Category: Travels on Saturday

  • Abuja Bantaba: Stakeholders renew commitment to tourism marketing

    THE third edition of the Bantaba tourism speed dating

    was recently held inAbuja, and it was a success story. It

    was an opportunity for stakeholders in the industry to come together to discuss some of the salient issues affecting the sector and the way forward. With the Akwaaba annual travel fair, the foremost West African travel fair holding in Lagos, the Bantaba speed dating offers a platform for travel trade networking in the northern part of the country.

    Raising the marketing tempo of the tourism industry in Nigeria via-a-vis the Akwaaba platform, the 2013 Abuja Bantaba demonstrated the convergence power of the private sector as the driver of the tourism industry globally, when core and allied players in the tourism registered their presence.

    The one-day event that hosted a mini exhibition, matching travel buyers with sellers and allied tourism players also reduced the cost of individual marketing in Abuja and the North, vis-a-vis attracting buyers by using greater attraction through the speed-dating and marketing efforts of sellers with high-powered seminar session.

    The Bantaba did not only boost marketing and speed dating with face-to-face incentives through the one day buying and selling activities, but also widened stakeholders scope on growing and building the businesses and industry altogether.

    The speakers drawn from different tourism fields dealt with different topics allotted to them for discussion and in return touched on salient issues affecting the tourism industry and how they can firmly proffer solutions that would bring decency to the partnership drive for onward development.

    However, the organiser of the Abuja Bantaba did not only do their homework well to create the platform for buyers and sellers in the travel and tourism industry to grow their businesses, but also to cross-fertilise ideas on areas where the tourism sector can rank with others globally.

    The publisher of ATQ Magazine and organiser of Abuja Bantaba, Mr Ikechi Uko, who addressed stakeholders at the one-day speed-dating travel and tourism show said Abuja Bantaba will continue to improve on the content of the platform to position stakeholders’ business domestically and globally.

    Uko added that to boost the capacity of attendees, they decided to introduce more speakers and topics that addressed the immediate problems facing the tourism industry.

    Some participants spoke on the event. Movenpick Hotel Accra’s director of sales, Mr Andrew Asare-Boafo, said: “You can see that your efforts have been recognised. It gives us a good feelings, an appetite to do more, and for Bantaba to recognise us outside Ghana is a plus for us.

    “I am so amused and this award will turn out to be something good and it is going to be another challenge for us because it is not just that we have won an award, but the difficult aspect is to keep it and make sure that we keep the tempo to win again.

    “You know other hotels will be looking at us and will want to be there, so we have to work harder to keep it. The award is something that will motivate us to want to do more in terms of customers’ hospitality”.

    The Chairman, HRG and former President of the National Association of Nigerian Travel Agencies, Mr. Femi Adefope, who spoke on travel management companies, said that they do more and provide wide-ranging services, including taxi, parking(in-country), sourcing of meeting venues, video conferencing facility, among others.

     

  • ‘International tourists between January and April were 298m’

    A total of 298 million inter
    national tourists travelled worldwide between January and April 2013, 12 million more than in the same period last year, according to the latest UNWTO World Tourism Barometer.
    Prospects for the current tourism peak season remain positive with some 435 million tourists expected to travel abroad in the May-August period.
    International tourist arrivals grew by 4.3% in the first four months of 2013 to reach a total of 298 million, up from 286 million, despite a challenging global economic environment.
    Results were positive in all regions, with the strongest growth in Asia and the Pacific (+6%), Europe (+5%) and the Middle East (+5%) and weaker growth in the Americas (+1%) and Africa (+2%). By subregion, South-East Asia (+12%), South Asia (+9%) and Central and Eastern Europe (+9%) were the star performers.
    “International tourism continues to show an extraordinary dynamism,” said UNWTO Secretary-General, Taleb Rifai.
    “The 4.3% growth in the number of international tourists crossing borders in the first months of 2013 confirms that tourism is one of the fastest growing sectors of our times, contributing in a central manner to the economy of a growing number of countries” he added.
    Emerging economies growing faster Growth was stronger in emerging economy destinations (+4.6%) as compared to advanced economies (+3.3%), a trend which has marked the sector for many years now. By region, growth was positive in all regions, but results where rather mixed.
    Asia and the Pacific (+6%) saw the highest relative growth boosted by arrivals in South-East Asia (+12%) and South Asia (+9%).
    International tourist arrivals to Europe, the most visited region in the world, were up by 5%; an excellent result in view of the economic situation in the region. Central and Eastern Europe (+9%) continues to lead growth, while Southern and Mediterranean Europe (+5%) also turned in strong results.

     
    Africa (+2%) and the Americas (+1%) reported a rather weak growth in the first four months of 2013, though following the strong progress of 2012 (+6% and +5%, respectively). At the subregional level, results were rather flat in all subregions of the Americas except in Central America (+4%). In Africa, the 3% growth in Subsaharan Africa contrasts with even results in North Africa.

    Growth in the Middle East is estimated at 5%, though this figure should be taken with caution as it is based on still rather limited available data.

    435 million tourists expected to travel abroad during the tourism peak season

    Prospects remain positive for the period May-August, the Northern Hemisphere’s summer season. Around 435 million tourists are expected to travel abroad during these four months which account for as much as 40% of all international tourist arrivals registered in a year. The pace of growth might slow somewhat, as shoulder seasons tend to show faster growth than the peak season.

    International air travel reservations for May-August from business intelligence tool Forwardkeys support this outlook with a 4% increase in bookings for that period. The highest growth is recorded in international flight reservations from Africa and the Middle East (+7%) and the Americas (+5%), followed by Europe (+3%) and Asia and the Pacific (+2%).

    This outlook is confirmed by the UNWTO Panel of Experts Confidence Index survey which shows sustained confidence for this period, though with variations by region and activity. Confidence picked up significantly in Europe, the Middle East, among Global operators, tour operators and travel agencies. On the other hand, confidence decreased among experts in Asia and the Pacific, the Americas and Africa, as well as among experts in the transport industry.

    For the full year of 2013, international tourist arrivals are expected to increase by 3% to 4% in line with UNWTO’s long-term forecast of 3.8% per year for the period 2010 to 2020.

     

  • Hadur packages special tours

    Hadur Travel and Tours has put together

    special private tour packages to Israel. The tour packages, according to the company’s CEO, Mrs. Olufunke Taiwo, are made to suit individual clientele, groups or families.

    This is part of the efforts of the agency to develop private pilgrimage to Israel in Nigeria.

    Mrs. Taiwo, in an interview, said: “ The market for wholesale private pilgrimages by Nigerians is fertile. We are poised to give excellent tours to meet the needs of interested Nigerians.

    “The tours are designed so you can travel freely in a safe, organized and flexible trip with the free individuals from other countries.

    “ Hadur Travel and Tours is strategically working at making the Nigerian private holy land pilgrimage more flexible, affordable and attractive to all segments of the economy .”

    Mrs. Taiwo said the new packages will start running from September. “ These visits will be to all very important sites in Israel, including Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth ,Jordan, among others,”she said.

     

     

  • Making Nigeria truly ‘fascinating’ and beautiful to tourists

    The tourism industry is a very sensitive sector as it relies heavily on certain external factors to thrive. Image, perception and how the rest of the world sees a place are major factors in driving tourism in any country.

    So, a country might have all the best tourist attractions in the world- interesting historical sights, superb landscape and scenery, great culture, festivals, warm, welcoming locals and others. But no tourist will willingly visit if the image of that country is all wrong.

    That is the dilemma of Nigeria. It has all it takes-in terms of culture, natural wonders and a warm people- to be a major tourist destination, attracting people from all over the world and earning the country more money than oil. But with the way the country is perceived by outsiders as a very unsafe, corruption and crime-riddled place, Nigeria is a hard sell, tourism-wise. Ok, the Federal Government through its Ministry of Culture and Tourism is striving to place the country on the world tourism map with its launch recently of a tourism brand identity termed, ‘Fascinating Nigeria.’

    There is nothing wrong with the name. In fact, the brand experts can even call it ‘Mesmerising Nigeria’ or ‘Intoxicating Nigeria’ but what’s the use of a beautiful brand name when other essential factors for attracting tourists are missing? Travelers to a country want to experience something new particularly the local traditions and culture that are usually different from theirs and interact with the locals in a safe, secure environment.

    Now, every Nigerian knows, this is not one of the most secure places on earth. Even we, Nigerians are sometimes scared of our own country and think twice before venturing to certain parts. Not surprising with the insecurity in some parts of the North, kidnappings, armed robbery, ritual killings and other crimes prevalent today.

    The reality is that a tourist who wants to visit Nigeria needs a crocodile-thick skin and an ability to cope with tenth rate infrastructure and social amenities, the type that advanced countries grappled with over a 100 years ago and have since made tremendous progress.

    So, let’s get things right first. Create the enabling environment especially with good infrastructure and security and you won’t need a fancy brand name to draw in the tourists. For the truth is that, from my visits outside the country, many foreigners already find Nigeria a very fascinating though scary place. And one of the things that has aroused this interest in the country is our movie industry, Nollywood.

    Several years ago, a workshop I attended for female journalists in an East African country, gave me an idea of the strong hold these movies have especially on the African continent and the diaspora. When some of the participants at the programme found out I was from Nigeria, they got really excited and started bombarding me with questions. Most of them were related to our movies and some of the stars.

    “How’s Genevieve Nnaji? What about Omotola and Rita Dominic? We want to meet Jim Iyke! Can you link us?” they demanded. In my mind I was like: “Shuo! Wetin you dey find Jim Iyke for? Abi beating dey hungry una?”

    The way they were talking, it was like I live with these movie stars or we interact every day. They don’t understand that these people have their own lives to live and I have mine. And the only time I get to see or even meet them is during work like in one-on-interviews, press briefings or on the red-carpet at shows, movie premieres and other such glamorous events I attend especially during my days covering the fashion and style beat.

    Anyway, one of the participants, I think a Kenyan woman later complained about the ‘negative’ effects of our movies on marriages in her country.

    “Your films are causing marital discords in many homes!” she declared. When I asked why, she explained:

    “Some housewives sit all day watching these films and their house work suffer as a result. They won’t cook or clean the house. And when the husband returns from work in the evening to a dirty house with the wife looking unkempt herself, and no food, what do you expect? Quarrels and fights!”

    From this, Nigeria is lucky to have a powerful tool like a film industry that has created awareness about the country and which can benefit the tourism sector. For instance, through holding film festivals and other movie-related activities that will draw in movie buffs from all over. Movies and (other forms of popular culture like pop music) are powerful medium which create potent images about a country and its people. The images could be good or bad. For instance, many Nigerians got their first perception of America through Hollywood. Through many of their films, America was portrayed as an Eldorado, a land of ‘milk and honey.’ It’s only when you travel there, you realize its all propaganda, that the U.S is not the perfect place or ‘heaven on earth’ it’s portrayed to be.

    So, how do outsiders see us through the eyes of Nollywood? We are viewed as a money-mad, criminally minded, desperate people who would do anything including committing the most heinous crime for money. This perception was got from the themes that run through most of the films such as rituals, voodoo and witchcraft, crime, 419, kidnapping, assassinations, armed robbery, prostitution and others. They don’t understand that just like in other countries, we have good as well as bad Nigerians. They only see the bad ones who taint the rest with their ‘badness.’

    This is something producers, directors and other stakeholders in the sector need to look into so the rest of the world don’t see us as the voodoo capital of the world. I think that title rightfully belongs to our neighbours, Benin Republic where voodoo is like a state religion and there’s even an annual voodoo festival there.

  • Intercontinental Lagos begins operation

    Intercontinental Hotels Group (IHG) has opened its doors for guests signalling the commencement of operation. The property in Lagos is the brand’s first in West Africa.

    The 352-room Intercontinental Lagos is located on Victoria Island, Nigeria’s business city and diplomatic hub, and home to many multinational companies.

    Sitting magnificently close to Lagos creek, the 23-story hotel offers guests stunning panoramic views of the Gulf of Guinea. Lagos is the largest city in the country, as well as one of the biggest and fastest-growing cities in Africa.

    The hotel is set to appeal to local residents and international travellers alike with four restaurants and stylish bars on offer.

    Ekaabo, which in semantics and offerings welcomes all to an all-day dining restaurant, serves up a blend of Nigerian and international cuisine, both buffet and a la carte. Its outdoor option is a beautifully terraced arena adorned by a majestic waterfall.

    Another dining option is Milano, offering authentic Italian cuisine. For those after Far Eastern fare, the hotel’s Chinese restaurant, Soho, is the ideal option. At the hotel’s poolside bar, PS/SP, guests can choose from a variety of healthy light meals and drinks, while they enjoy a relaxed atmosphere, close next to the hotel’s Zen garden.

    For event planners and business travellers, the hotel offers state-of-the-art facilities. Its Grand African Ballroom can seat up to 1,200 people with additional six other meeting rooms, two boardrooms and business facilities. The hotel also features a luxurious health and fitness centre which includes a sauna and steam room and three beauty treatment rooms.

    “Given its excellent location, Intercontinental Lagos is perfectly placed to give our guests access to central business areas, pristine beaches and some of the best entertainment options in Lagos,” said Didier Coeln, General Manager of Intercontinental Lagos.

     

    “We also understand that our guests value authenticityand want to experience the local culture. Our concierge team looks forward to sharing their local knowledge of Lagos so guests can enjoy an authentic and enriching stay with us.”

    Pascal Gauvin, Chief Operating Officer, IHG, India, Middle East and Africa commented: “We are excited to debut our first hotel in Nigeria. With its thriving economy and abundant natural beauty, including spectacular waterfalls and numerous national parks, Nigeria is an ever growing business and tourism destination. We look forward to further expanding our presence in the region as part of our continued growth.”

    InterContinental Lagos is the sixth InterContinental hotel in sub-Saharan Africa. Over the next five years the hotel is due to be joined by an additional two InterContinental hotels in Senegal and Uganda.

     

  • NCPC boss inaugurates medical team

    The Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Christian Pilgrim Commission (NCPC), Mr. John Kennedy Opara, has inaugurated the Federal Medical Committee for the 2013 Christian pilgrimage exercise.

    Inaugurating the committee in his office in Abuja recently, the NCPC helmsman charged members of the committee to maintain high sense of integrity and honesty in the discharge of their assignment. He urged them not to be involved in any manipulation, but should ensure that honesty and integrity are considered always.

    His words: “Let us agree that in honesty and integrity that we are able to give all”.

    Mr. Opara stressed that the knowledge of man is limited, but only God has the ultimate knowledge, hence the need for the medical personnel to depend completely on God’s direction and not their own professional knowledge. Consequently, he urged them to always give praise and appreciation to God for what he has done and what he will do in the characteristics of David in the Bible.

    The NCPC boss scored the performances of the past federal medical committees in the last three and four years high, thus he tasked them to maintain the same tempo if possible to surpass their records.

  • Ife people celebrate Oranmiyan Festival

    Oranmiyan was one of the seven sons of Okanbi, the only child of Oduduwa, the progenitor of the Yoruba.

    The legend, Oranmiyan, despite being the grandson of Oduduwa was the pioneer Alaafin of Oyo. He was famed as a strong enigmatic leader who led his people into a path of greatness that lasted several centuries, leaving a heritage that lasts till today.

    After establishing Oyo, he left and conquered the Benin people and again founded the Benin Kingdom. After several wars and conquests, Oranmiyan returned to Ife, the cradle of the Yoruba and was the sixth Ooni of Ife.

    He later joined his ancestors. The place where the staff of Oranmiyan lies in Ile-Ife, Osun State is now a centre of tourist attraction. This great legend that has continued to shape the destiny of a race deserves to be celebrated as a unifying force for the Yoruba people. Oranmiyan is a unique name that has occupied a column of Yoruba history as a warrior, conqueror and legend.

    An organization committed to the development of Tourism in Nigeria, FLABSY Travels & Tours has received the approval of the Ooni of Ife, Alaiyeluwa Oba Okunade Sijuwade, to organize a festival which would bring all Ife indigenes and the entire Yoruba at home and in diaspora like Brazil, Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, Cuba, United States of America etc. together and use the platform of the festival to identify and bring to the fore a unique and binding tradition for the Yoruba people, utilise the platform to propagate Oranmiyan as a central figure in Yorubaland and explore all creative means to ensure that through the festival celebrations, Oranmiyan staff becomes a tourist haven, ensure that the festival is enlisted in the calendar of the Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation and the World Tourism Calendar, achieve a top-of-the-mind festival event for Odun Oranmiyan and create awareness for Ife indigenes at home and abroad use the platform to drive investment opportunity to Ile-Ife.

    The festival event would be devoid of Political affiliations or leanings such that every Yoruba man would be eager to attend yearly and attract corporate organizations that may use the festival opportunity to showcase their brands as well as compete for sponshorship of the festival to achieve optimum mileage and revenue generation.

    The significance of Odun Oranmiyan cannot be over-emphasized, as it is the festival that will unites the people together. It is also a celebration of a deity and warrior of the Yoruba. Therefore, FLABSY Travels & Tours is determined to celebrate Odun Oranmiyan 2013 in August 2013 so well that people will want to be associated with the annual festival not just as Ife people but as citizens of Osun and Yoruba in general. Oranmiyan is arguably the most deified of the whole Yoruba deities. He was only the Yoruba King that was confirmed to have established other towns, like Oyo and Benin, became their King and later returned to his abode and also became a King before his eventual transformation as denoted in the Oranmiyan Cenotaph.

    The Oranmiyan Cenotaph is a renowned tourist centre that has drawn million of visitors to Ile-Ife and has continued to do same. The name has appeared in many cultural and historical books. Oranmiyan is a religion to many in Yoruba land as it is being worshiped while they visit the Cenotaph to pay homage and reverence to the deity.

  • Tantalizers forges ahead

    Tantalizers Plc, quick service restaurant chains, is cur

    rently carrying out massive remodelling of its stores, all in a bid to serve its customers better.

    Determined to reposition the brand and deliver value to its customers, the phase revamping exercise has been completed in the Victoria Island, Tejuosho, Akoka and Lekki stores.

    The most recent addition is the one at Allen Avenue. The interior of the store now carries an attractive, cozy and exciting look. Homely and comfortable, the dining experience will also be one to remember as the store now boasts of a rich array of breakfast menus in addition to delicacies like asun

    In a statement in Lagos, Promotion Manager, Tantalizers Plc, Mr Toluawa Oyetayo, said: “Work is currently ongoing in three outlets in Ibadan and two in Abuja. The revamping exercise underlines the company’s passionate and tireless drive to give her customers the best in terms of ambience, quality meals and services.”

    Tantalizers Plc currently has outlets spread across Lagos, Abuja, Ibadan, Port Harcourt, Akure, Ondo, Ado- Ekiti, Ilorin, Ijebu Ode and Abeokuta, while the company is set to break new grounds in the next few months.

     

  • Ezaa Marks Oke Aku Festival

    The New Yam Festival of the Igbo ( Iwa ji in Igbo language) is an annual harvest festival by the Igbo people held at the end of the rainy season in early August.

    The Iwa ji Festival (literally “new-yam eating”) is practised throughout West Africa (especially in Nigeria and Ghana) and other African countries and beyond, symbolizing the conclusion of a harvest and the beginning of the next work cycle.

    The celebration is a very culturally based occasion, tying individual Igbo communities together as essentially agrarian and dependent on yam.

    Yams are the first crop to be harvested and are the most important crop of the region. The evening prior to the day of the festival, all old yams (from the previous year’s crop) are consumed or discarded. The next day, only dishes of yam are served, as the festival is symbolic of the abundance of the produce.

    Traditionally, the role of eating the first yam is performed by the oldest man in the community or the king (igwe). This man also offers the yams to God, deities and ancestors. It is believed that the position bestows the privilege of being intermediaries between their communities and the gods of the land. The rituals are meant to express the gratitude of the communities to the gods for making the harvest possible, and they are widely followed despite more modern changes due to the influence of Christianity in the area.

    The day is symbolic of enjoyment after the cultivation season, and the plenty is shared with friends and well-wishers. A variety of festivities mark the eating of new yam. Folk dances, masquerades, parades and parties create an experience that some participants characterize as “art”; the colourful festival is a spectacle of exhibited joy, thanks and community display.

    Palm oil (mmanu nri) is used to eat the yam. Iwa ji also shares some similarities with the Asian Mid-Autumn Festival, as both are based on the cycles of the moon and are essentially community harvest festivals.

    In recent times, the celebration, which used to be the greatest festival of the year in most communities in Igboland, has become endangered. In fact, some communities have stopped celebrating it except by a handful of the people who do so quietly.

    Two major reasons have been blamed for this. The coming of western education and Christianity, especially as the celebration was seen as a pagan or traditional religion celebration.

    However, in the land of Ezaa Ezekuna in Ebonyi State, the new yam festival known as Oke Aku Festival is still revered and celebrated with pomp and grandeur. The festival marks the commencement of a new calendar year for the Ezaa.

    Ezaa are a north eastern Igbo sub-group in south eastern Nigeria. The Ezaa are direct descendants of Ezekuna and his wife, Anyigo. They are, therefore, often referred to as Ezaa Ezekuna.

    Ezaa people live in virtually all three senatorial zones of Ebonyi State and beyond, but are concentrated in Ezaa North, Ezaa South, Onicha, Ishielu and Ohaukwu local government areas and even in some parts of Enugu State.

    Onueke is the ancestral headquarters of the Ezaa, one of the most populous clans in Ebonyi State of Nigeria, hence the Oke Aku Festival takes place in the town.

    The traditional Ezaa in these areas still return to Onueke to offer sacrifices to the graves of their progenitors. Coincidentally, Sacred Heart Parish, Onueke serves as the headquarters of Christianity for Ezaa Catholics.

    Onueke has been quite important, politically speaking. It used to be the headquarters of the old Ezzikwo Division. It was also the headquarters of the old Ezaa Local Government Area. Right now, it doubles as the headquarters of the Ezaa South Local Government Area and Ebonyi Central Senatorial Zone, comprising Ezaa South, Ezaa North, Ishielu and Ikwo local government areas.

    Onueke derives its name from the famous Eke Imoha, one of the oldest and biggest markets in Ebonyi State. The Eke Imoha Market is central to the economic life of Ezaa people. This is where the people sell their rich agricultural produce. Mainly farmers, the Ezaa produse yams, cassava, rice, cocoyams, and many other crops in abundance.

    These food crops, along with many other modern wares, are bought and sold in the Eke Market which is held every four days. The other markets in the Ezaa area include Awho, Nkwo, and Oryie. Eke is considered the first and biggest of these markets.Hence during this year’s celebration, the traditional rulers asked the person responsible for the recent facelift given to the market. And when the Chairman of the Ezaa South Local Government Area, Laz Ogbee, indicated that he was the one responsible, the traditional rulers immediately gave him a chieftaincy title of Ochia Aha 1 of Ezaa Ezekuna.

    The seriousness and tenacity of purpose with which the people of the area have held on to the festival and their other traditions and customs is seen as a welcome development by Hon. Ogbee, himself a proud Ezaa man.

    “It is good that we the Ezaa have continued to celebrate the Oke Aku Festival, especially in this era when serious efforts are being made to ensure that the Igbo language does not go into extinction”, said Hon Ogbee.

    For the Ezaa, it signifies an end of a planting season, especially the planting of yam and the beginning of the consumption of new yam. Yam is so celebrated in the Ezaa land and the Igbo culture because yam is regarded as the king of crops.

    The 2013 celebration was no different to that of previous editions. It was indeed a gathering of who is who in the Ezaa nation as well as invited friends across the nation during the grand finale at Ezaa Cultural Centre, Amana, Ezza South Local Government Area.

    In attendance where the Governor, the Deputy Governor, the Speaker of the State Assembly, members of the National Assembly and State Assembly from the state and captains of industry.

    According to Hon Ikeuwa Omebe, “the celebration for ages has never failed since it was instituted by Ezekuna, the ancestral father of Ezaa people centuries ago. The 2013 was very significant in the sense that it was happening at a time when Governor Martin Elechi wants to re-enact those cultural practices and virtues that could make Ebonyians greater than they can imagine through his attitudinal change policy which emphasises achieving a purpose in life through good character”.

    On the significance of the festival, Omebe noted that no one dares harvest or sell new yams unless the festival takes place or else there will be fatal repercussions.

    “If there is no Oke Aku, we can’t sell or eat new yam anywhere in the Ezaa land. If you do, then you are to experience deaths in your family. People will start dying gradually, so many unusual things will start happening in that person’s family”,Ombe said.

    Historically, Ezaa have to celebrate it first before any other clan in the old Abakaliki block. This is because Ezekuna, their progenitor is believed to be the eldest of the four sons of Anakewhaliki among the four major clans in the bloc, the other three being Izzi Nodo, Ikwo Noyo and Ezekoma, otherwise known as Agba.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Izzi can be found in Izzi, Ebonyi and Abakaliki local government areas of the state while Ikwo Noyo clan are found in Ikwo local government area. Ezekoma people are otherwise known as Agba and can be found in the present day Ishielu Local government area of the state.

    This is what Omebe meant when he said, “Ezzas have to do it first before any other clan in Abakaliki. After Ezza, Ikwo and then Izzi before other clans will then celebrate theirs. Every Ezza man must come over to partake in this Oke Aku festival irrespective of political affiliations or differences”.

    “Naturally we used to do it at Orinte. As time went on it was shifted to the stadium, later the governor came and built a cultural centre for the people here in 2009. This place is called Ngamgbo Ezzekuna, it is where Ezekuna, the progenitor of the Ezzas lived, died and was buried. That small hall there is his house”.

    At the Ngamgbo Ezekuna, one could see the mud hot where the progenitor of the Ezza nation lived and died. Behind it is the new cultural centre built by Governor Martin Elechi to promote and sustain the culture of the people. The two structures present a vivid juxtaposing picture of the history of the people- the past and the present.

    “Oke Aku is a period when we sit together and reflect on the past and make projections for the future advancement and progress of the people. This is a time used to unite us. It gives us the opportunity to iron out differences and make peace with one another”.

    Thus, in a goodwill message, Governor Martin Elechi sued for peace in the land arguing that no meaningful development can be achieved in an atmosphere devoid of peace and tranquillity.

    Elechi represented by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG) Chief Fidelis Mbam thanked the people of the area for their contributions to the development of the state and promised more democracy dividends to the people provided they continued to remain law abiding.

    For Chairman of Ezza South Local government, Mr Lazarus Ogbe, who was the motivating force behind the 2013 Oke Agu Festival, the 5 days event was a time of reconciliation that brought peace.

    “It reminds the good people of Ezzas that the Oke Aku Festival was the main culture still remaining that draws both the families in Diaspora and those within together for collective progress”, Ogbee said.

    The Chairman who was visibly surprised at the Chieftaincy title of Ochi Agha 1 which literarily means the war general conferred on him by all the traditional rulers in the area, said such titles will not only encourage him to do more for the Ezza nation but will also encourage others to contribute their own quota to the overall development of the people, the state and country in general.

    It is hoped that the colourful celebration with its message of peace will impact into the people the need for peaceful co-existence with themselves and there neighbours especially during the forthcoming local government area elections. ENDS

     

     

  • Jades ups the ante in Abuja

    Jades ups the ante in Abuja

    Within the last couple of years, the Nigerian hospitality industry has witnessed a kind of steady growth with the current atmosphere of peace under a democratic polity.

    With the robust hospitality climate, the drive to acquire a certain per cent of the market share has seen some of the unbranded hospitality outfits coming up with new and innovative services.

    The latest is a new hospitality outfit,Jades Hotels, billed to open today in Wuse Zone 5, Abuja.

    The opening of the 60-room hotel, according to the management of the hotel, would be performed by Governor Theodore Orji of Abia State.

    However, knowing the competitive nature of the hospitality market in Abuja, the hotel general manager, Mr. Varun Sivanandan, said Jades was set to revolutionize the industry with certain innovative signature services.

    The hotel general manager, who was upbeat about the official opening ceremony, said it would offer the hotel the opportunity to showcase its new approach to customer satisfaction and the running of hospitality business.

    Sivanandan, an Indian and graduate in hospitality management with added exposure of managing top rated hospitality outfits in India and Dubai, spoke on his desire to take Jades Hotels to the next level.

    He explained that even though he was new in the Nigerian hospitality industry, he said guests satisfaction was the key thing, anywhere in the world in the hospitality business.

    His words: “I have had experience in a four-star hotel in India and at the international level. I can take Jades to the next level. I am a degree holder in the hospitality.”

    The hotel is a mixture of luxury and business. The hotel’s facilities cut across different categories just to cater for an eclectic market.

    Many believe that the hotels in Abuja are too many, leading to cut-throat competition.

    On this, Sivanandan disagreed. He said: “There is what we call segmentation in hospitality, and competition in the industry is a welcomed development. It is difficult for the customers to get value for money with services in the hotels without competition. The mere fact that you have hotels being in short supply when you have major events in Abuja has to do with hotels being in short supply. Still the market is open. Operators of hotels would always find their on level when it comes to services and tariff. We have a class and we have out target market here in Abuja.”

    According the manager, the hotel intends to build a solid reputation based on personalized service.

    “We serve each of our customers, according to his or her needs. We will not serve the way we serve the other person because you have different personalities. So it is segmented according to the needs of every guest. That is why we go an extra mile to serve you.

    “One of the things we do to give you personalized service is gueridone service, that is, we can prepare a mile with the chef standing in front of you. For example, you ordered for eba, they will just prepare the meal right in front of you. These are part of the innovations we are bringing to the industry.

    “There is a certain level of satisfaction for you to see that the food you are going to eat is not being brought from the back of the house, but it is prepared right in front of you.

    “We also have special delicacies from the different parts of the country. We will also celebrate Nigerian cuisines. We have delicacies like isie ewu, ugba and pepper soup of all kinds. We will also do continental cuisines. We will have specialty dishes from different parts of the world.

    “We are planning to do different theme nights at the pool side areas. In Abuja, we have all types of customers. The theme nights would try to cater for different segments of the market at any given day. One, for example,during India Night, the cuisines and setting for the night would be Indian. The same applies to other nationalities.

    “There are many hotels in Abuja, but there is still space for more. The market is not saturated as some people wrongly believe. Once you are ready to offer something special to the industry, there would be room. That is what we intend to do.

    “We also have a Wifi for our in-house guests. We also have free gym for in-house guests. There is a certain category of massages that is free for in-house guests. We really want to make the difference in Abuja,”he said.

    He vowed that Jades would not be a flash that would fade off a few years after throwing its doors open. This, the hotel intends to achieve through aggressive training of its staff and maintenance of facilities.

    “We are embarking on the training continuously to make our staff understand the need to maintain the facilities.

    The hotel is tastefully designed. It gas extensive facilities for guests like specialty restaurants, bar gymnasium and conference and banqueting facilities. You should know that the hotel the art of relaxation. That informed are going out of our way, to create a new hospitality experience that we are bringing to Abuja.”