Category: Sunday magazine

  • Atilade cautions politicians against inciting statements

    The South West Chairman of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Archbishop Magnus Atilade, has appealed to politicians to be civil, respectful and considerate as they go about their electioneering campaigns.

    He spoke at the CAN and faith- based organisations’ meeting with one of the governorship candidates in Lagos recently.

    Over 24 faith-based organisations, including the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN), College of Bishops, Coalition of Churches in Nigeria (CCN), Patriotic Christian Leader Forum and Christian Welfare Initiatives (CWI), among others, participated in the meeting.

    Atilade hinged the success of the forthcoming elections on the willingness of politicians to remain civil and avoid statements capable of setting the nation on fire.

    He pointed out that Nigerians are tired of empty promises from politicians but governance with human face and profound strategies to create employment, security and stable power supply.

    According to him: “Nobody gets to any position of authority except ordained by God and under no circumstances should any politicians cause civil unrest with their uncivil utterances.

    “Politicians should not destroy the posters of their opponents or speak ill of anyone to get undue popularity. Campaigns should be based on issues and not on personalities and focus should be on their own programmes.”

  • What is special about personalised drink?

    What is special about personalised drink?

    Chinedu loves his Coca-Cola but he will prefer the Coca-Cola to bear his name. But he is a frustrated man. With N500 in his hand, he deployed people to search for a PET bottle that bore his name but failed; not once, not twice.

    But Chinedu is not alone. He is one of the several people scrabbling to own a Coke Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) bottle that bears their name.

    Precisely on the 12th, I went to Ikeja Shopping Mall to honour an appointment. Fortunately, the guy I was supposed to meet was still on his way so I had ample time to window shop.

    As I made my way into the Shoprite super market, I noticed a group on the left side close to the exit and entrance doors. Incidentally, they were shoppers as they had shopping baskets and trolleys with them.

    Inquisitively watching them, I noticed they circled something huge and were talking excitedly as they stretched their hands into the middle pulling out Coca-Cola 50cl PET bottles and dropping into their baskets.

    Again, and again they moved in circle, searching, scrutinising the PET containing the drink and dropping them in their baskets.

    What exactly is going on here? I asked no one in particular as I approached the crowd. It was then I noticed the stacks of Coca-Cola pallets surrounded by the shoppers. “Ah,” I mused, “Nigerians like freebies.”

    Without paying attention to me, the shoppers, giggling and engrossed in their search kept calling out to each other, “please if you see a PET bottle with the name Jide hand it over to me as that is my son’s name.”

    Another shopper appealed to others that she was looking for the containers with the names Ifeoma and Chinyere.

    “I know my name will not be here as it is not a common name. I have searched for the Coke PET with the name Banke for over 30 minutes now,” lamented another man.

    “I have seen Samson, thank God; that is my husband’s name. I now need to find the names of my twins,” exclaimed a lady excitedly

    Watching them, it looked bizzare, intriguing. What is it about finding names on coke PET containers that will reduce adults to children. They were all shrieking and laughing. I mean, free drinks will not even elicit such excitement in adults.

    Gently nudging one of the men engaged in the search who already had several bottles in his basket, I asked what happens if one finds a bottle that bears the name of her choice and he replied that the person pays for it if she wants to take it.

    Before long, I was caught in the frenzy and forgetting completely what brought me to the shop, I started searching for the Coke PET bottles bearing the names of my loved ones and also appealing that anyone that sees some names should pass them over to me.

    However, the journalistic instinct in me was aroused when a man of about 40-something years held up a N500 note and announced that it was for anyone who could help him find the name ‘Chinedu’ as he needed to get back to his office and had already spent about 20mins in the search.

    That announcement provoked more excitement and frenzy amongst children and teenagers who wanted to win the prize money but must find the Coke plastic bearing Chinedu.

    Approaching the man that made the announcement, I introduced myself and asked him why he wanted the plastic coke that badly as to make an offer of N500.

    “That is my name and I have been in this shop and others to search for it to no avail.” Why is it so important to you? I persisted. “I just like the innovation and will like to buy the ones with my name,” quipped the man in response

    Crestfallen, he left without seeing it.

    Coca-Cola the soft beverage giant has transformed the global Coca-Cola brand into a special personal experience for consumers by swapping the iconic Coca-Cola logo with personal names. Though the campaign ‘Share a Coke’ started in Australia, in 2011, it has been successfully activated in over 50 countries and was launched in Nigeria on January 7th, 2015.

    In Nigeria, 400 local names were chosen and branded on Coke 50cl PET, while 163 names were printed upon bottle crowns and 53 names printed on Coke cans.

    The 1litre Coke PET are branded with words like, Cousins, Joy, Happiness, Dinner, etcetera, encouraging consumers to share the drink with people that matter most to them.

    Wondering if the excitement of finding one’s names on Coke PET bottle was restricted to just Ikeja, last week Saturday, I took a trip to the popular Surulere Shopping Mall on Adeniran Ogunsanya and on entering the Shoprite super market I found that it was the same thing all over: Coca-Cola succeeding in bringing out the childlike tendencies still in us.

    Miss Roqibah could not find her name. Checking virtually through the over 1,000 coke PET bottles with her friend who was more lucky, “I am just looking and hoping that I will find my name or even my second name,” she lamented.

    What names are you searching for? “Roqibah or Wura,” she replied. Before I could respond to that, other shoppers laughed and told her that she would never be able to see any PET bearing such names as they were not popular names.

    But what does seeing your name on a Coke plastic mean to you? “It’s the first time am seeing something like this and seeing my name will make it more cool,” enthused Roqibah.

    As I was still talking to her, I heard shrieks of laughter from two young ladies on another end of the Coke stacks. Walking up to them, I saw one of them clutching three PET while excitedly saying “my name is Nnenna and I found three bearing my names. I will buy all the coke with my names.” Why? I queried, and she responded that it was fun seeing her name. “I feel as if Coca-Cola is directly addressing me.”

    “If anyone can help me find a PET with Susan on it, I will pay for a bottle for her.” Looking at the elderly woman beside me, I tried to find out from her why she wanted to buy that one. Explaining with laughter, she said Susan was her granddaughter who will appreciate that more than any other thing.

    For Margaret whose birthday was on the 20th, nothing would thrill her colleagues more than offering them plastic Coke with their names on it. So she started the search for 21 Coke PET with various names. Fortunately before I left the shop, which was about one hour later, she had 20 plastic Coke with names she wanted except the name David.

    “Coca-Cola has given me serious assignment as I just have to find my name ‘Okwudili’,” lamented a man who claimed to be a coke lover. But does finding your name on it make any difference to the taste of the drink? “No, but it gives the opportunity of acquiring an affordable personalised product.”

    The ‘Share a Coke’ campaign which features a variety of indigenous and other names that are popular among Nigeria’s diverse cultural groups has come to stay as is being sold now in almost all the retail outlets across the country with no price increase.

    For Chinedu, Roqibah and other consumers like me who are unable to find their names in store, you will have the chance to create your own personalised coke during the nationwide activation which commences next week.

    Everyone loves something that is personal or unique to him even if it is just a drink.

  • Tope Edu notches higher

    Tope Edu is the younger sister of Senators Bukola Saraki and Gbemisola Saraki-Fowora, an interior architectural designer that specialises in creative and functional designs of spaces including residential and commercial. Driven by her desire to follow high standards, after her Masters in law, she decided to follow her passion for interior design and studied at the prestigious Chelsea College of Arts and Design. The founder of Topeedu Designs has no doubt made a good decision as she has been wowing her clients with corporate brand styling. Recently, Ermenegildo Zegna, an Italian menswear luxury brand, launched its first West African flagship store in Lagos. The store was designed by Studio Berreta and implemented by Tope Edu Designs who is also the franchise director of the brand.  Creative Tope and her team create a seamless journey from concept theory to completion.

    Other projects with Tope’s midas touch include Oando Marketing Plc head office, the renovation of The Moorhouse Hotel, among others.

  • Tokunbo Edun proving her mettle

    Olatokunbo Edun is the administrator of Grace Schools and she has proved her mettle as a thoroughbred professional. Tokunbo, who lost her beloved mother, Deaconess Grace Osinowo, the founder of the school years back, has since moved on to reposition the school. She leaves no one in doubt about her managerial prowess coupled with her rich background as a seasoned administrator.

    A very sociable personality who avoids the klieg lights and paparazzi at social functions, Edun has been able to combine her roles well and has been a kind giver to several notable causes. She works round the clock to sustain the laudable legacy bequeathed by her mother. She is the mother of Anike Lawal, the brain behind Mamalette.com, the first ever online interactive parenting platform in Nigeria.

  • Harmattan: Fun, fear and fury

    Harmattan: Fun, fear and fury

    In the past few weeks, the harmattan haze has been blowing and biting really hard across the country. Almost everyone admits that it is so cold and the intensity is extra-ordinarily high compared with the experience last year and beyond. In this report, Yetunde Oladeinde, Assistant Editor (Lagos), Kolade Adeyemi (Kano), Yusufu Aminu Idegu (Jos), Chris Orji (Enugu), Nwanosike Onu (Anambra), Odunayo Ogunmola (Ekiti) and Oseheye Okwuofu (Ibadan) take a look at its impact across the country and how Nigerians are coping.

    The harmattan season, for many, is expected at the tail end of every year and it is known to usher in the new year. Many Lagosians, therefore, begin to take a number of measures to protect their eyes from dust particles and the skin and soles of the feet from peeling, and lips from cracking as soon as it breezes in.

    Surprisingly, this year’s experience is different, tougher and lasting longer than any recent memory. Extra measures are therefore being taken to combat it, while it translates into an opportunity for those who deal in items required to combat it to make more money. 68-year-old Fatima Ajani did not mince words when she declared that she is hardest hit by the harmattan in Lagos.”I come out briefly in the afternoon because I am asthmatic and the dust is not good for my health at all. I have cold and I have been sneezing ever since it started.”

    Excessive sneezing, cough and catarrh are some of the symptoms that result from impact of this cold dry dusty wind peculiar to the West African sub-region. Unfortunately, the season is not a very good one for people suffering from respiratory conditions like asthma, as the cold, dusty weather tends to aggravate it.

    Notably, the Meningitis epidemic, usually experienced between February and May in the northern part of Nigeria is an aftermath of the harmattan.

    It also triggers sickle cell crisis in those who suffer from the disease. There is also an increase in the incidences of diarrhoea and food-borne illnesses, due to the dust that settle on foods not properly stored or washed before consumption.

    The rapid change in weather condition came as a surprise to Nigerians all over the country because it has not been like this in a long while. Residents of Ibadan city and environs have been groaning over the harsh weather and they have been devising ways to cope with the season.

    Like in other parts of the country, many people are forced to wear two to three clothes, in addition to thick pullovers to combat the weather. In some schools in Ibadan, proprietors say they are considering the possibility of adjusting the school time-table because the morning sessions are less participatory at the moment.

    Mr. Gbenga Ajayi, proprietor, Genius Model School, Omi-Adio, Ibadan, complained over the attitude of the pupils in the classes, while stating that school attendance has dropped significantly as some of the children who have health challenges cannot brave the harsh cold weather.

    “This is a very unusually cold weather and we are considering changing the school from morning to day school because of the children. But we must first of all get the consent of the parents. I don’t think we have witnessed this kind of weather in recent time. It’s very different,” Mr Ajayi said.

    Investigations also revealed that the poor weather condition has resulted in increase in respiratory diseases among children and old persons. “As I am speaking to you now, I have my own burden; I could not sleep in the night because of cold, fever and body pains. And this is exactly what many people are complaining about. But we hope it will not last beyond necessary because it would mean a different thing for the health of the people,” Alfred Banjo a retired civil servant and resident of Ibadan said.

    An expert in climate matters and lecturer at the University of Ibadan, Dr Ibidun Adelekan, however, described the weather change as normal, and attributed it to growing climate change.

    The climatologist also noted that there are many benefits of the harmattan season, as harsh as it appears. She said many farmers would be happy with the weather condition because of the increased benefits derived from it.

    She listed some of the negative impacts to include poor visibility that hinders air transportation, and increase in respiratory diseases among the populace.

    Explaining the factors responsible for the intensity of the weather condition, Dr Adelekan said: “We have the north east wind from the Sahara and it is usually very cold. So, now the wind from the Sahara is over Ibadan and that is what has brought the harmattan now. The second factor is that at this time of the year, we don’t have clouds. So, because we don’t have clouds, the radiation or energy has been able to escape rapidly into the space especially at night; unlike when we have clouds during other times of the year. Because this radiation is escaping into the space, it is usually cold at night and early hours of the morning.”

    Continuing, she said, “The third factor is the pressure over the Sahara, and because the high pressure is there, the inter-tropical discontinuity, the ICD, will not be able to lift it away. Currently, that is the boundary zone between the north east wind coming from the Sahara and south west wind coming from the Atlantic Ocean. The ICD at this time is around the coast. So the wind is over Ibadan at this time.

    “What determines the movement of the ICD is the high pressure. As long as you have a region of high pressure over the Sahara, the ICD will tilt downward and that is what determines the intensity of the harmattan now. But once the high pressure reaches over the Sahara, the ICD will now move up so that we don’t have cold wind over Ibadan or this part of the country.”

    In Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, the situation is no different. The change in weather has altered the way of life of residents of the state capital and surrounding towns and villages, who have been devising various means to suppress the effects of the harmattan. Many residents now wake up later than they used to because the effect is felt more in the early hours of the day. Those who are self-employed are in the majority of this category, as they are seen to have control over their time.

    Core civil servants, school teachers, uniformed personnel, health workers however have no option but to defy the harsh weather and go to work.

    The Nation also gathered that families now ensure that they have enough hot water at home with which they take their bath every morning before setting out for the day’s activities.

    A resident, Mrs. Bola Ogidan, said: “My children and I now monitor supply of power everyday in order to heat water for bathing. You know electricity is not regular in Ado-Ekiti and its environs, so we always wake up in the night anytime power is restored to heat water. This has become our practice since harmattan commenced because none of us can afford to bathe with cold water.”

    Wearing cardigans has also become a compulsory norm for school pupils and students going to school.

    Some parents have also gone ahead to make arrangements with their children’s schools authorities to converge their wards at ‘safer’ places like their homes, rather than usual bus stops where they would be exposed weather.

    As it is, it is only bread sellers and those selling wares at motor parks who defy the weather to target early morning travellers from for sales.

    At Old Garage, Bisi and Erekesan markets in Ado-Ekiti, sellers of cardigans, sweaters and other thick clothes are smiling to the bank. A dealer in cardigans at Old Garage, Mr. Cosmas Njoku, told our correspondent that he has made huge profits since the harmattan period began, wishing that it continues.

    Njoku said: “The type of harmattan in town now has not been witnessed in a very long time and this has made many people to change their way of dressing because they need thick dresses to protect themselves. My brother, I will not deceive you, I have made a lot of sales in the last three weeks because of the effects of this cold weather. Many people have been coming to my shop to buy cardigans and pullovers.”

    Another group of people ‘enjoying’ the harmattan season in Ado-Ekiti, Ikere-Ekiti, Aramoko-Ekiti, Omuo-Ekiti and other communities are tea sellers. A visit to Atikankan area in Ado-Ekiti and Fagbohun Shasha Market in Ikere-Ekiti which are dominated by Hausa traders showed that many people flock to tea joints early in the morning to drink hot tea and fight the cold.

    A Hausa trader who gave his name as Hamisu told The Nation that “business” has been booming since harmattan began baring its fangs in the state.

    He explained that more customers have been trooping to his stand to take tea in the morning, revealing that he now makes thrice what he used to make as profit.

    Investigations also revealed that even churches are not left out, as some are now adjusting their programmes to protect their members from the impact of the weather.

    In addition, residents now go out with ointments, which they apply on their lips and hands to tackle the dryness that comes with the season.

    Meanwhile, farmers are happy, as they believe that the prolonged harmattan bodes well for farming in the year.

    In Anambra State, the intensity of the harmattan is equally severe. Some of the residents, especially motorcycle operators, otherwise known as okada, now come out a bit late, while commuter bus transport operators and other vehicle owners now wind up their vehicle glasses.

    In the same vein, those who have air conditioned vehicles no longer put them on.

    Mrs. Nwando Elendu Offor told The Nation in Awka that harmattan is the best period for her husband and not herself.

    She said this year’s harmattan has being stronger than in recent years, adding that at times, she stays indoors till 1pm, while covering her entire body.

    She is however thankful that it has not come with any devastating effect.

    A pregnant working woman, who did not want her name in print, told The Nation at Freedom Square Cyber café in Awka that this year’s harmattan has brought cough and catarrh to many families, including hers, because of its severity.

    Also, Mr. Hycinth Odia complained that harmattan has never been his friend over the years, not to talk of this year’s edition that has persevered.

    He said the only way he has been able to withstand the cold at night and early morning is through cuddling his wife and his pillow.

    A Nollywood actress and senatorial candidate of the Advanced Congress of Democrats (ACD) in Anambra Central Senatorial zone, Lolo Oby Okafor, told The Nation that this has not been her best period.

    The actress/politician revealed that the harmattan has cracked her voice, leading to the suspension of her campaign temporarily.

    In Enugu, many of the children born about 12 years ago and below could comfortably be said to be experiencing their first harmattan. For many years, the coal city state has not experienced a biting harmattan as it is experiencing this year. The accompanying cold has also stopped some parents from sending their children to school, while those children who dare to go at all, report late to classes. Even teachers arrive late.

    Says Mrs. Ifeoma Madu, the cold is so much in the early morning that “we sleep off beyond the normal time.” Many a times, the family also skip their morning devotions to meet up with the day’s activities. Madu, who is a retail trader at the Mayor Market, Enugu, said she has consistently failed to meet up with the market schedule and this is costing her a lot.

    She however admitted “that apart from its adverse effect economically, I enjoy the weather. You do not need sleeping drugs to sleep soundly.”

    Against the backdrop that the weather is affecting business adversely, Sam, a small scale super market owner at New Layout Area of Enugu, argued that the low patronage is not completely as a result of the harmattan.

    He said the main cause is that many people who went for the Christmas celebration in their villages have not returned. Somehow, he however linked their “over-staying” to the harmattan which is more severe in the villages.

    “Many of them want to stay back in the villages to enjoy the harmattan. You know the harmattan is “sweeter in the villages.”

    At the MAON secretariat of Enugu, although offices were opened with normal duties going on, serious business was yet to commence. Also, every office window was securely locked to avoid the windy cold from finding its way into the offices.

    Winter clothings are also now a common vogue, as every worker is forced by the harmattan to purchase one. Even the low income workers now put on suits to work.

    Interestingly, private paediatric hospitals are smiling to the banks, as the children are not being spared by the biting cold. Many children are being rushed to hospitals due to one ailment or the other associated with harmattan.

    The fact that the doctors in public hospitals are on strike is also a snag. And so, those who cannot afford the bills of the private hospitals have resorted to self-medication.

    One of the paediatricians, Dr. Bede Ikem, however says there is no cause for alarm, as the fevers associated with the weather are not life-threatening.

    Plateau State, hardest hit

    Hardest hit however are residents of Plateau State who have witnessed a record-breaking harmattan, as temperature has fallen to as low as three degrees centigrade.

    Though, originally and by virtue of its geographical location, Plateau has always has an exclusive cold weather. Its rainy season is colder than any other location in Nigeria, the dry season is also cooler. But residents say the kind of weather being experienced in the new year is historic.

    75-year-old Pa Mathew Ajayi in Tudunwada, Jos, said, “The cold this year is very rare on the Plateau. I was born here on the Plateau 75 years ago; I have also lived here all my life; it has been long we witnessed this kind of weather. If I can remember, the last time we witnessed this kind of cold in Jos was 1982, some 33 years ago.”

    Ajayi added that “In 1982, the last time residents experienced such cold weather, several residents died due to the impact of the cold. Some soldiers who were posted to Jos newly died after bathing with cold water. Some persons also died in Pankshin village when the fire they made to warm their huts before they could sleep exploded and consumed the house and its occupants. The 1982 weather also caused deaths of domestic animals in Pankshin local government of the state.” Pa Ajayi said

    In such a low temperature of three degrees, the cold is severe enough to cause blood to clot in your veins. But citizens of the state rely on warm water and prayer to escape the cold scourge. It is even difficult to brush your mouth with cold water in the morning. Such is the situation residents of Plateau have passed through in the last two weeks.

    The harsh weather has also forced residents to regulate their movement. No more night crawling at the moment, as residents round up their daily activities fast enough to return home by 6pm. Residents say the situation at the moment in the plateau state is akin to a self-imposed curfew, as they avoid coming out of their homes until 8am, and retire by 6pm.

    Part of the state witnessing the worst condition is Jos, the state capital; the military barrack in Rukuba; Pankshin Local Government, as well as Riyom Local Government. Residents of Jos in particular are being warned on daily basis by the state government through the state media to take precautionary measures to avoid being victims of the harsh cold.

    Residents warm water to drink both day and night, as the water is extremely cold and could cause blood-clotting when taken in its natural cold state. During the day time, people rush to the popular Terminus Market at the city centre to buy thick socks and thick hand gloves, as well as thick winter jackets, which is the new sleeping gown for both the young and the old.

    Residents who must taste alcohol at night now go for exotic gin, whisky, rum, vodka and the like. The sale of beer is witnessing its lowest patronage. Families have resorted to the use of electric room warmer to sleep comfortably. Those who cannot afford electric room warmer go for charcoal which they light and place in the centre of the room.

    Medical experts have warned residents to always keep themselves warm both day and night. They have also been warned against playing with cold water to avoid its attendant risk. There are fears among residents that if such weather continues as schools resumes, it might take a negative toll on pupils.

    Even though the temperature has improved relatively, the impact of the cold is still high on the Plateau. Workers come out of their office to feel the sun as from 10am; traders and shop owners prefer to do business in the sun at day time whilst they head home before sun-set.

    Despite the intensity of the harsh cold weather, there has been no record of fire disaster yet on the Plateau, which residents consider amazing; but Rev Samson Della of Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA) says it is the work of God.

    Kano experience, very severe

    In Kano, the story is the same. It was a time to celebrate for Chief Johnson Oley, whose wife gave birth to a bouncing baby boy after 10 years of searching for the fruit of the womb. Charged by the joy a new-born brings, the Kano-based business man decided to celebrate. He invited friends from within and outside Kano, but for some of his friends who came from far and near, it was a near-bitter experience as they were greeted by the hash haematin currently blowing in the ancient commercial city of Northern Nigeria.

    One of the invitees, Mrs. Adela Seguin, a Laotian, complained bitterly over the severe chilly cold in Kano, which she likened to the situation in Norway. Dressed in different layers of gowns, sweaters, cardigans, hand-cloves and cap, apparently to prevent the cold from weakening her ribs, Mrs. Adela regretted visiting Kano at this point in time, complaining that in her life time, “I have never witnessed this kind of cold before. I once lived here in Kano and I have been visiting Kano even during haematin season; but my brother, I must confess to you that this is a worse situation. I arrived here a day ago and if not because of my relationship with Chief Johnson, I would have boarded the next available flight and found my way back to Lagos.   I know there is cold in Lagos where I reside but this Kano experience is very severe.”

    Apart from the lamentations of visitors as captured in Mrs. Seguin’s account, Kano residents and, in fact, indigenes are also complaining of the harshness of this year’s haematin. They say the weather has made it a taboo for people to bath with cold water. Very early in the morning, residents, mostly youths and streets boys, are sighted by road-sides, circling around bon-fires coming out from dry fire wood just to warm their bodies. Also, road-side tea-sellers, popularly known as Mai shay in Hausa parlance, now smile to the banks as a result of the influx of customers who besiege their kiosks, both in the morning and evening for hot cups of tea, to keep body and soul warm.

    Our correspondent also observed that, apart from dressing odd and awkward, all in the name of shielding the cold, most residents in Kano now skip taking their baths, especially in the morning periods when the cold is at its highest. The situation has also affected business activities, such that major markets in the commercial town remain scanty until as late as noon, when the cold would have subsided and people would be able to leave their homes.

  • Group task youth on 2015 elections

    The Executive Director of Youngstars Foundation, Kingsley Bangwell has advised young people to shun violence and embrace peace and fair play as we approach the 2015 general elections.

     Bangwell made this known at  campaign toward, Nigeria 2015 election organised by Youngstars Foundation in partnership with The 2Face Foundation funded by the National Democratic Institute (NDI) through USAID held recently at the NRC Building, Ifako-Ijaiye, Lagos.

     The campaign “Vote Not Fight”: Election no be War brought together hundreds of youths, civil society groups, youth association and musicians within the Ifako-Ijaiye community. The youth, were given  a non-violence pledge slip.

     He said that the need to engage young people, most especially in violence prone areas on the values of peace, love and fair play as we approach the Nigeria 2015 election, is very instructive for a violence free poll.

     Bangwell said “vote Not Fight” is a youth non-violence voter education campaign that seeks to promote peaceful participation by Nigerian youth in the 2015 elections.

     He noted that by February 2015, Nigerians would again head to the polls to decide through the ballot box the leadership of the country at the federal and state level both at the executive and legislative arm. Previous elections have been known to be marred with instances of violence and sometimes needless deaths.

     He recalled that in 2011 elections in Nigeria, Over 600 people were killed and about 40,000 people were internally displaced in the post- election violence of 2011. He said, “this must be prevented in 2015 especially as there are already instances of violence during rallies in” some parts of the country.

     Bangwell opined that the campaign seeks to encourage youth to make a commitment to shun violence and embrace peace. It is hoped that Nigerians from all walks of life will commit to peaceful elections by signing a non-violence pledge.

     “Election is not a war but an opportunity to refine the future of our country which must be echoed in the minds of our youth as we draw closer to the polls,” he said.

  • Strut 2015 in style

    Strut 2015 in style

    As we have discussed in invogue about the clothes,jewelry and bag.it is time to talk about shoes for 2015.As we all know,shoes enhance the attractiveness of legs and stylish dress.And no other set of shoes will capture the imagination of fashion buffs this season as gladiators,sneakers,peep toe shoe,wedge,flat,stilettos and strap sandals.Nothing guarantees you that special look than stylish and perfectly cut shoes.I have always belived that a beautiful shoe is useless unless  it feels as wonderful as it looks.So,make sure that they fit properly in the store before paying for it.

    Below are some of the shoes that will capture the imagination this year.

    -Knee-length boot-All hail the return of the stunning and perfectly fitting knee-length boot

    -sneaker shoe-sneakers with heels their elevation may differ in centimerters and thickness

    -peep toe shoes-it is a simple yet solid shoe that allows a lady to show off her lovely feet while just revealing a bit of the toes

    -wedge shoes-there are three varieties of wedge that are in vouge now;the wedge sandals ,wedge shoe and the wedge slippers.A wedge shoe  is guaranteed to make you look chic.

    -stilettos-everything you could want in a pair of sexy high heels,from strap sandals.peeps toe to covered shoes.stilettos,after the 80s disappeared and reappeared they are most  elegant shoes for 2015.They are a must have for women of style,who need to look classy and different.

    -flat shoes-these well-balanced,trendy and funky shoes are another women foot wear that cannot go out of fashion.The pattern and style may vary per season but the flat shoes will forever remain in fashion.

    -pump metalic-These shoes have had almost the same shape for ages without changing.it is a fashion material that women can’t get tired of.

    -Bow shoes-otherwise known as butterfly shoes is the new trend in town.

    -To- much shoes and bags[italian shoes]-Though they are fading out mainly because of the colour blocking era;neverthless,these set of bags and shoes have their popularity too.Italian shoes with matching pair of a bag are the high shindig favourite to watch  out for.they are getting more stylish and designers are experimenting with mix fabric.

    -Gladiator shoes-strappy gladiator have their roots in ancient rome and greece where people wore them to war.Today’s gladiator are more stylish and are usually worn with skirts and knee length dresses.Certain basic are essesntial while wearing gladiator shoes such as taking care of your feet and sometimes painting your nails,since your feet will get quite some attention when wearing these strappy shoes.

  • Forced into the dark

    Forced into the dark

    Three visually-impaired Nigerians, who lost their sights to violent attacks, share their stories of pain, regrets and rehabilitation. writes Adeola Ogunlade

    Ebong Essienkan is an IT consultant and trainer with over two decades experience as a software developer for local and multinational companies in Nigeria. As a graduate of Mathematics and a Masters degree holder in computer science, Essienkan was doing quite well, with lots of opportunities to further climb up the social ladder. To top it up, he runs a primary and secondary school with his wife in Alagbado area of Ogun State, where he gives vent to his desire to develop a new generation of change agents.

    Things, however, came to a halt in 2013, when Essienkan on his way back home from executing a job in Akowonjo, Lagos, was attacked by gun-wielding robbers, who shot rapidly at him. They took his car and other valuables in it, but in the process, the bullet also hit his eyes, rendering him blind ever since.

    For a man whose means of livelihood greatly depended on his sight, Essienkan had thought that all hope was lost. “My eyes were instrumental to my work. In developing new software, your eyes and other sense organ work together. My sight was the immediate tool for me to get access to information and use my computer as an IT consultant.”

    He, therefore, focused his thoughts on retiring gracefully or doing something else. And then his family came to his rescue. They insisted there was no way he was going to retire in that tender age and introduced him to the Nigeria School of the Blind (NSB), Oshodi, Lagos, where they told him that he could be rehabilitated and empowered to carry on with his IT dreams.

    Speaking to this reporter on the occasion of his graduation from the NSB, Oshodi, along with 37 other blind trainees, Essienkan said: “By the grace of God, I made use of the opportunity to do a one-year advanced course in computer.  I can now reply email, do power point presentations, and access Microsoft word. I used my brail writer machine very well, so I can relate with the outside world well.”

     Life as a blind man

    Essienkan explained that his training has also helped him to convey information through words of mouth and various multi media platforms. “With this training in NSB, I am back to being a contributing member of the society. I am no longer dependent because of the loss of my sight like the average blind person who needs support to live.”

    He also revealed how he and his wife are involved in training young people and helping them, so they can become contributing members of the society. “I am currently based in Alagbado, Ogun State, where I teach students and teachers mathematics, and I double as an IT consultant and school proprietor. Especially because my wife and I read mathematics, we focus more on mathematics, which is our way of contributing our quota in the preparation of tomorrow’s world leaders.”

    As a passionate mathematics teacher, he also says he wants to encourage children to love mathematics and disabuse their minds of the wrong notion that mathematics is difficult.

    Initially, access to computer was of importance to Essienkan here at the school, but now he says he can play a difficult keyboard. “I can handle the keyboard effectively. Life is back!” He says with that dint of elation.

    Having also worked as a software developer over the years, ICT had become a second part of him. He was deeply involved in software development. He had also trained a lot of people in that area and is hoping to get back into it. “The ultimate for me probably is to sit down and develop new software, particularly software packages that are accessible to the blind. We have noticed that a lot of software applications are not accessible to the visually impaired. If I was not blind, I would not have known.”

    Although the introduction of the Automated Teller Machine is a welcome development in the financial sector as it has made business and banking transactions a lot easier, Essienkan says the visually impaired community has been shut out of its boundless opportunities.

    “We know that ATM machines are very personal and if you have to move to someone who will help you type your secret code on the ATM, your account is open to fraud.”

    As an IT consultant and because of his current situation, Essienkan notes that he has privileged information that the visually impaired have been left out in some of the development stride all around the world. The internet community is good, as a lot of websites are visually impaired compliant. Although, he also says, some are not.

    Quite surprisingly, one of the popular websites, Yahoo, is not friendly with the visually impaired, Essienkan says. “If you are filling a form to register for an account with Yahoo and other social platform, it will get to a point where you will be asked to enter a particular code; and you must enter that code. But the blind cannot enter that secret code. The secret code must be read and imputed into the system.”

    So ultimately, Essienkan has an urgent call to duty. It is therefore left to see, how environmental factors will impact on his dream.

    Expectations from the government

    “Visually impaired people are a group of people who are contributing members of society and should not be left to wallow in the dark,” Essiekan says.

    According to him, efforts should be channeled at making the brail system of reading and writing compulsory in schools, as it will go a long way in engendering everyone, particularly the upcoming generation to supporting the visually impaired in the society.

    “For us to be effectively integrated into the human society, I think members of the society need to be abreast of ways of interacting with us. Everyone must be able to read and write for us, just like Mathematics and English language are compulsory in schools. Whether we like it or not, whether in old age or accidentally, the reality is that people lose their sight.”

    Essienkan also suggested that the government and society should finance and subsidise the visually-impaired people from a generic point of view, because as he put it, “a lot of poor people are finding it hard to manage life. And it takes time.”

  • Harmattan: Threat to cocoa harvest

    Harmattan: Threat to cocoa harvest

    Nigeria’s mid-crop cocoa output is threatened by dry winds from the Sahara Desert that have evaporated moisture and caused buds to break off trees, a farmers’ group said.

    According to Taiwo William, national coordinator of the Cocoa Farmers Association of Nigeria, the harmattan winds have persisted for one month unbroken by rainfall, increasing the adverse effects on cocoa trees. He lamented that the buds that break off would have formed cocoa pods.

    “The very cold and dusty winds have stunted the growth and healthy development of cocoa buds on the trees,” William said in a telephone interview yesterday from the southwestern city of Abeokuta. “By now we should be seeing at least between 12 and 15 buds on each tree, rather we are seeing just an average of 6 buds.”

    Nigeria, the world’s fourth-largest producer of the chocolate ingredient behind Ivory Coast, Ghana and Indonesia, set a target to produce at least 500,000 tons of cocoa by the end of the season running through September 2015 as more trees got to an age where they produce the beans. According to the ministry of Agriculture, the country produced 350,000 tons of cocoa in the 2013-2014 season, although the International Cocoa Organization put that year’s production at 240,000 tons.

    ‘Severest Intensity’

    The last rains in the southwest belt that accounts for about 70 percent of Nigeria’s production were recorded in November, Ayodele Adegoke, a cocoa farmer based in the southwestern town of Ado Ekiti, said yesterday by phone.

    “If there had been one or two rainfalls during the period, the story would’ve been different,” he said.

    The dry winds from the Sahara manifest the “severest intensity” in January and begin to weaken afterward, John Chigbu, manager at the Meteorological Office in the commercial capital, Lagos, said in an interview in his office.

    While the winds last, they aid rapid depletion of moisture, causing young cocoa seedlings to die, Layi Olubamiwa, a researcher at the Cocoa Research Institute of Nigeria, in southwestern Ibadan, said yesterday in a phone interview. For the surviving trees, the quality of yield declines, resulting in cocoa pods with underweight beans, he said.

    The West African nation’s two cocoa harvests include the main crop from October to December, and the smaller mid-crop from April to June, estimated at 66,000 tons in the 2013-14 season. Most of the country’s output is from farmers working on small plots in the southern cocoa belt.

    Cocoa fell 0.2 percent to 2,044 pounds per ton as of 5:08 p.m. yesterday in London, declining for the third day in the longest falling streak since Nov. 14.

  • Deflating The Pressures Of Life (3)

    Last week, we examined the issues of telephone and electricity bills, which cause financial pressures and how to deflate such pressures. I said a person who is jobless does not need to own a telephone, since he can’t foot the bill. Also, I told you it is wasteful to deliberately leave your electricity lights on and walk away. This accumulates bills which may lead to financial pressure, if you are unable to pay up!

    This week, we will be looking at another aspect of financial pressure arising from children’s school fees, and how to overcome it. I want you to know that as parents, the kind of school you send your children to, should not be determined by your choice, but by your income. If, for instance, your child goes to school where the school fee is thrice your annual income, you are already operating under pressure.

    The kind of school that a child goes to, in most cases, does not determine his intelligence or performance. It is discipline that will distinguish him in the ultimate. By following scriptural principles, you can cheaply deflate such financial pressures. God said to Abraham: …Lift up now thine eyes, and look from the place where thou art northward, and southward, and eastward, and westward… (Genesis 13:14).  Abraham obeyed God and what happened to him? The Bible makes us to understand that God blessed him with much cattle, silver and gold (Genesis 13:2).

    You can see that if Abraham did not start from where he was, he wouldn’t have ended his life well; he would have died of poverty! You, too, can always start from where you are, in anything you are doing. For instance, when our children were growing up, I never prayed for their school fees for once, because they went to the school I could afford, without prayer or pressure. Should there be a fall in income, the children can be relocated elsewhere. If the school fees of your children are more than your income, relocate them to another school whose fees you can afford without tears.

    However, the overall attitude that will help anyone deflate financial pressure is contentment.  Be content with that which you have (Hebrews 13:5). Unless you are satisfied with what you have and where you are per time, you are likely to live under financial pressure. If the school fees of your children are more than your income, relocate them to another school which fees you can afford without tears.

    Therefore, be happy with what you have. Your reward may be slow, but it is sure.  It takes contentment to get to where you are going. This is my philosophy from scripture: What I don’t have, I don’t need, because no good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly (Psalm 84:11). Husband and wife, with contentment, you can cheaply overcome financial pressure and your destiny becomes colourful, especially in this New Year!

       The truth is, contentment does not come on a platter of gold. It is one of the characteristics of a child of God. If you want to become a child of God, you do so by accepting and confessing Jesus as the Lord and Saviour of your life and family. For you to have contentment, you must be born again. Are you born again?

    You can be born again right now, as you say this prayer: Lord Jesus, I come to You today. I am a sinner. I cannot help myself. Forgive me of my sins. Cleanse me with Your precious blood. Deliver me from sin and Satan, to serve the Living God. Today, Lord Jesus, I accept You as my Lord and Saviour. Thank You Jesus for saving me! Now I know, I am born again!”

    Next week, I will be showing you the implication of social pressure on your family and how to combat it

    Welcome to the family of God, the family of Winners! You will never go back, in Jesus’ name! Now that you are born again, you shall not be under financial pressure anymore, in Jesus’ name!  I come against any financial pressure in your life, in Jesus’ name! Contentment shall be the key in your hand for overcoming  the pressures of life. You won’t fail!   This is your year of Heaven On Earth!  

    Every exploit in life is a product of knowledge. For further reading, please get my books- The Winning Wisdom, Understanding Financial Prosperity and Breaking Financial Hardship.

    I invite you to come and fellowship with us at the Faith Tabernacle, Canaan Land, Ota, the covenant home of Winners. We have four services on Sundays, holding at 6:00 a.m., 7:50 a.m., 9:40 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. respectively.

     I know this teaching has blessed you. Write and share your testimony with me through: Faith Tabernacle, Canaan Land, Ota, P.M.B. 21688, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria; or call 7747546-8; or E-mail: feedback@lfcww.org