Category: Travels on Saturday

  • The mistress (3)

    It wasn’t just my mother who was opposed to my union with Frank. Expectedly, his wife did not want anything to do with me and swore that it would be over ‘her dead body for her to share her home with that husband snatcher’ as she referred to me.

    But I was not concerned about her for Frank had assured me, he would sort things out with her. It was my mother that bothered me more. She remained adamant in her opposition to my marrying Frank. She distanced herself from the marriage preparations and refused to play her role as the mother of the bride-to-be. I felt bad at her attitude, seeing her as a bad mother who did not want her child’s happiness. ‘Enemy of progress,’ I grumbled to myself on several occasions.

    To make matters worse, on the day Frank and his people came to my house for the engagement and payment of the dowry, my mother was no where to be found. She simply disappeared! It was one of my aunties, her younger sister who stood in for her as the bride’s mother.

    The ceremony went well, however and Frank and I became man and wife. I immediately moved into my new home with my husband and a new life began for me. What about his first wife, you might wonder. Well, the woman had in anger, moved out of her matrimonial home with her daughter. Frank told me that she had declared she would rather stay under the bridge than share her home with me.

    To me, it was ‘good riddance to her’ and I happily took over the house as the new ‘madam.’ By this time, I was already about six months pregnant. A month before my due date to deliver, Frank sent me abroad to stay and prepare for the birth. It was there I had my beautiful baby boy whom Frank named Philip after his father who was late.

    To mark the birth of his much longed for son, Frank threw a lavish party at our home on my return from the U.K. I still remember that day like it was yesterday. I felt so happy, so proud as I held my baby in my arms, with the numerous guests trooping in to congratulate me and drop money and gifts for the baby.

    As for my husband, his love for me seemed to have increased a hundredfold and he couldn’t do enough for me. He gave me so many gifts including some very expensive jewelry. And to top it up, he bought me a house. I was at home one day, nursing the baby when he arrived from the office with a large brown envelope which he dropped by my seat.

    “What’s this?” I asked, looking at him curiously.

    “Why don’t you open it and see,” he replied, smiling as he sat in a nearby chair.

    I hurriedly opened it and when I saw the deeds to the property in my name, I almost dropped the baby out of shock.

    “Hey, careful! Don’t drop my little boy,” he said, coming over to take the baby from me. He had fallen asleep so Frank placed him in his little crib.

    “Oh, Frank! Is this really for me? So, I’m a landlady now! Thanks so much, honey! I really love you…!” I said excitedly, going over to hug him so tight, he jokingly said I should stop before ‘I broke his bones!’

     

    Losing my baby

    Little Phillip was about two years old when the tragedy that turned my otherwise happy life upside down occurred. We had a swimming pool behind the house as Frank loved to swim. Though I could swim, I preferred sitting by the poolside in a deck chair with a cold drink, watching as he frolicked in the water with a friend or two that usually came over at weekends to hang out with him.

    That day, I was alone in the house as my husband had gone to work. I went down to the pool, not to swim but just sit and read a magazine. Later, Phillip, who had been taking a nap upstairs woke up and the maid brought him down to join me. I played for a while with my baby then went into the house to do something, I can’t remember now. The maid was with Phillip so I felt he was safe.

    Some minutes later, I heard a piercing scream and abandoning what I was doing ran quickly downstairs. It was a horrible sight that met my eyes: my precious son had drowned in the pool!

    From the incoherent statement the sobbing maid made, I gathered she had left him briefing to get something from the kitchen and he had fallen into the pool in her absence.

    I could remember screaming and shouting, and I was even ready to drown along with him if I had not been restrained by one of our drivers who was around. Though he quickly rushed the boy to the hospital, it was too late. He was already dead!

    I was grief-stricken and nothing anybody said could console me. I wept all day and refused to eat. But even in my grief at losing our son, I could see the effect on my husband. He took the boy’s death badly. For days and even weeks after, he would stay in his room drinking and listening to very sad, melancholy music.

    When my family heard about what happened, my father came to see me without my mother. Two of my siblings were with him. My mother’s absence showed she was still angry with me over my choice of a husband. I felt bitter that she could not even put the past behind and come to see me in my time of distress.

    Later, we recovered somewhat from the tragedy and forged on with our lives. Before my son died, I had discovered I was pregnant again and the doctor, our friends and family kept reminding of that- that I needed to be strong for the new life growing in me.

    I had a baby girl some months later. We were happy for the new arrival in our home and I was hopeful that things would return to the state they were before we lost our son. Three years later, I gave birth again, to twin girls. Though my husband tried to hide it, I could see he was not too happy that I had had girls again. He had so desperately wanted a son, another boy that would take Phillip’s place.

    •To be continued next week

     

    •Send comments/advice/suggestions to psaduwa@yahoo.com, psaduwa007@gmail.com or 08023201831. The best feedback will be published soon!

    •Names have been changed to protect Nichole’s identity and other individuals in the story

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    I consoled myself with the fact that I was still young and fertile enough to have more children especially sons. I was ready to do anything in my quest to give my husband male issues as I felt instinctively that our future happiness depended on it. I confided my worries to one of my aunties and she promised to help. She said she knew a powerful man of God, a prophet who could help ‘turn my womb so I can only give birth to sons.’

    One day, she took me to this man who prayed for me and applied some funny smelling ointment on my stomach. He assured me that my womb would only produce males from then on.

    I believed him so much that when I became pregnant again some time later, I bought clothes for a baby boy. So, you could imagine my disappointment when I had another girl. Don’t get me wrong, I love my daughters and I think the world of them. But we live in a society where the male child is highly sought after and a woman who can’t give her husband males is deemed a failure, one who has not fully fulfilled her role as a wife.

    This time around, when Frank heard I had given birth to another girl, he did not even bother to show up at the hospital. It was one of my elder brothers who came to pay the bills and take me and the baby home. And it was two days after, that he came home from wherever he had gone to. I noticed immediately that he was quite withdrawn. He did not show interest in me or the baby unlike in my previous deliveries.

    I tried to find out what was the matter, but he refused to say anything. Then one day, he simply flared up when I asked him to help me keep an eye on the baby while I took a quick shower.

    “Am I now your baby nurse that I should carry the baby? Take her with you or leave her there! Don’t bother me!” he said.

    “But Frank, what’s wrong with your helping me with the baby? She’s your daughter afterall!” I pointed out.

    “Yes! She’s my daughter and that’s the problem! There are just too many of them! You think I married you to fill my house with girls? Woman, you better wake up to your responsibilities or else…! with that he picked up his car keys and hurriedly left the house.

    I knew I had to give him a son or my marriage would be in jeopardy. But try as I could, I could not conceive again. It was as if my womb just closed up. Worse still, my relationship with my husband continued to deteriorate. Before, he would come home straight from work as soon as he closed to spend time with me. Now, I hardly saw him. Sometimes, he would stay out for days and return without explanations. To keep the peace in our home, I did not ask questions about where he had been.

    Later, I started hearing stories of his escapades with other women outside. A friend of mine even saw him at a swanky hotel in town one day with a lady and told me how he was all over her. I ignored all these stories and focused on taking care of my children, all the while praying that God would remember me and give me a son.

    Things got worse, however. We had been together for about seven years when Frank simply walked out on me one day. I had gone out that day and returned to see him dragging some suitcases downstairs. His driver was standing nearby to help load the bags in the boot of his jeep outside.

    “Where are you going, Frank? You didn’t tell me you were traveling,” I stated, eyeing the bags.

    “As you can see, I’m leaving,” he said shortly.

    “What do you mean, leaving? To where?” I asked, my heart beating fast with fear probably.

    “Can’t you get it? I’m going away! I’m leaving you! And for your own good, don’t bother looking for me!” he said, as he moved outside to the car park. I followed quickly, shocked at the turn of events. I knew we were having problems but not to the extent of abandoning me and his family. How could he?

    I was not ready to lose my husband so going down on my knees, I pleaded with him to reconsider.

    “Please, Frank, you can’t do this to me! Don’t go, honey! Think of the children! They need you. And I can’t live without you!”

    But he ignored my pleadings and hurriedly getting into his car, drove away. It’s been over a year now and I have not set eyes on my husband. We only speak on phone when he calls to enquire about the children. I’ve pleaded and sent people to him to give me another chance but he remains adamant. Worse, I heard he has started living with another lady in one of his other properties in town and he is planning to marry her.

    To be fair to him, he still takes care of us by giving me money for our upkeep. But that’s not what I want. I want my husband back. Some people might think what happened to me is the law of karma or nemesis considering what happened to Frank’s first wife. Or I should have paid attention to my mother’s advice as they were words of wisdom from an elder. Whatever.

    Truth is, I still love and want my husband and I will do anything to get him back. He is not actually a bad person but his obsession for a son has beclouded his judgement. So, what should I do to win him back? Thank you.

     

     

     

    What do you think Nicole should do next?

     

    Send comments/advice/suggestions to psaduwa@yahoo.com, psaduwa007@gmail.com or 08023201831. The best feedback will be published soon!

     

    Names have been changed to protect Nichole’s identity and other individuals in the story

     

  • UNWTO to support Libya’s tourism development

    The United Nation’s World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) has signed the agreement with the Libya to help promote the country’s tourism. Under the agreement, signed last week during the 2013 World Travel Market (WTM) in London, UNWTO will provide support to Libya´s Ministry of Tourism in its strategic tourism development through institutional building and governance, sustainable development, marketing and human resource development.

    Priority will be given to institutional building and governance, with technical support focused on developing a cohesive tourism policy, strategy and action plan, as well as updating the sector´s legislative and regulatory frameworks and strengthening its organizational structure.

    “This agreement is a very positive step in reviving Libya´s tourism sector and affirms UNWTO´s commitment to Libya during this time of national rebuilding. Tourism will enhance the country´s global image and contribute to its sustainable economic growth and development,” said UNWTO Secretary-General, Taleb Rifai.

    “Libya has great potential for tourism. It was a tourism destination in the 60s and we want to prioritize rebuilding the country´s tourism sector. Tourism provides great opportunity for investment and employment and will give a better face for Libya,” said Libya´s Tourism Minister Ikram Bash Imam.

    “By joining hands with UNWTO, we will work to implement our plan for sustainable tourism development”, he added.

    The cooperation agreement will build on Libya´s Ministry of Tourism action plan towards sustainable tourism development with the support of the public and private sector.

    The agreement was the result of the UNWTO mission to Tripoli in June 2013 to assess the specific needs of Libya’s tourism sector.

  • Nigeria takes part in WTM

    Nigeria takes part in WTM

    Nigeria joined more than 150 other countries to participate in this year’s edition of World Travel Market (WTM).

    The event  held annually at Custom House, ExCel, London. The event  attracts around 50,000 of the global travel and tourism industry’s most senior executives who come to London every year to profile the hottest travel destinations.

    It attracted  thousands of visitors from all over the world who used the three-day event to make brisk travel business. For Nigeria, it is the first time in seven years that Nigeria’s contingent to the apex global travel event will not be led by the former Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation Director- General, Otunba Segun Runsewe.

    World Travel Market will showcase more than 180 countries and regions through its more than 5,000 exhibitors.

    The deals agreed at WTM will be the product content in travel companies’ brochures and on their websites which will ultimately decide where holidaymakers visit in 2014 and beyond.

    Reed Travel Exhibitions director, World Travel Market, Simon Press, said: “World Travel Market plays a vital role for both the global travel and tourism industry facilitating more than £2 billion in industry deals.”

    World Travel Market attracts many celebrities as destinations use their famous ambassadors to gain a competitive advantage.

    Celebrities attending WTM 2013 include Bollywood superstar Anil Kapoor. Kapoor also starred in Hollywood blockbusters, Slumdog Millionaire and Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol.

    Anil is joined by cricketing legends, Viv Richards (Antigua) and Brian Lara (Trinidad and Tobago). Former Manchester United forward, Dwight Yorke, and actor, Rudolph Walker (Patrick Trueman in Eastenders), were guests of Trinidad and Tobago.

  • CEPTAC launches book on slave trade

    A book, Memories of Niger Delta Slave Trade Route, by the

    Centre for a Promotion of Peace, Tourism, Art and

    Culture (CEPTAC) will be presented to the public in December at the Presidential Hotel, Port Harcourt.

    Speaking with reporters on the book, the CEPTAC president, Chief Mike Amachree, said the NGO decided to conduct research on the slave trade routes in the Niger Delta region of the country for the generation coming to know that the obnoxious trade once took place in the region.

    He added that the ultimate interest of CEPTAC is to have the state governments of the region to establish a slave museum that will attract tourists to the areas.

    “We want to showcase it so that our children will not forget about the obnoxious trade and we feel that creating monuments for it in the country will be a sort of tourist attraction as people will come to see the slave museum.

    “We want the government of South South to create a slave museum that will attract tourists unlike the small family slave museum in Badagry,” Chief Amachree said.

    Chief Amachree explained that having tourists from Europe and America visit the museum will earn the region needed funds for development as this could be a replacement of the reparation championed by the late Chief M.K.O. Abiopla.

    The research journey, according to him, started at the Port Harcourt Tourist Beach Resort with himself, Professor E.J. Alagoa of the History Department of the University of Port Harcourt and other members visited all states in the South South, including Imo and Abia states to gather materials.

    The CEPTAC president sad the compilation of the research material gave birth to the book that will be presented in collaboration with the River State Ministry of Culture and Tourism under the chairmanship of King Alfred Diete Spiff, the first military administrator of old River State and the current Amanyababo of Twon Brass in Bayelsa State.

  • Atlantic Aviation starts operation

    A new Nigerian helicopter-services operator, Atlantic Aviation, supported by one of the world’s leading providers of high-quality transportation to offshore oil and gas producers has begun flight operations.

    Atlantic Aviation, an indigenous company wholly owned by Jagal Group with technical service support given by CHC Helicopter, completed its first commercial offshore flight for Total Exploration &Production Nigeria Limited off the Nigerian coast.

    On its maiden commercial flight, Atlantic Aviation transported 10 employees and contractors of Total Exploration & Production Nigeria Limited from Port Harcourt Nigerian Air Force Base to their FSO Unity offshore installations with a Sikorsky 76C+ helicopter.

    Shaf Syed, Regional Director, Atlantic Aviation, said: “This is significant for Atlantic Aviation, but represents only the first days of what we expect will be many years of demonstrating how we can help oil and gas operators to go further and do more in Nigeria, one of the world’s fastest growing regions for this industry.

    “We are confident that the world-class technical service support we enjoy from CHC in the areas of training, flight and engineering standards will make Atlantic Aviation the most competitive helicopter operator in this market.”

    The twin-engine medium Sikorsky S76C+ helicopters already in Nigeria will be followed by several AgustaWestland AW139 aircraft and heavy helicopters.With its fleet, Atlantic Aviation can serve offshore operators in Nigeria with sufficient range to access deep-water and the frontier ultra-deep-water rigs and installations.

    Atlantic Aviation has established bases with efficient facilities and hangars in Lagos, and is developing a state-of-the-art operational hub in Port Harcourt

    Atlantic Aviation is a Nigerian company, wholly owned by the Jagal Group. The Jagal Group has been existent in Nigeria for over 40 years, serving the offshore oil and gas industry, amongst other sectors. CHC has provided services in 19 different African countries for a diverse mix of customers, including oil and gas operators and the United Nations. In Africa, CHC operates AgustaWestland 139 and Sikorsky 76 aircraft as it supports customers across multiple drilling programmes.

     

  • A new lease of Life for Tinapa

    A new lease of Life for Tinapa

    Driving down to Tinapa Resort from the main expressway leading to Odukpani, one feels the presence of nature with the hundreds of rubber trees lined up in a neat row. The resort itself, for first-time visitors, is always awe- striking.

    At conception, completion and opening, it held so much hope. It was supposed to be the beacon that would jump-start the tourism transformation of the Nigeria. But about six years since the doors of the business resort were opened and free trade zone kicked off, the lofty dreams and high hopes that heralded the project are giving way to disillusion as the project, so far, has failed to fly.

    Rather,the resort has been lurching from one kind of challenge to the other. Some entrepreneurs have braved the odds to set up businesses.

    Meanwhile, the huge facilities available for business are lying waste. The space has been overtaken by rodents. At inception, the vision was that six years down the line, the resort ought to be fully operational, both as a shopping resort for the whole of Africa and as a leisure resort.

    On the level of the leisure, the water park within the complex is active, receiving healthy amount of visitors, most especially during festivities.

    Lakeside Hotel, almost within the complex, is doing well under an experienced and competent indigenous manager. This has helped in steadily attracting business to the hotel.

    The Tinapa Free Zone and Resort also has facilities for retail and wholesale activities as well as leisure and entertainment. For consumers, the resort has about 80,000 square metres of lettable space for retail and wholesale made up of four emporiums of 10,000 square metres square each and smaller shops, warehouses and so on.

    An entertainment strip contains a casino, digital cinema, children’s arcade, restaurants, a mini amphitheatre, a night club and pubs. There is an artificial tidal lake that feeds from the Calabar River, a water park / leisure land and a parking space for about 4,000 cars.

    Business facilities include an open exhibition area for trade exhibitions and other events and a movie production studio commonly called “Studio Tinapa” or “Nollywood”.

    Tinapa was initiated by the former Governor Donald Duke as a way to boost business and tourism in the state. Over $350 million was spent on initial development. The first phase of Tinapa Business Resort and Free Zone, Calabar, was commissioned on the April 2, 2007. It is a 10-kilometre drive from Calabar by a roundabout route, but the Federal Government is building a more direct 2.5- kilometre access road to link it with the city. All these have not been optimally put to use.

    Although the resort is owned by the Cross River State, there are reports that due to the huge debt of the resort, the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) is to take over the management of the resort following a settlement agreement with the Cross River State government for the transfer of its controlling interest in Tinapa.

    By the agreement, AMCON is to buy back Tinapa’s debts, totalling N18,509.744.797.05, and provide the sum of N26 billion for the revitalization and resuscitation of the resort to reposition it as a private sector driven enterprise.

    Many in the industry see this as the tonic needed by the resort to rebound. The Nation spoke with the Chief Press Secretary to the Cross River State Governor, Mr. Chris Itta, on the AMCON take-over the resort. He explained that it was not the government of the state that negotiated with the AMCON to take over the place to reduce the huge debt burden currently hanging on the neck of the state as a result of the Tinapa project.

    He said by the arrangement, AMCON will not only remove the huge debt burden but also inject the necessary funds needed to revitalize the resort to the tune of about 26 billion. Itta said the founding vision for the project was for it to run optimally and create employment opportunities for the citizens of the state.

    He added that it was not that Cross River State government is divesting totally from the project, rather the state was still retaining a certain percentage equity.

    Itta explained further that the deal with AMCON would allow the state government to put money into other critical sectors. He said every month, the state government spends about N100m to run Tinapa. He added that during the Nigerian Bar Associaition (NBA) conference, more than N80m was spent to get the air conditioners working.

    He said the deal should not be politicised, but rather the concern is how it would help the state move forward and the government impact more positively on the people.

    For many tourism stakeholders, it is like the dawn of a new era that will place Tinapa on the path of achieving the vision behind the project. The fortune of the Nigerian tourism industry is intertwined with the success and failure of tourism in Cross River State, being the only tourism destination in Nigeria.

  • SAT showcases as Akwaaba begins tomorrow

    South African Tourism, the national tourism agency responsible for the marketing of South Africa, is showcasing at 9th Akwaaba Travel Market in Lagos, collaborating with the National Association of Nigeria Travel Agencies (NANTA) to encourage business travel and tourism between South Africa and Nigeria.

    South African Tourism will host its annual trade workshop event which is one of the leading attractions of the Akwaaba African Travel Market at the Eko Hotel Expo Centre in Lagos scheduled to hold from October 27 to 29.

    The trade engagement presents a one-stop avenue for South African product owners and suppliers to meet with Nigerian traders in order to create a win-win business partnership for both parties and enhance travel trade between both countries.

    South African Tourism booth will showcase exquisite varieties of South African travel products and offers for the Nigerian travellers at the Akwaaba African Travel Market exhibition.

    South African Tourism will be leading about 20 South African products, including hotels, tour operators, provincial tourism boards and the rainbow nation’s national airline carrier, South African Airways, to the trade workshop.

    Already confirmed to attend from the hotel sector are Tsogo Sun, Sun International, Protea Hotels, Rezidor Hotel, 54 On Bath and Intercontinental Hotel.

    Leading tour operators in South Africa, including Syavaya Tours, Legend Tours and Welcome Tours, will be connecting with Nigerian travel traders at the trade workshop.

    The tourism board of Johannesburg, the commercial hub of South Africa and Kwazulu-Natal Wildlife will showcase their rich tourism and travel attractions to potential buyers.

    South African Tourism will also host a cocktail networking function for the participants to wine and dine in an atmosphere of relaxation to round off the trade workshop.

    The annual South African Tourism trade workshop is part of the trade marketing strategies that have built a robust business travel and tourism relationship between both countries over the years.

    According to statistics from January to June this year, 40,097 Nigerians visited South Africa, representing an impressive 15.9 per cent increase from the figure of Nigerian travellers to South Africa last year during same period.

    As a result, Nigerians are gradually and fast taking South Africa as their leisure and business travel destination of choice.

  • Ikenne people set for Ereke Day

    All is set for the annual Ikenne Town Day also known as the Ereke Day. The grand finale will be held on November 2. The day offers indigenes of the town an opportunity to come together, celebrate their culture and common heritage and also launch or unveil developmental projects. The day is also being organized to attract tourists to the town.

    Ikenne is blessed with a number of tourist sites which include the Chief Obafemi Awolowo mausoleum, the May Flower School made famous by the late social crusader, Tai Solarin.

    Top among the activities at this year’s event is the launching of the late Chief Kolawole Oranti Youth Centre. Chief Oranti, a renowned industrialist, was the founder of the Ikenne Day celebration in 1977. The centre was built by his children in his memory.

    There also efforts to use the opportunity to launch a unique traditional attire that would serve as a kind of cultural identity for the Ikenne people.

     

  • Museum Commission lists 100 new monuments, sites

    The Director-General of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM), Malam Yusuf Abdallah, in Dutse said the commission had listed 100 new monuments and sites across the country.

    Abdallah made the disclosure at a five-day stakeholders’ sensitisation workshop on the declaration of monuments and sites in the North-West geo-cultural zone.

    He said the 100 new monuments and sites would be declared open for use to commemorate the country’s centenary and anniversary of the amalgamation of the Northern and Southern protectorates.

    “The commission has proposed 18 national monuments in the north-west geo-cultural zone.

    “Six of the monuments were proposed in Kano State, four in Kaduna State, three in Katsina State, two in Sokoto State and one in Jigawa, Kebbi and Zamfara respectively,’’ the director said.

    Abdallah said Nigeria has a total of 65 declared national monuments in 22 states at the moment.

    He urged all the states of the federation to expedite action on declaring cultural property as their state monuments.

    Also commenting, Alhaji Abubakar Abdullahi, who represented the Emir of Dutse at the occasion, commended the commission for proposing one of the new monuments for the state.

     

  • Abia to hold carnival

    The Abia State government is to hold the first-ever carnival where the indigenes of the state who are in

    show business will be urged to showcase their talents and let the people who have not seen them to see them and admire what they have been doing outside the state.

    Speaking in Umuahia, the Chief of Staff [COS] to the governor, Cosmos Ndukwe, said that the carnival, which has the theme, “showcasing our cultural heritage”, is part of the fruitful restoration and transformation of the state through displaying the rich culture of the state.

    Ndukwe said many people do not know that the sizeable percentage of those who make entertainment industry tick in the country are Abians, adding that the people of the state are eager to see them live.

    He explained that there are many tourism sites in the state, and that many more are being discovered on daily basis, stressing that the carnival will afford those coming for the event to see what the state has to offer in the tourism industry.

    The COS said: “This carnival will offer Abia youths a dynamic tool for self-expression and exploration and provide a platform for us to prove to the world what tourism destination we as a state have become”.

    Ndukwe said the carnival will feature rich cultural displays which will have financial rewards for the youths of the state who have distinguished themselves, especially in the social world.

    He said: “As it has always been the case, the reward would be to boost their endeavours, while serving as a formidable springboard for the upcoming ones. We intend to gather our best together for the world to appreciate”.

    The COS said the organisers of the carnival will exploit their relationship with the corporate world to source for funds and called other distinguished Abians both at home and abroad to identify with the noble cause.

    He explained that the state government is already talking with some of the corporate bodies and distinguished Abians to see how they can key into the great opportunity to help themselves, the state and the people.