Category: Southeast report

  • UNN joins youth platform NextU

    Pensions Alliance Limited (PAL) has added the University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN) to its youth-focused platform, NextU.

    The development, the company said, was in line with its position of creating value for Nigerians.

    UNN would join other universities viz:  University of Lagos, University of Benin, University of Port Harcourt, Obafemi Awolowo University and Ahmadu Bello University admitted last year.

    ‘NextU’ is the CSR initiative of PAL Pensions focused on providing knowledge and guidance

    for ‘Unleashing the Potential’ of young people on career, finances, entrepreneurship, new media, entertainment and life choices.

    Olushola Amusan, Laura Ikeji-Kanu, Tunji Andrews and Gossy Uwanwoke were the frontline speakers that mentored the students at the event.

    The panelists who came from various backgrounds representing; Financial Literacy, Investment, Employability, Career growth, Entrepreneurship and Art/Creativity and New Media; gave the students’ tips on how to be successful in their career and business, manage funds and invest wisely with small funds.

    The students were also thrilled by award winning musician Ice Prince Zamani, who has consistently proven himself through sheer determination and hardwork, a quality that brings the ‘NextU’ idea to life.

    Managing Director, PAL Pensions, Morohunke Bammeke said at the occasion: “The vision of PAL Pensions is to be the best PFA by creating value. PAL Pensions is that company that will always add value to you.”

    She encouraged the students to commit to lifelong learning to create sustainable success and charged them to go out and unleash their potentials.

    The event, targeted at young, social media savvy, forward-thinking students interested in not just career after graduation but also entrepreneurship was well attended by the institution’s students.

    They not only got the chance to learn from the experiences of the panellists, but they also got an opportunity to win fantastic prizes by taking part in the #SellYourself competition.

    “PAL Pensions is always interested in ways to impact the society positively,” said Sunmisola Mark-Okoma, Head, Brand Management and Corporate Communications”, adding, “this is

    why we started the NextU project: a project that aims at guiding young people through

    career choices and financial literacy. Basically, we are telling them that PAL Pensions would

    provide them with the support they need to become whom they want to become.

    University of Nigeria Nsukka is the first of three schools we would be adding to the Network this year.

    “This year, we are expanding the NextU platform to include ‘The NEXTU Academy’. The

    Academy would combine theoretical business & graduate school training with Practical workplace skills to raise workforce ready graduates.”

    She also added that an online programme tagged #Sellyourself would also run later in the year where young people can win various prizes worth over a million naira.

    Pensions Alliance Limited (PAL Pensions) is a licensed Pension Fund Administrator with over 12 years of professional experience in Pension Funds Administration, incorporated on April 14, 2005, to manage and administer retirement savings contributions of employees in Nigeria as a result of the Pension Reform Act of 2004.

    With a client base of over 400,000, the company’s vision is ‘to be the leading PFA, creating value.’

  • Easter succour for Ebonyi constituents

    While the Easter celebrations lasted, a member of the House of Representatives Anayo Nwonu representing Ebonyi State Ezza North/Ishielu Federal Constituency visited with the sick at Federal Teaching Hospital Abakaliki.

    During the visit, Mr Nwonu paid the hospital bills of some pf the patients especially nursing mothers and their babies at the hospital to enable them join their families for the Easter celebrations.

    At the announcement of the offsetting of the bills by the lawmaker, the patients broke into a dance as they praised the lawmaker for coming to their aid.

    The lawmaker also gave the patients some cash to enable them transport themselves back to their various villages.

    In reaction, one of the beneficiaries, Mrs. Chinyere Aleke from Okposi Umuoghara, Ezza North Local Government Area commended the lawmaker for bailing them out of the difficult situation they found themselves.

    She said, “I am very happy today because we have been set free by our representative at the National Assembly. The hospital discharged us but held us and insisted we must pay all bills before they allow us to go home. On Wednesday, we examined our condition here in the hospital and discovered that it is getting worse and we went into serious prayer asking God to come to our rescue. On that Wednesday, I led the prayer session and I told them that it is not only our Governor and Rev. Fr. Abraham Nwali, Senior Special Adviser to the Governor on Religion and Welfare that we have who always assist the needy, that we have some other public spirited individuals that can assist us and we must pray God to touch their hearts to come and rescue us.

    “At about 4pm on that day, Hon Anayo Edwin Nwonu sent his brother and one of his aides to come and ascertain patients from Ezza North/Ishielu federal constituency. They compiled our names and left. Today, he has visited us himself to clear our bills and we are grateful to him and pray God to replenish him. I have stayed in this hospital for two months and my bill is N150,000.

    “The hospital management chased us out of the hospital bed and took us to where they call ABS where we are staying without light and other amenities because of our inability to pay our hospital bills. We sleep there on bare floor with our belongings.

    Mrs. Nwosu Princess who hails from Ikwuato Idembia Ezza south local government area of the state said “we have been discharged since by the hospital management  but we cannot afford  our hospital bills. We removed from our hospital beds because we cannot pay the bills and the hospital management said we must pay the bills before they will release us. We sleep on bare floors, we have suffered in the hospital.

    While addressing the patients at the hospital before handing over the sum of N1,583, 000(one million five hundred and eighty three  thousand naira) to the hospital management as total bill of the 15 indigent patients, Hon. Anayo Edwin Nwonu said he was touched by the conditions of the women at the hospital.

    He noted that he cannot be happy celebrating Easter while his constituents were languishing in the ABS ward.

    Nwonu said, “I said let me visit you people to share the joy of Easter celebration with  you people who are my constituents who have been discharged but cannot afford their medical bills. We cannot leave everything to our Governor to attend and that is why we said let us you also voted into power compliment his efforts by helping you the much we can.

    “I did this type of thing last year when we flagged it off as our every ceremony activity and it is necessary that those who are in positions of authority to remember the needy like you people. So, we decided to come and visit you before Christ resurrects to enable you leave the hospital and go home and celebrate his resurrection.

    “I don’t know how I will go home, buy foods, drinks and start celebrating without you people being happy. This to me is not good and I have decided to come and celebrate with you. So, your happiness is your own happy and I am fulfilled that you are going home to celebrate the Easter after my visit.

    “It is God that brings out somebody to save the poor and we believe that he has done that to you by bringing us to come and visit you in this hospital.  So, we thank God for the opportunity to share with you what we have and he is the one that gives power and wealth.

    “All your bills have been brought to my office and I am going to pay all of them to enable you go home and celebrate the Easter. The beneficiaries are; Chukwuma Peace N98, 520, Aleke Chinyere N150,000, Nwosu Princess N170,380, Orji Salome N58,040, Ugochukwu  Rachel N156, 730, Onyeazi Onyekachi N107,490,  Uche Nneka N95,910, Eze Udochukwu N119,280, Okwor Annastecia N135, 040, Izzi Chineme N168,660, Elom Miracle N26,650, Ogodo Maria N90,590, Nweke Grace N64,370, Igwe Ugochukwu 97,905, Adaeze Ugoeze N43,690. Total of everything is N1,583, 000(one million five hundred and eight three naira). We will clear all of them so that you can regain your freedom and go home and celebrate Easter with your people.

    “I know that you people have stayed long in this hospital and money for transportation and feeding will be an issue. So on that note, we are giving N5,000 each to all of you.

    Mr Nwonu said he took the action to support the State Governor, David Umahi who regularly does similar humanitarian gesture through the Department of Religion and Welfare Matters.

    The Chief Medical Director of the Hospital, Dr. Emeka Onwe Ogah commended the lawmaker for the gesture and called on public spirited individuals to emulate him.

    He disclosed that the hospital has rendered selfless services to indigent patients.

    “It is a very good thing. Whatever thing you need to do to touch the lives of your people, I think that is the greatest thing God like and want us to do which is what the lawmaker has done. You can see the jubilation among the patients, it is so marvelous. It pains a  woman to come out of labour having the child and sleeping outside the comfort of her home. Today, Hon. Edwin Anayo Nwonu has given them comfort which is a great thing and we are calling on people, the rich and public-spirited individuals, to emulate this kind gesture. Our governor who is the first citizen of this state started this, he has been doing this and I know he will continue to do this and that is why some of his political associates are adopting that.”

  • Enugu council joins oil host communities

    The Aninri Local Government Area, Enugu State chapter of the Host Communities of Nigeria Producing Oil and Gas (HOSCON) has been inaugurated.

    HOSCON came into existence after signing into law the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) in 2017 by the National Assembly.

    It was the PIB that gave impetus and extended the rights and benefits of the host communities of oil producing states to other states that are producing oil and gas pipelines and oil depots which are now known as “oil impacted states” which Enugu is a member.

    Inaugurating the chapter, the Enugu state chairman of HOSCON, Dr Perry Iloegbunam explained that the PIB that where there is “refinery, petroleum depot or where pipelines pass through, will draw from Host Communities Funds”.

    “Though oil has been discovered at Igah and other places in Enugu state, but even by the spirit of PIB, Enugu state by hosting a depot and numerous pipelines is much more qualified and such has been recognized, admitted and certified as the 19th HOSCON state”, Iloegbunam informed.

    He listed other parts of Enugu where oil and gas have been found in commercial quantities that lie idle and waste as Isi Uzo, Eha Ndiagu, Oji River, Nsukka, Ezeagu, UDI, Awgu, Eha Alumina and others.

    The Aninri Local Government chairman of HOSCON, Chief John C. Eze said the inauguration was the beginning of another phase of human economic and social development in Aninri.

    He said, “Today is the beginning of another job creation and general empowerment of the teeming jobless youths in the local government area.

    “I can assure the people of Aninri local government that after this inauguration, the local government will witness what will be better described as simultaneous rejuvenation and bumper harvest of agric produce through HOSCON mechanised agric programme.

  • Rage in Imo oil communities

    Youths in Imo State threaten to shut down oil facilities over abandoned gas plant, reports OKODILI NDIDI

    Wherever oil flows, violence goes with it. In Ohaji-Egbema Council Area of the State, the discovery of crude oil once elicited much jubilation. Now, there is anger in the land. Why? The people think the federal government is taking them for granted, piping oil out of their land without paying attention to things that may give the locals a little lift. One of such things is a gas plant that has been abandoned in the area.

    Youths under the auspices of Egbema Elites have threatened to shut down oil facilities in their area if the Federal Government fails to complete the abandoned gas plant.

    The stern look on the faces of the youths, the energy and anger they exuded showed that they meant every word of the threat and consequently, danger is in the offing, except their demand is attended to with equal seriousness and commitment.

    The aggrieved youths lamented that the project which was awarded in 2001, has been abandoned for 13 years without any credible reason.

    They accused the Federal and state governments, as well as the oil companies operating in the area of deliberately marginalising the oil-producing communities in the state.

    Leader of the group, Francis Uzor, said that the community had been in total blackout for over 30 years, as the abandoned gas plant and other Federal Government abandoned projects within the oil producing communities of the state.

    Uzor, alleged that the Ministry of power had treated the people of Egbema community with discontent even, adding that the management of the abandoned gas plant refused them access into the facility.

    He said, “We are here to inquire why the Egbema Gas Plant which was awarded in 2001 has been abandoned since 13 years now. But unfortunately we have been shut out.

    “Egbema people are very peaceful people, we are not as restive and violent as people think we are. We are here to know if there is any way we can help out. Since I was born we have not had electricity yet we have the highest deposit of gas in the whole of Africa.”

    Also speaking, Ademachukwu Chimaraoke called on the anti-graft agencies to probe the N18b that was awarded by the FG to ensure that the project was completed.

    Chimaraoke said if the federal government failed to ensure that the abandoned project was revived in two weeks, the group would march to Abuja for a protest.

    He stated that not even the promises made by the vice president, Yemi Osibanjo,when he visited the state in 2017,that the abandoned gas plant would be revived in two weeks had yielded any fruit.

    The woman leader, Mrs Elizabeth Opara, said that if the federal government fails to revive the abandoned gas plant within two weeks, the women of the community would protest naked in Abuja.

    She asked the Federal Government to start engaging their youths for meaningful endeavours and not for thuggery and electoral violence.

    Sequel to the demands by the aggrieved youths, traditional rulers in the oil beating communities have demanded full implementation of Niger Delta plan.

    The monarchs particularly from oil producing communities in  Ohaji/Egbema Council Area of  the state, called on the Federal to fully  implement the Niger Delta Master plan without further delay.

    They said that the full implementation of the Master Plan will cushion the hazardous effect of the oil exploration in the area.

    The monarchs in a communique issued at the end of their meeting and signed by the  Chairman of the Imo State Oil Producing Communities of Nigeria , Eze Sylvester Okwudo, frowned at “total and deliberate neglect of oil producing communities in the state for the past 50 years by various administrations”

    They warned the oil prospecting companies to stop “provoking the members of their host communities through their nonchalant attitude”.

    The traditional rulers stated  that most of the oil companies operating in Ohaji/Egbema LGA have flouted all the agreement  reached with the oil producing communities, adding that such action and others were responsible for the growing tension and youths restiveness in the oil producing communities.

    They called on the Federal Government as a matter of urgency to give Imo State their due share as one of the coastal states in the country, adding that other coastal states in the country have received their shares of projects and other entitlements from the Federal Government.

    They appealed to the oil companies to fully implement all the agreement reached with oil producing communities in the areas to reduce tension in the communities

    The monarchs also demanded for immediate commencement of repair of all Federal Government abandoned projects especially the Egbema Power Plant.

    They opined that if the Power Plant is completed, the people of the area will enjoy steady power supply like other oil producing communities in other parts of the country.

    On the earlier ultimatum issued by the Ohaji/Egbema Elites over the abandonment of projects in the oil producing communities, the royal fathers gave their total support, while calling on the group to remain calm.

  • ‘How God saved me, my wife from herdsmen’

    For Mr. Augustine Nzedigwe Udealor, his family and the people of Mmiata Anam, Anambra West Local Government Area of Anambra State, April 4, 2019 would remain evergreen in their memories.

    Some group of persons suspected to be Fulani herdsmen had on that faithful day stormed the agrarian community around 5 am, killing no fewer than six farmers and leaving about 30 others with various degrees of injuries.

    Although the government had assured that the crisis between herdsmen and crop farmers in the community which led to the ugly incident has been resolved, there is still palpable apprehension among locals in the area.

    While some have fled their farms for fear of a recurrence, others temporarily stopped going to theirs, while some courageous ones resort to occasional visits to theirs farms.

    One of the survivors of the killings, Mr. Augustine Nzedigwe Udealor, was full of gratitude to God for saving his life and that of his wife, attributing their survival to divine intervention.

    Narrating his ordeal to the Nation, Udealor said they could have been among the dead if not that blinded their eyes from seeing where they hid.

    According to him, they had gone to work on their farm around 8 am when the herdsmen struck.

    Read aso: Ekiti governor regrets killings by herdsmen

    “We were working in a farm close to our house when a neighbor came to inform my wife about the presence of the herdsmen in the community.

    “My wife and the woman were discussing the matter without knowing that I was overhearing what they were saying.

    “It was not up to 10 minutes that some heavily armed men surrounded me with guns and machetes.

    “As soon as I screamed, they came after me, my wife and the neighbor. We all ran in different directions.

    “In fact, it was God that saved us because when they came searching for me, they couldn’t see me inside the bush were I hid, even though I was seeing them.

    “I hid there for some hours out of fear, because I didn’t know exactly where they were.”

    Udealor however said he later came out and was able to see his wife and the neighbor, after searching for them for a while.

    He said while one of them was wielding a loaded gun, others were holding machetes in their hands.

    He added, “My wife later told me that the herdsmen had killed one Chief Obugo Nnakwe while he was fetching firewood in his farm.

    “I even heard they killed four people in the nearby Iyiogbu farm settlements and burnt their houses before coming to our side.”

    Describing the incident as unfortunate, Udealor said it was a reprisal attack in revenge for the January 29, 2019 clash that led to the death of two herdsmen alleged to had raped wives of two farmers in the area.

    “When the farmers overheard their wives shouting for help, the herdsmen attacked them with cutlass, but the farmers overpowered them.

    “They collected the herdsmen’s cutlasses which they used to kill them,” he added.

    He said the herdsmen were later arrested and remanded in prison.

  • Hope for HIV-positive nurse, 24 years after

    For 24 agonising years she bore the pain, the stigma and the rejection that is often the lot of people living with HIV/ AIDS. She was battered, abused and dehumanised by the very company she risked her personal safety working for.

    She was abandoned by colleagues, family members and acquaintances but she remained resolute; she was not broken in body or spirit as she fought the attendant stigmatisation.

    That has been the travail of Mrs. Georgina Ahamefule, an auxiliary nurse, who got infected with HIV while working in a private hospital in Lagos in 1995.

    Now relocated to her Amuzi village in Ahiazu Mbaise Council Area of Imo State with her equally sick husband, Mrs. Ahamefule recounts her ordeal and her unsuccessful battle to get justice.

    She narrated her chilling encounter to The Nation.

    “This problem started since 1995 when I was working with a medical centre (name withheld) as an auxiliary nurse,” she said. “I was pregnant then, I was sick but not seriously sick. I thought it was because of the pregnancy, I went to see the doctor, who gave me some drugs, after which I came back but he told me he did some tests on me and he told me the result was out and he referred me to Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) without telling me the kind of test he did. I didn’t know what the result was; he just gave me a sealed envelope to see another doctor there.

    “When I went to LUTH, the doctor there opened the envelope and asked me to go for another test, it was there that they told me that I was HIV positive, that I had AIDS and was going to die.

    “What saved that day was my godmother who was working at LUTH then. I went straight to her and told her what they told me, she was the one that counseled me and told me that I was not going to die, that many people who are positive are still living. Meanwhile I was still pregnant so I went back to the doctor at the place I was working and he directed me to go and see his secretary and the secretary gave me an envelope and when I opened it, it was a sack letter so I left and due to the shock I started having problems with the pregnancy and I went back to the hospital and told the doctor and they did a scan and the result was that the baby was dead, so I had a miscarriage because of the trauma and I pleaded with the doctor to wash my womb and they said no that they cannot touch me because they don’t want their instrument to be contaminated but that was the same hospital where I contacted the virus as a result of exposure.

    “I wasn’t really feeling sick then but I was broken down by the way the management of the hospital treated me so I was directed to the Social and Economic Right Action Centre (SERAC) and they started counseling me and thereafter they approached the management of the hospital where I was working to recall me or pay me compensations so that I can start up a small business but the management did not agree and I had to sue them to court.

    “So when we sued them to court, the judges said I cannot come to court because I will infect them with HIV virus unless my lawyer will bring a foreign doctor who will undertake that my presence in court will not put their lives at risk. That was when my lawyer went to Appeal Court, that took a long time before we got judgment and I was allowed to come to court. We went to High Court and the matter lingered for many years, it was in 2012 that the first judgment was given. Meanwhile my lawyer was claiming N10 million from the management of the hospital because they didn’t care for me and it was in the course of my work that I was infected because there, they used to do a lot of abortion and other things that involved contact with blood and we as auxiliary nurses that used to clean up the place with our bare hands.

    “The court awarded me compensation of N7 million, I was here one night when my phone rang and my lawyer broke the news to me that I have been awarded N7 million by the court, that I should come to Lagos in the morning. I rushed to Lagos in the morning and before I got to his office, he has already assembled journalists in his office for a press conference. He has not given me the money but the whole world has heard that I got N7 million after then all the people that used to help me abandoned me because they thought that I have collected the money without informing them.

    Read also: Random jottings from HIV treatment centres

    “So from that 2012, my lawyer stopped calling me and I was kept in the dark about everything that was happening, meanwhile during the press conference at the lawyer’s office, I was asked by one of the journalists what I will do with the money, I told them that my priority was my son, that I will send him to school to any level, my lawyer promised me there and then that my son’s education will never be a problem but up till now he never asked after my son. When this was happening my son was in the secondary school, when he got admission into the university in 2013, I told the lawyer but he did not say anything, the money he said that I won I did not see it.

    “Finally another lawyer took over the matter and one day he told me that they have passed the judgment, that was in 2017, that what they have agreed to give me now is N2 million instead of the N7 million, and I said okay collect it, at least if I have N2 million I will be sure of my son’s education, but I didn’t see anything till now. Instead of the owner of the hospital to pay the compensation, he went to court and told them that I was dead.

    “My husband here is sick since January last year, he had a partial stroke but I thank God he is getting better. All these problems, I am not working, the little petty trade I do has collapsed because that is our only source of survival, there is no help anywhere, all my friends have gone. But when I was in Lagos many NGOs came to me, they will video me and ask me questions and they will promise that they were going to the USA to raise funds for me but I didn’t see anything, many people have used me to make money for themselves”.

    At last the fate of now forlorn and fragile looking Mrs. Ahamefule has gotten the attention of the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA).

    The Programme Officer, Gender, Human Rights and Care Support Services, Community Prevention and Care Services, NACA, Mr. Esor Fabian, who led a delegation on a visit to the victim’s family, regretted that she was put through such ordeal.

    He said that it is against the law to stigmatise people living with HIV, adding that the virus cannot be transmitted through mere social contacts.

    According to him, NACA will take up the case through relevant Civil Society Organizations to ensure that the victim gets justice.

    He also promised that she will be enlisted in empowerment programmes organized for people with similar challenges.

    He said, “It is a pity the way she was treated but NACA got to know about not quite long and we have gone ahead to speak with our collaborating agencies to ensure that she gets justice and thereafter she will be enlisted in our empowerment programme.

    “She should not have suffered such fate, it was most unfortunate the way people treat others like animal. It is wrong to stigmatize people living with HIV, most people do this out of the erroneous belief that one can contact the virus by associating with HIV positive persons. You cannot contact AIDS by mere shaking of hands or eating from the same pot with the person leaving with HIV, the virus can only be contacted through blood and fluid contact”.

  • EEDC sensitises schools, churches

    As part of efforts to enlighten its customers and bridge the existing knowledge and communication gap, the Enugu Electricity Distribution PLC (EEDC) has taken its sensitisation campaign to Schools and Churches within its coverage area.

    This was made known to by the Head of Communications, EEDC, Mr. Emeka Ezeh.

    Ezeh said that the initiative is in furtherance with the organisation’s resolve to ensure its customers are better informed of its operations and the dymanics of the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI).

    He also said that the exercise allows it the opportunity to ensure customers are well equipped with the relevant safety measures and rules to observe within their immediate environment.

    So far, some of the schools visited include: Spring of Life International Schools, Independence Layout, Enugu; Graceland College, GRA, Enugu; Nike Grammar School, Enugu; Government Secondary School, Enugu; St. Patrick’s Secondary School, Emene; St. Joseph’s Secondary School, Emene, Enugu; Gateway Secondary School, Trans Ekulu, Enugu, to mention but a few.

    On the other hand, some of the churches visited include: St. Mulumba Catholic Church, New Haven, Enugu; St. Peters Anglican Church, Emene; All Saints Catholic Church, Ibagwa Nike, Enugu; Mater Dei Catholic Church, New GRA, Enugu; Assumption Parish Nkwo Nike, Enugu; St. Jude’s Anglican Church, Oraifite, Anambra State; St. Mary’s Anglican Church, Uruagu, Nnewi, Anambra State, among numerous others as the exercise is still ongoing.

    Read also: EEDC commences upgrade of injection sub-stations in Enugu, Awka

    Ezeh said that this engagement is timely, as the rains are here and always come with windstorm, and those reached so far can better apply these safety knowledge imbibed during our engagements during this period.

    The decision to target schools is hinged on our belief in “catching them young”, noting that majority of our adults already have a poor orientation about electricity operations and usage, hence, the need to start with the children so as to build a better and safer nation.

    “We value our customers and care about their wellbeing. We need them to be alive to be able to use electricity and not to be used by electricity” Ezeh said.

    EEDC emerged overall first position in the 2018 cumulative Nigerian Electricity Management Services Agency (NEMSA) Safety ranking – a testament of sustainable safety practices which EEDC has consciously and consistently instilled in her staff and customers through the various trainings and enlightenment programmes.

  • 300 Enugu youths trained in biz management, customer service

    No fewer than 300 youths are currently being trained in Enugu under the Pan Africa Youths Entrepreneurship Development Program (PAYED) on business management and customer service with a view to inculcating competent business idea and capacity in them.

    The programme is sponsored by Cities Foundation.

    The project coordinator of the group, Chinwe Owhorji made this known during the kick-off of the four month training in Enugu, stating that the training would help youths know business strategies.

    Owhorji disclosed that the training would allow youths between the age of 18 – 35 to develop enough capacity to improve on their businesses and contribute to the nation’s economy.

    Owhorji disclosed that the group would connect the beneficiaries to financial institutions to start up their business, and help them secure access to loans.

    “Pan Africa Youths entrepreneurship provides support through Citi Foundation and funded by Techno Serve 2 for enterprising people to build competitive business and employ more people in their business. We are trying to get more youths to be financial literate, to rely more on themselves and be able to contribute their own quota to economic development of the country.

    “At the end of the training which lasts for four months, we will connect the beneficiaries to financial institutions to start up their business, get them access to the market and also partner with other internship organizations to help establish them”, she said.

    She stated that the group has trained and empowered about 280 youths in its first phase of the programme, adding that the programme is holding simultaneously in Abuja.

    “The Citi Foundation have partnered with Techno Serve 2 to deliver the PAYED programme to over 250 youths in Nigeria, between the ages of 16 and 35. The programme links youth to owners, managers, supporting them to launch new micro-retail start-ups.

    “The Citi Foundation takes a philanthropic approach to funding, and leverages the enormous expertise of Citi and its people to fulfil our mission and drive thought leadership and innovation. The Financial Literacy Session is an example of how Citi engages its employees as volunteers to deliver training in basic accounting, helping to maximise the impact of the grant to the PAYED entrepreneurs”, she disclosed.

    In 2018, Nigeria received over $1.3 million dollars in grants from the Citi Foundation to fund 6 programmes supporting young people to develop the leadership skills and entrepreneurial mind-sets required to compete in today’s economy.

    In some cases, the partnership with TNS have also expanded financial inclusions efforts to Nigerian communities, as entrepreneurs marry their business ventures with financial mechanisms that provide access to services to money transfer systems.

  • NYSC chief to Corps members: Embrace host communities’ culture

    Corps members deployed to Anambra State for their national service have been urged to embrace the culture of their host communities.

    State Coordinator, National Youth Service Corps (NYSC),  Kehinde Aremu gave the advice during the cultural carnival ceremony for the Batch ‘A’ corps members at the orientation camp, Umunya, Oyi local government area of the state.

    He expressed worry over the neglect of culture by members of communities, saying certain strange diseases prevalent in the society might not be unconnected to such neglects.

    He said, “Every corps member should be abreast with the culture of his or her host communities. All hand must be on deck to ensure we don’t lose our culture.

    “Our culture is what defines and unites us. Our geographical location also defines these cultural settings.

    “Our food is also part of our culture. That’s why we have strange diseases all over because of culture neglect. You can’t take it away from the disconnect from our culture.

    “Those who ignore their culture are invariably ignoring their existence and the provisions made by God for man to enjoy a flourishing life.”

    According to Aremu, the corps members first port of call soon after the orientation exercise were the palaces of traditional rulers and Presidents General of their host communities for proper integration.

    “The corps members are immediately integrated by the Igwes and PGs who are earnestly waiting for them.

    “Such integration goes a long way to assuring corps members of sense of belonging and security from pockets of criminality prevalent in the community especially during festivals,” he added.

    The event, which featured various cultural displays by corps members, attracted special dignitaries including the commissioner for Youth Empowerment and Creative Economy, Bonaventure Enemali and traditional rulers.

  • Abia oil communities flaunt cultural feast

    Over 200,000 persons, some from neighbouring countries, attended a carnival in Obehie, Ukwa West Local Government Area of Abia State conceived to tap the rich cultural endowments of the communities rather than depend on their crude oil deposits. SUNNY NNWANKWO reports

    Guests came from far and wide: Ghana, Cameroon, and Cote D’Ivoire, among other countries. Apart from the surging crowd of locals, other visitors streamed in from virtually every part of the Nigeria. In all, there were over 200,000 persons at the Ukwa carnival initiated to draw attention to the rich cultural endowments of the Ukwa people in Abia State.

    It was a delight for tourists. There were enough peculiar costumes to enthrall the onlooker, as were cultural ensembles, including dance groups.

    Ukwa area is blessed with huge crude oil and gas deposits, but the people are much aware that oil is finite, while their culture is inexhaustible. They want to celebrate the infinite above the finite, a theme that resonates with the Buhari administration which preaches diversification away from oil.

    Ukwa Land is made up of two local government areas in Abia State; Ukwa East and Ukwa West.

    The Ukwa people, according to researchers, are generally said to have migrated from the riverine parts of the Niger Delta.

    Ukwa East is said to be occupied by the Ndoki clan while Ukwa West is inhabited by the Asa Clan. History has it that the two brothers also have their kith and kin in Obigbo (Oyigbo) in Rivers State which were together with them before the Justice Mamman Nasir Boundary adjustment in 1976 carved out part of Ukwa Division and placed it in present Rivers State.

    One of the unique features of the Ukwa and Oyigbo indigenes is that they speak the same language and have the same cultural ties despite being in different states as a result the 1976 boundary adjustment.

    Ukwa people are agrarian in nature. They have oil palms in large quantity which many have opined to be the largest in the entire Southern Nigeria.

    Apart from the abundance of food, the Ukwa people who also share boundaries with some parts of Rivers and Akwa Ibom states is immensely blessed with natural resources, which the state is enjoying today. This is because the Ukwa people like their neighbouring Niger Delta communities also have crude oil deposits, which is why Abia State is as an oil-producing state.

    The large oil and gas deposits in Owaza-Asa, Ukwa West LGA, the largest centre of operation of SPDC on land in the entire OML 11 with over 158 oil wells, accounts for the presence of various oil companies in the area.

    Apart from Abia Palm at Ohambele in Ukwa East, where major cooking oil consumed within and outside the state is produced, the Industrial sand at Asa-Ugbo Bekee is also another economic generating deposit in the area. The Akwaette weaving which has surpass generations remains one of the trades bequeathed to the people by their fore-fathers that still thrive.

    There is also the Rubber Research Institute located in the Ukwa region because of the quantity of rubber deposit in the area.

    Research has also shown that Ukwa area has the potential of erasing the status of land-locked region away from the Southeast because the confluence town of Obeaku-Ndoki where Imo River joins the Blue River is only about 40 nautical miles to the Atlantic Ocean.

    The two cities recently attracted the interest of the federal government with the signing of Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the state governments for the establishment of an Economic City in the area comprising Ukwa East, Ukwa West and Ugwunagbo LGAs respectively.

    No wonder the federal government under President Muhammadu Buhari seeing the economic importance of the area approved the Enyimba Economic City when it was brought to his tables for approval.

    Just as the Buhari government is preaching diversification of the economy from dependency on crude oil, a group of like-minds from the oil-rich region of the state are already planning ahead for the two agrarian communities.

    These Ukwa West and East entrepreneurs, worried about the untapped natural and economic resources lying waste, have embraced cultural festival to tap the tourist potentials of the people.  The plan is to change the narrative from being oil-dependent communities to cultural oriented communities.

    They want to replicate and domesticate what many Nigerians including their sons and daughters travel as far as Brazil and Calabar to watch.

    They said that they intend to use the cultural fiesta to boost the economy of the state and to also showcase the rich cultural value of the people which the visitors may not have had the opportunity to come across. This is even as the event would create opportunities for the locals and others to meet and discuss with potential investors on how they can take their businesses further, and make Abia State a tourist hub.

    In an interview, the organisers who stated that the last edition of the carnival with the theme; Destination Uncommon, featured among other things: Royal Procession which was undertaken by the traditional rulers of Ukwa as well as their Niger-Delta counterparts, Community Cultural Procession, Carnival Band Procession, Display from various Cultural Groups from neighbouring states of Rivers, Akwa-Ibom, Cross River, Enugu, Anambra and Ebonyi including Reggae, Jazz, Hip-hop, R&B, Comedy, Talent shows and pageantry.

    The organizers added that the concert was used in the unveiling of ‘Eres Hermosa’ one of the biggest Spanish costumes that have never been seen in Africa.

    The carnival director, Mr. Emeka Don Alasoro said in as much they are not in any way trying to compare the Ukwa Carnival with any other one pre-existing it, they have already created an identity which they will like to sustain.

    “Ukwa Carnival is a worthwhile initiative borne out of the passion to promote our culture and tourism and at the same time, uplift the economic status of our people. It is expected that the event will create an enabling environment for prospective investors, both indigenous and international to visit Abia State and Ukwa land in particular to explore business opportunities and other investments.

    “This will help to facilitate our economic well-being and ignite speedy development of Ukwa land and Abia State in general.

    “In this connection, we are therefore optimistic that we are going to make Ukwa

    land an envy of Igbo land before a decade. Hence, our mantra remains; Connect, Celebrate, Relate and Showcase.

    “We are not in any way trying to compare Ukwa Carnival with the likes of Calabar Carnival. That’s never the motive. Our vision is different and likewise the aims. Cross River State is far older than Abia and Calabar Carnival is far older than Ukwa Carnival as well. If you have seen what we did in our maiden edition last year, you will agree with me that this year’s own will be more glamorous.

    Mr. Obum Mao Azunna, the Chairman of Grand Council of Niger Delta Youths Leaders who doubles as the Public Relations Officer of Ukwa Royal Heritage, while speaking on the choice of Obehie said it was due to the town’s equidistance to both Aba in Abia state and Port Harcourt in Rivers state, stressing that the town is also at the centre of the whole Ukwa area.

    Azunna who opined that the maiden edition last year recorded over 60, 000 participants expressed happiness that well over 200,000 persons attended the just concluded edition.

    On the opportunities and business potentials the carnival can bring to Abia State, Azunna said, “The carnival can open a huge channel for investors to see the potentials in Ukwa Land and Abia in general. The Obeaku Confluence which is just forty-nautical miles to the Atlantic Ocean is there waiting to be seen and developed, the Azumini Blue River is yearning for investors and tourists. The Asa-Ugbo Bekee which is the largest centre for industrial sand is here and need to be put into better use. Our oil palm produce and methods of production can be

    improved upon. A lot of people with several business interests will come here and they shall visit a lot of places and explanations will be made. We are hoping to shift attention away from the oil in Ukwa to other things that put youths out of the streets and gainfully keep them busy.

    “The carnival will promote what Ukwa is all about. Our land does not just produce oil and gas alone. We are not looking at that anymore. Ukwa people are agrarian people. This is why today; the robber research institute of the federal government is here and very fruitful. There in Ohambele where we have the Abia Palm Plantation.

    “Our Akwete clothes which the Igbo race has been known for back in the early days are still been produced here in Akwete. It is among the paramount things we are going to showcase.

    On insecurity, one of the organisers, Precious Ogbuji said, “Yes, it is true this is Niger Delta region, but it is the most peaceful and secure oil producing area in Nigeria. There has never been any reported case of security lapse in Ukwa Land for so many years notwithstanding that our people have been neglected over the years despite the weight of wealth in the land. We have great synergy with the military and the police. Here in Ukwa Land, Asa to be precise, we have one of Nigeria’s military bases, the 144 battalion which is just a stone’s throw from Obehie”.

    He re-emphasised that the event is nonpolitical, stating, “As you can see, the organisation that is championing this event is non-political and non-dependent on any company or organisation. The whole idea behind the Ukwa carnival was borne out of the passion to promote our cultural heritage. We made it that way because we want to sustain it and wouldn’t want a situation where one or group of individuals and even one company will see this event as theirs.

    “Major oil companies in Ukwa may have their social responsibilities to the communities, the state government may be there, but we don’t use our carnival as a prior mandate for anyone of them. The carnival has come to stay and Ukwa Royal Heritage will ensure that. We are not leaving the burden on anyone, but whoever identifies with us is welcomed”, he said.

    The Founder and Chairman of Ukwa Royal Heritage Limited, Mr. Ezinwanne O. Adiele who could not hide his joy over the attendance of the just concluded edition disclosed that they have started making plans for another edition that would be holding later this year, December to be precise.

    Adiele called on the state government, corporate organisations, agencies, manufacturers, industrialists, business people and investors to identify with this all important annual event to facilitate a speedy development of Abia State through Culture and Tourism.

    A situation he said, will ignite a laudable economic growth and balance, foster bilateral relationships and enhance local and international business connections.

    Adiele reiterated that a country like Brazil, which is today a known emerging economy in the world had leveraged immensely from her yearly Carnival to attract tourists from various parts of the world and as such boosting the economy of Brazil.

    He also named Trinidad and Tobago, Haiti, Cuba, Barbados, Jamaica, Dominican Republic, Bahamas, among others, who rely on their cultural and tourist potentials as an alternative means of boosting its economy.

    The Ukwa Cultural Carnival founder while stating that Abia State could achieve lofty goals within her socio-cultural and economic index if proper attention would be given to this passionate and fascinating project said that the ‘Ukwa Carnival Expo’ has all it takes to attract both national and international attention to Abia State tourism industry.