading the air. It is simply a way of life for many of the young and the old residents of the area.

    A set of commercial sex workers in the area, called Dan Gbana (daughters of hard drug), specialise in taking heroin and go about their business without having their bath for days. A trader named Angela in the area said the Dan Gbana girls could sleep with any man for as little as N100 if they lack the resources to buy drugs.

    She said: “This is another world entirely. It is not possible for a child to be brought up here and he would not take hard drugs, which come in different forms. The area is predominantly populated by people from a particular state in the North. It is home to many people of questionable character because they come to patronise the commercial sex workers that operate here.

    “Here, both the old and the young are involved in prostitution and also indulge in all kinds of hard drugs that are sold here. It is also a common sight to find a nursing mother hustling for ‘customers’ without minding what happens to her baby. They often do all this under the influence of hard drugs and liquors. They take hard drugs and wash them down with strange liquor drinks.

    “The prostitutes are of different categories, but the deadliest of them is the Dan Gbana group. They are brutal and often dispossess men who sleep with them of their valuables. They are called dan gbana because they consume a lot of gbana, the Yoruba word for hard drugs. They consume it as if their lives depend on it and would not even have their bath for days.

    “They become restless if they stay for some time without taking hard drugs. If they become so broke that they do not have a dime to buy drugs, they could sleep with anybody for as low as N100 in order to get money to buy the drugs.”

    Findings revealed that the population of drug addicts is growing in geometric proportion as hard drug business continues to thrive. Indeed, the consumption of Indian hemp and skunk is fast becoming a status symbol at motor parks and among street children. It was gathered that some of addicts even go into contests to determine the best consumers of hard drugs among them.

    A bus conductor, who gave his name simply as Tairu, says it is impossible for most of his colleagues to do without hard drugs because of the harassment they face in the course of duty.

    He said: “It is difficult to do transport business without the help of hard drugs. We face a lot of harassment from passengers, security men, LASTMA and agbero (touts). You can’t deal with these people without being tipsy. In fact, you need to be high in order to tackle them without fear.

    “Once they see that your eyes are very thin and red, they would not need anybody to tell them that you are operating on a different planet. The drugs, particularly Indian hemp, also help our voices because it is not easy to shout from morning till night without being aided by drugs.”

    Although he admitted that many of his colleagues have suffered health (mental) challenges as a result of hard drugs, he was quick to blame such situations on poor diets.

    He said: “Many of our people have become kolomental (mad) after taking some of these hard drugs. The reason is that they don’t eat well before taking them. If you don’t eat well before taking them, you will be adversely affected.”

    Asked if some of his colleagues also take hard drugs in order to commit crime, he said: “ I don’t know about that. I have simply told you why I take them. Everybody has his reasons for doing what he does.”

    Findings showed that the consumption of hard drugs has also become a sort of competition among addicts in some areas like Ikorodu, Lagos, where a whole building is said to be dedicated to the sale and consumption of hard drugs.

    Alhaji Jimoh, a resident of the area, lamented that the residents’ complaints to security agents had yielded no fruits. “I wonder what the future of this country would be with the rate at which the youth are now addicted to hard drugs. Here at Ojogbe in Ikorodu, there is a whole building devoted to the sale and consumption of all manner of hard drugs. I learnt that its users are ranked according to how much hard drug they are capable of consuming, and they are always competing to be the best. This is dangerous.

    “We have complained to security agents, made radio announcements and taken all necessary measures, but it all seems fruitless. Their number seems to be growing every day in spite of our complaints. Unfortunately, females are also part of this unholy lifestyle. Something needs to be done because it contributes to the incidence of criminal activities in the country and also casts a thick cloud on the future of the nation.

    Residents of Ipodo, a part of Ikeja reputed for a thriving hard drug market, also expressed concern that the lives of many promising young people, including those of girls, were being destroyed by their addiction to hard drugs.

    A resident of Awolowo Way, Ikeja, Lagos, who identified himself simply as Jimmy, observed that many young people in the area had sacrificed their future on the altar of drug addiction.

    Jimmy said: “The future of many young people in this area has been destroyed by drugs. Many of them have become junkies. They often call it elubo (the Yoruba word for yam flour). So, when you hear young men say they want to go and buy elubo, they are talking about hard drugs and not yam or cassava flour.

    “Do you know who junkies are? They are guys who have almost become crazy because of their incurable addiction to hard drugs. They cannot do without it in a day. When some of them have no money to buy the drugs, they deposit their phones, laptops and other valuables to get them on credit. There are times that some of them go there in expensive shoes but end up returning home in bathroom slippers, having used their shoes to take hard drugs on credit.

    “The dealers always make sure that the value of whatever item they deposit is more than the amount of drugs they take, because most of them would prefer to continue to use it to take more hard drugs until they exhaust it. That is one of the reasons there is a steady rise in crime.

    “In spite of this, many young people are getting hooked on it every day. They celebrate it as if it is a good thing.

    “There is a wealthy and renowned publisher of a popular romance magazine in this country who has almost gone bankrupt because of his addiction to hard drug. He is always here to consume drugs. He has sold so many of his landed properties as a result of this. There was a time he had to vacate his house to live in a hotel for a long time, after which he could not pay the bills. It became a serious issue between him and the owners of the hotel.

    “When his addiction to hard drug started taking a serious toll on him, he began to look very unkempt.”

    Confirming the publisher’s story, another resident, who gave his name as Ben, lamented the harm that hard drugs have done to many young people in the area. He feared that if nothing urgent was done to discourage the youth from taking drugs, the future of the country could be the worse for it.

    He said: “The story of the publisher is true. I know him very well. I was one of the people he took abroad for relaxation when his magazine was making waves. He is not the only person that has been destroyed by addiction to hard drugs in this area. There are uncountable youths who have had their promising future destroyed by their addiction to hard drugs. One of them is a young man whose father was a popular car dealer before he died.

    “After his father’s demise, he was lured into taking hard drugs. Today, he has become a junkie. He washes cars for people to get money to buy hard drugs. After toiling all day to get money, he goes to the drug joints to lavish it. How many of them would you count?”

    He recalled that hard drug business found its way into Ikeja area a few decades ago through a late retired soldier. He said: “I don’t know how hard drugs business started in other parts of Lagos, but I know how it started here in Ikeja. It was one late soldier (name withheld) who started the business. He succeeded in training many people who joined his children in continuing the business after his death.

    “Their operational base is still here in Ipodo. Some of his boys have continued to move to other parts of Ikeja to expand the business. That is why hard drug business has extended to other parts of Ikeja. This portends serious danger to the future of the country, because when the youth, who are supposed to be the leaders of tomorrow, now take pleasure in drug addiction, the level of criminal activities in the society will multiply and the country would be worse for it.”

    A visit to Akerele, another drug market in Agege area, revealed that the business was still thriving in spite of a recent raid of the area by men of National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA). One of the young traders told our correspondent that it is not possible for anyone to stop the business in the area.

    He said: “Cats (security agents) are always coming to raid us rats. But no matter how much they try, they can never stop us from doing our business. The people behind this business are not poor people; they are rich and highly connected people. But they use people like us to market it. I have been arrested and released several times.

    “It is an international business and Nigeria is a re-routing nation for them. The dealers from countries like Colombia, Mexico, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and so on, bring the drugs to their agents here for re-routing to other parts of the world. They exploit the porous nature of our security system to smuggle these drugs into the country. Have you asked yourself how these hard drugs that we don’t produce in the country are everywhere like common edibles in spite of all the security bodies at the airports, sea ports and the borders?

    “Apart from serving as a re-routing ground, they also intend to make Nigeria a big market because we have a large population that can serve as a big market for these hard drugs. They are succeeding because some boys are consuming them like food. It is not the headache of a dealer that anybody becomes junkie, because nobody is forced to take drugs. You can only be lured and it is left for you to accept or reject them.

    “At times, some guys use their valuables as deposit to get hard drugs on credit. Was it the dealer that asked such guys to do so? It is about using what you have to get what you want.”

    The Public Relations Officer of NDLEA, Mr Jarikre Ofoyeju, said the agency had not rested on its oars in its bid to check the menace of hard drugs in the country. He said: “As a result of training, exchange of intelligence with our international collaborators and years of accumulated experience on the field, the agency has been able to uncover several new modes of drug concealment adopted by drug barons.

    “The first seizures of heroin, hidden in tiny threadlike manner and woven in woollen rug carpets, were made in 2012. The consignment, which was intercepted at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA) Lagos was sent from Pakistan as unaccompanied cargo.

    “Another seizure of heroin from Pakistan, which was intercepted at the Lagos Airport, was hidden inside cartons of football. The weight of both seizures was 29.260kg. The largest seizure of heroin in 2012 was hidden in heavy steel moulding machines, which were cut open by industrial welders to access the drugs.

    “This illicit shipment also came from Pakistan through the Tin Can Island Port, Lagos. There was the case of a 48-year-old widow who concealed 66 wraps of methamphetamine weighing one kilogramme in her private part. It is the largest drug concealment in private part in the country. She was to board a Kenyan Airways flight to Nairobi when she was apprehended.

    “The agency detected 2.472kg of cocaine industrially concealed inside ear rings, buttons, necklaces, bangles as well as in female belts imported from Brazil. The agency detected 2.665kg of cocaine hidden inside prepared chicken imported from Brazil. A South African lady was found with 5.5kg of methamphetamine industrially packed in sardines. In addition, a 65-year-old grandmother concealed 1.740kg of cocaine in herbal syrups on her way to London. These are several methods used by drug traffickers in smuggling drugs, which the agency promptly detected.

    “In 2012, the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) adopted various measures that led to the destruction of 1,404.27 hectares of cannabis farms. This is to prevent the supply of cannabis to dealers and drug addicts. A total of 8,052 suspected drug traffickers were arrested and invited for interrogation. These comprised 7,510 males and 542 females.

    “We successfully intercepted a total of 233,699.875kg of narcotics. The seizures include 228,794.13kg of cannabis, 3,905.447kg of psychotropic substances, 461.15kg of ephedrine, 211.325kg of heroin, 176.55kg of methamphetamine, 131.888kg of cocaine and 19.385kg of amphetamine.

    “The emerging threat of clandestine laboratories is an area where the NDLEA has demonstrated its resolve to dismantle drug trafficking syndicates. In the past two years, the agency has worked very hard to prevent drug barons from using the country in illegal drug production. This has led to the discovery and closure of five clandestine laboratories used for the production of methamphetamine.

    “Methamphetamine is a class ‘A’ psychotropic substance in the category of Amphetamine Type Stimulants (ATS). Four of these illicit drug production factories were discovered in Lagos, while the fifth laboratory was detected in Nanka village, Anambra State. Some of the seizures made during our raid operations include 461.15kg of ephedrine, 176.55kg of methamphetamine and 19.385kg of amphetamine.

    “The agency apprehended a suspected Colombian drug kingpin who was invited to establish clandestine laboratories in the country. He was placed on $38,000 per week salary by a local drug cartel. This is an indication that amphetamine production is indeed a big threat to the country. The target of the NDLEA is to have a society free from drugs, crime and insecurity. No effort will be spared in actualising these objectives.”

    He, however, said that the fight against hard drugs by the Agency had not been without challenges.

    He said: “Drug control, like other human endeavours, is not free from challenges. There are challenges of inadequate funding. We need operational vehicles and more logistic support. Narcotic and money laundering investigation is expensive. There is also the challenge of inadequate drug enlightenment. This is also capital intensive.

    “We are assessing the various geo-political zones and to develop suitable preventive enlightenment. Some people see drug trafficking as a business and not a crime. This is a misconception that needs to be corrected. There is also an erroneous notion of get rich quick irrespective of the means. Besides, there is the problem of moral decadence that places emphasis on materialism.

    “We shall continue to promote public interest and protect the country from the activities of drug barons. The regular arrests and seizures at the airports, seaports, land borders and within towns are sufficient proof of our determination and commitment towards a drug-free society. We shall continue to frustrate the activities of drug cartels through similar efforts.”

     

  • Bitterleaf healing power

    Bitterleaf is one of the widely use cooking vegetable in Africa and it can grow in any part of the world

    Very few people are aware that this vegetable is highly medicinal and can be used to cure diseases as well as help to keep our body in good health condition. The important thing this leaf does is to clean the blood, hence prevent sickness. This made by squeezing the fresh leaves to get the juice. Drink about a glass of the juice 3 times a day.

    •Bitter leaf also cleans the lymphatic system as well.

    •For smokers or those that are been exposed to secondary smoke, bitter leaf is useful by protecting the body against pollutants that come from cigarette smoke and some dangerous gas.

    •The juice prevents malaria sickness due to the presence of Natural Quinine. Regular intake of this bitter leaf juice will prevent malaria sickness

    •It also yield the healing power of Sexually Transmitted Diseases(STD). The drinking of the bitter leaf juice daily and also squeeze the leaves and paste it on the patches and warts that appear on the skin will vanish in course of days.

    •It is useful for treating of ringworm, eczema and other diseases, just squeeze and paste it regularly, drink the fresh bitter leaf juice, this will clear them off in no time.

    •It is useful in curing loss of memory. It could be a symptom of diabetes or a sickness on its own. Whatever the nature, bitter leaf is very good for treating this ailment.

    •If you often feel weak and tired or you lack vitality and vigour, squeeze the bitter leaf in water, take a glass 3 times daily.

    It is good in treating stroke, strengthens the muscle and cleanses the system.

    •In treating pneumonia, squeeze the fresh leafs of the plant in water. Take a glass full thrice daily. Warm the solution on fire each time before you drink.

    •Insomnia is an inability to sleep well, take 2 glasses of bitter leaf juice every night. You may add a little honey if you wish.

    •It prevent Arthritis or rheumatism in patients. It soothes swollen joints and eradicates the pain.

    •Chew the tender stem and swallowing the juices is a well known remedy for stomach aches. Alternatively, pound the fresh leaves in a mortar to extract the juice, add a pinch of salt to three tablespoons of the undiluted juice and drink. This version is reported to bring immediate relief.

  • Princess Fifi Ejindu on Africa Arts and Fashion Banquet at The Dorchester presented by Africa Fashion Week London

    Princess Fifi Ejindu on Africa Arts and Fashion Banquet at The Dorchester presented by Africa Fashion Week London

    With six weeks left to the biggest African fashion extravaganza outside of Africa that is Africa Fashion Week London 2013 scheduled for 1-3 August 2013 at Old Truman Brewery, AFWL patron Princess Fifi Ejindu has given us an exclusive sneak peek at another grand event as part of the week that is Africa Arts and Fashion Banquet to be held at The Dorchester Hotel on Sunday, 4 August 2013.The first edition of African Arts and Fashion Banquet supported by the AFWL patron, Abuja-based businesswoman, architect and philantrophist, Princess Fifi Ejindu will see leading dignitaries, first ladies, celebrities, designers and business people both from Africa and Diaspora attend this exclusive event at the prestigious venue.Speaking of the event and her support to Africa Fashion Week London 2013, Princess Fifi Ejindu said:

    “I believe Africa Fashion Week London is a great platform for African talent and a great opportunity for Africa to showcase the talent that we possess.

  • Babatunde Okewale bereaved

    It took the man in the Chief Medical Director of St. Ives Specialist Hospital, Dr. Babatunde Okewale, to comprehend the death of his lovely maternal grandmother, Madam Olujimi Sobo. If status and wealth could hold death at bay, Madam Olujimi would have cheated death, considering Okewale’s high standing.

    Although Madam Sobo died at a very old age, Dr. Okewale would have spared no expenses to get her on her feet. But death defied all measures and claimed the life of the lovable woman. Dr. Okewale has been inconsolable since the woman passed on, because he maintained a very special bond with her during her life time.

    Madam Olujimi was buried in Abeokuta, Ogun State, a few days ago, after an elaborate funeral at the Abeokuta Sports Complex. Lest we forget, St. Ives Hospital, which also has an IVF unit, successfully delivered a 54-year old woman, Mrs Mojisola Bello, of a set of twins recently. The feat, we learnt, was achieved through the IVF unit of the hospital.

    According to Okewale, Bello was one of the oldest women he had delivered of babies since he began the fertility unit of the hospital. A fellow of the prestigious Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in the UK, Okewale relocated to Nigeria some years ago after a successful practice that spanned more than a decade in the UK.

    St. Ives Specialist Hospital has brought relief to many fertility-challenged women through cost-effective fertility treatments.

  • How to heal after infidelity

    Surviving doesn’t always mean saving your marriage. Surviving can mean building a more honest marriage after the infidelity. Or, divorcing and leaving the marriage more aware and prepared for your next relationship.

    Your thinking during times of emotional stress is distorted. Be sure your reaction to your spouse’s infidelity is measured and sensible and not out of anger and pain.

    Infidelity is not the end of your world. It is the end of your world as you know it but there is life after infidelity and accepting that can play a major role in how well and how quickly you heal.

    If you engage in doomsday thinking, the idea that infidelity is the worst thing that could have happened you will continually live with the belief that he/she will do it again, that another marital disaster is right around the corner. The trick is to remember that as a result of the infidelity you have the opportunity to strengthen your marriage or move on to a new life as a stronger person.

    There are different paths to healing after infidelity. You may choose to work together as a couple and rebuild your marriage. You may decide, after much thought that it is in your best interest to leave the marriage. Whether you stay in the marriage or leave, your attitude toward what happened is the single most important predictor of how well you heal from the adversity.

    Bottom line, if you are negative, hostile and angry you will be in pain for a long time. If you are emotionally resilient, are able to accept that the infidelity is nothing more than a blip on your life path you will heal more quickly.

  • Justin Bieber is releasing his third Fragrance

    If Justin Bieber’s first two suggestively titled scents, “Someday” and “Girlfriend,” didn’t satisfy the Bieber-shaped hole in your heart, there’s still hope. The pop star, who’s spent the year maturing into manhood, is releasing a third, sleek, ambiguously titled fragrance to add to his olfactory empire. He’s christened his new scent, a fruity floral musk with notes of vanilla, The Key; of course, the tall white bottle comes with a weighted, wearable gold key charm (complete with sparkling stones) that die-hard Beliebers can wear close to their hearts. Like the Walmart version of those Cartier bracelets. The new scent will be hitting shelves in July,