Category: Sunday magazine

  • How youth can succeed, by Adeboye

    The General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church Of God, (RCCG), Pastor Enoch Adeboye, has advised youth to be visionary, diligent, hard working and fear God to succeed in life.

    He spoke last Sunday at the special thanksgiving and prayer service organised for students by the RCCG, National Headquarters, Throne of Grace, Ebute-Metta Lagos.

    The service with the theme I will Excel brought together thousands of youth drawn from across the country.

    Adeboye said there are immense opportunities and possibilities for young people who will dare to dream big and work hard towards actualising their dreams with godly principles.

    He noted there are many youth shortchanging themselves by trading away their God- given talents and opportunities because they lack foresight, vision and goals for themselves.

    He cited Joseph who started early in life with a dream and goal to excel and became a savior through dint of hardwork and focus.

    According to Adeboye: “The life of Joseph is a lesson for every one of us as he took a decision that no matter the condition, he would work hard and would not sin against God as he walked up to the top of the ladder in life.”

    He bemoaned laziness, idleness, lethargy, and short cut syndrome that characterize contemporary youth, stating “we would continue to sit at the back side of life when we undermine the place of hard work, honesty, and the fear of God in all that we do.”

    He added: “I have decided that I am ready to offend the whole world as long as I will not offend God. It is never fun to offend God. If you want to follow the crowd, you will end up in perdition with the crown.”

  • Dewunmi Ogunsanya’s wife goes home

    Dewunmi Ogunsanya’s wife goes home

    MOJISOLA, wife of the chairman of Multichoice, Otunba Adewunmi Ogunsanya, who recently passed on was buried amid eulogies from friends, family members and associates.

    Until she died due to complications arising from a cancer-related ailment, Mojisola was a senior magistrate in the Lagos State Judiciary.

    The funeral rites for the deceased commenced on Wednesday, April 2, with a service of songs held at The Harbour Point on Victoria Island, Lagos. The following day, the burial service was at the deceased’s husband’s country home in Ikorodu Town. Thereafter, her remains were interred right inside the expansive mansion.

    The late Mojisola Ogunsanya was survived by her husband and four children, Adebusola, Fuad, Fadekemi and Haliya. By: Olusegun Rapheal

  • Include religious index in next census, CAN tells FG

    The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) has demanded for inclusion of ethnic and religious details in the next national consensus.

    It also insisted that the secularism of the nation must be preserved and never tampered with.

    These were some of the demands contained in a communiqué after a key meeting with the National President of the body, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, with the South West region of the organisation in Lagos.

    The meeting, which held last Wednesday attracted the National Secretary of the body, Rev. Musa Asake and other leaders of the organisation’s five blocs in the South West.

    At the meeting, the church leaders lamented the rising attacks against Christians in the North and destruction of worship centres and Christian business interests.

    They also bemoaned lack of unity among Christians and the prevalence of arms and ammunition, especially among Fulani herdsmen.

    The South West chairman of the CAN, Archbishop Magnus Atilade, who briefed reporters on the outcomes of the meeting, said it was also agreed Christians must increase political awareness and participate more in governance.

    These, he said, will safeguard the faith from systemic attacks, especially the refusal to grant Certificates of Occupancy to churches in many parts of the nation.

    He stated the apex Christian body has also declared every last Friday of the month for national fasting and prayers.

    Sources hinted that church leaders frowned at the apathy towards CAN in the body of Christ and challenged themselves to give the organisation increased relevance in local assemblies.

    They also resolved to raise more funds for the operations of CAN with a view to strategically evangelizing the nation.

  • Christian, Moslem groups sign health pact

    Christian, Moslem groups sign health pact

    The Christian Health Association of Nigeria (CHAN), Federation of Moslem Women Association of Nigeria (FOMWAN) and National Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) have signed an agreement to collaborate on provision of healthcare services to the indigent.

    They also resolved to boost the operations of faith-based health institutions under their care.

    This pact was signed at a recent meeting in Abuja.

    CHAN, which is an umbrella body of all mission hospital across the country according to its Director, Advocacy and Communication, Pastor David Omorebokhae, has close to 4,500 hospitals and clinics in all the nooks and crannies of the federation.

    The Muslim delegation on the occasion was a cleric, Musa Ihejioto, a Monitoring and Evaluation Officer from NSCIA.

    He was accompanied by Rashida Ibrahim, who stood in for Mrs. Amina Omoti, National President of FOMWAN.   The organisations stated that if they work together, they could attract funds from various international donor organisations and get the Federal and State governments to support their drive to render improved healthcare services to poor communities across the country.

    CHAN’s scribe, Dr Gogbag, stressed the need for the collaboration.

    He said: “Sickness does not know colour or creed, tribe or tongue. It does not know age or gender either.

    “The only language the sick understands is cure. That is why we have called you to this meeting so that we can work together for the good of our people.

    “We are aware that you our Moslem brothers and sisters are also involved in healthcare services delivery.

    “That is why we have invited you so that we can form a partnership and create a synergy.”

    Ihejioto said: “There is increasing need for us to work together and establish a synergy to enable us meet the needs of the down trodden.

    “What that means is that we are going to work out various areas where we will collaborate.”

    Ibrahim observed that working with the Christian agency would help in many ways to better the lot of the people who the two groups were out to serve.

    “The idea of collaboration is timely. That will help us to work more in various areas where our assistance is mostly needed.”

    The organisations agreed to meet again in the second week of May to harmonise the extent of their involvements.

  • Over 10,000 pastors for Foursquare’s conference

    From tomorrow, no fewer than 10,000 ministers and workers will attend the annual International Conference for Ministers and Leaders (ICML) organised by the Foursquare Gospel Church in Nigeria.

    The conference holds at the Foursquare camp, Ajebo Ogun State with participants expected from within and outside the country.

    A statement by the Chairman of the Planning Committee for the event, Rev. Albert Aina, said the theme of the conference is making maximum impact.

    Aina hinted that there would be 56 speakers for the conference, which ends on April 19, and learning track sessions with 19 seminar modules covering church growth, ICT, youth, mission and mentorship.

    He added that there would be live streaming of proceedings at the conference where General Overseer of the church, Rev Felix Meduoye; Prof. Yemi Osibajo, Rev. Mike Adegbile and Prof. Vuyani Ntintili from South Africa would be ministering.

    Aina said: “This conference would usher the church and the body of Christ into a season of explosion triggered by energised and trained manpower”.

    Participants would be given a souvenir containing all the 23 plenary sessions, 19 learning tracks, 26 groups/ unit training and 13 regional Discipling A Whole Nation (DAWN) presentations.

  • Is there no balm in Gilead? (2)

    Last week, I brought to you the first segment of this monthly teaching. I said when a man’s health is challenged, everything he has loses value. That is why the world says, “Health is wealth.”

    I showed you what the Balm in Gilead is, Who the Great Physician is, His great prescription and what it is worth.

    Recognize that revelation in the Word is our ransom from the harassment of sickness and disease. By revelation, you are entitled to instant restoration. The best you can find in any clinic, in this world, is healing; restoration is not part of their agenda. That is why they cut away any part of your body that is not functioning. They cannot restore it, but Jesus can replace it (John 10:10).

    This week, in continuation of the teaching, we shall be looking at the three-dimensional healthcare ministry of the Word of God and what is in God’s Word that Heals?

    Three-Dimensional Healthcare Ministry of the Word of God:

    •God’s Word is Medicinal: Proverbs 4: 22 talks about health to all your flesh; the original context is ‘medicine’ to all your flesh. So, God’s Word is medicinal (Psalm 107:20; Proverbs 4:20-22).

    •God’s Word is Surgical (Hebrews 4:12): Whatever is not curable must be repairable; so, God’s Word is surgical. It has the capacity to repair any part of your system. When God made man, He said, “It is not good for man to be alone, I want to make a help meet for him.” So, man was put to sleep and God operated on him (Genesis 2:21-23). God is still the Master Surgeon; He is still operating on people. The Word is still surgical today (John 1:1-3).

    •God’s Word is Creative: If it cannot be cured, it can be repaired; if it cannot be repaired, it can be replaced (John 1:1-3)

    God’s Word is medicinal, God’s Word is surgical and God’s Word is creative. There is no health need that will have any extra demand beyond these three provisions.

    What is in God’s Word that Heals?:

    •Divine Light: The entrance of God’s Word gives light and that light shines in darkness and darkness cannot stop it (Psalm 119:130; John 1: 1-5). Spiritual understanding is what equals light. The deeper your understanding, the greater your light.

    •Divine Nature: This nature is absolutely anti-sickness and anti-disease (2 Peter 1:4). So, we partake of God’s divine nature from the Word and that is our ultimate immunity against every sickness and disease. The more you bask in the healing Word of God, the healthier you live. It is by accessing the great and precious promises in the Bible, that you imbibe divine nature.

    Every healing recorded in scripture answered to faith (Matthew 9:27-29), but faith comes by hearing and understanding the Word (Romans 10:17). This is why every healing answers to supernatural insight from the Word. Today must mark your own day of initiation into a world of total health! Therefore, welcome to the final bus stop in your search for total health! Read this brother’s testimony:

    16 Years Of Divine Health!

    “In my former place of worship, I was a Believers’ Class teacher, a Sunday School teacher and a House Fellowship teacher. I used to carry a very big Bible, but I still fell ill. The first week my family and I joined this Church at Raji Oba, I fell ill again, but I prayed one prayer. I said, ‘God, if you are in this Church, let this be the end of this sickness.’

    One Sunday, I bought the weekly publication of the Church—Signs and Wonders Today. The title of the Bishop’s message was, ‘Press Until It Strikes.’ From that publication, I discovered that sickness could not kill me. That marked the end of sickness in my body. This year makes it 16 years that I have been enjoying divine health. I give all the glory to God!”—- Kola Owolabi

    Friend, the power to benefit from the above is available, if you are born again. You get born again by confessing your sins and accepting Jesus as your Saviour and Lord. If you are set for this new birth experience, please say this prayer: “Lord Jesus, I come to You today. I am a sinner. Forgive me of my sins. Cleanse me with Your precious Blood. Today, I accept You as my Lord and Saviour. Thank You Jesus! Now I know I am born again!” I will continue this message next week.

    Every exploit in life is a product of knowledge. For further reading, you can get my books: Keys To Divine Health and The Healing Balm and Satan Get Lost!

    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., 7:35 a.m., 9:10 a.m. and 10.45 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

  • Nigeria needs prayers, says cleric

    Nigeria needs sustained prayers to survive, the Parish Pastor of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Ikate Lagos State, Pastor Tony Zino, has stated.

    He spoke last Sunday during the launch of his musical album titled “Your mercy.”

    The album contains nine hit tracks.

    Its central theme, he said: “is on God’s mercy for us as individuals and as nations of the world.”

    Zino narrated how the vision that gave birth to the title: “While I was trying to really enjoy my sleep, my phone started ringing. In my subconscious I could hear the phone ring but I thought it was in my dream.

    “But it was real; it was a distress call at the early hours of the morning from a family friend whose relative was dying – “Wake up, wake up, he is dying, please pray.

    “I got up, managed to shake the sleep off me and I knelt down to pray for the family friend who was at his transiting point to eternity.

    “And the devil came whispering to my ears ‘you do not have the right to this level of battle.’

    “I wondered what he meant – not quite long he started reeling accusation upon accusation on me. Showing me pictures of the wrong things I had done previously.

    “At this point in time, my focus shifted. Instead of praying for the dying man, I spent more time asking God for mercy for myself.

    “And by that action, I missed the season of rescue to decree and make pronouncements for the dying man.

    “It was later revealed that the dying man was still hovering around the vicinity near his body. Unfortunately the man died.

    “God began to teach me a lesson of a lifetime that there are levels of battles in this journey of life with cunning tricks of dissuasion employed by the devil to manipulate people.”

  • Nigeria’s increasing  grounded pilots

    Nigeria’s increasing grounded pilots

    BEFORE now, unemployed pilots were virtually unheard of. Being a pilot was glamorous, exciting, and highly rewarding. With their fascinating uniforms, crisply white or black, featuring single-breasted blazers with gold or silver braiding and decorated with insignia akin to naval uniforms, representing his or her duties on board an aircraft, almost every youth coveted becoming a pilot.

    Today, things have changed. As at the last count, Nigeria is said to have between 400 and 600 trained but unemployed pilots. Currently grouped under the aegis of Nigerian Professional Pilots (NPP), they are trained and Nigeria licensed.

    Kano State is said to be currently training about 100 pilots in Jordan, while the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) is training about 74 in South Africa. The NCAT, Zaria, is set to graduate about 125 in December, while several others are being trained in Ilorin. This means that Nigeria could be having about 500 pilots joining the already swamped market of unemployed pilots in about another year with nowhere to work.

    Speaking on the scary scenario, Captain Nogie Meggison, JEdAIr CEO, and Chairman, Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON) told The Nation on Sunday, “the situation is this bleak because it is unlike many years ago when the aviation sector was booming, when the profession created a huge demand for commercial pilots, foreign and domestic, landing airline jobs immediately after graduating from flying schools. Then, it was more like something on the tip of a finger. But now, things are no longer so. Today, hundreds of trained pilots, both in Nigeria and in other countries of the world, now roam the streets in search of very scarce aviation jobs. As I speak to you, we have about 180 of them in the NPP list, all with Nigerian licenses. We have some Nigerians getting trained in the USA and other places and if you add all of them, we are talking of about 500-600 Nigerian youths getting trained as pilots waiting to further bloat the ranks of the unemployed in Nigeria. So, what bleeds my heart is that in another year, pilots, who are like fresh breath could become stale, no one would be willing to take the stale breath over the fresh ones. A pilot that does not get into the cockpit after six months is mandated to go for re-training. By the time they are two years out of work, they are no longer considered pilots. They must go for recertification. And we are talking of pilots who have been on ground for two, three, four five years and more.”

    Lamenting the state of unemployment in the industry, he said “Today, we have a rough figure of about 150 private jets in this country. And out of these, foreign pilots spend at least 60percent of their time in our country flying these jets. That automatically makes them residents in this country. And to every plane, there are two pilots. What we are saying is, take one foreign pilot and pair him or her with one home-based pilot, and this number will start reducing fast, and let the pair do a rotation one month on and one month off so that the routine will cover every professional pilot. Multiply 150 by four, that gives you 600. Today as we count, those private jets have roughly about 600 pilots flying our air space. But here, we have Nigeria’s younger blood willing to work but not being provided the platform.”

     

    Economic meltdown

    Reports show that this problem started with the economic recession of the 1980s and 1990s causing not only stagnation of aviation market, but also huge downsizing, according to an aviation operator at the international wing of the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Ikeja, Lagos.

    He said “As usual, we all thought that the tough times for a record number of unemployed pilots, would not be something that would become a dilemma. But seeing our future generation of Nigerians still awaiting landing a job with major airlines immediately after graduation is heart-rendering. Truth is, I see the golden-era for piloting job being gone, unless something drastic, as making a law forcing all airline operators to ensure that they employ one foreigner and a Nigerian as the co-pilot. If that is not done, our own younger pilots, being churned out of the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT), Zaria, every year, may have a very long time of waiting for elusive jobs as a pilot. In other words, they may have their dreams easily shattered.”

    In India, it is reported that the current situation in aviation job market is equally demoralising, with the mood of job seeking pilots, being largely depression.

    On a Facebook wall of non-working pilot, it was said that India reports around 6,000 unemployed pilots.

    In Europe, online information reports around 8000 jobless pilots being predicted to be residing in that region. And according to what is described as ‘sad statistics results’ on the situation in Europe, it is said that this shows in negative comments in news portals and aviation forums reflecting expectations heavily down in ever getting return on investment in acquiring commercial pilots’ certification.

    And according to the Head, Lithuanian Pilot Training Academy, Baltic Aviation Academy, Indre Sveistryte, “life has been tough for the young cadets at the moment and talks have been on the current situation, reasons and solutions.”

    He noted that there is a new term “frozen ATPL”, which has become common in the industry as slang for the young cadets with a Commercial Pilot’s license meeting the requirements for issuing of a full ATPL licence to pilot a commercial aircraft, but lacking 1500 hours of flight time to land their dream job offers at commercial airlines.

    Sveistryte said when the new wave of students graduated from the flight schools, a downturn was already on with the airline jobs interview doors’ closed. As a result, commercial aviation market at the moment is facing complex challenges- that is, a global surplus of fresh cadet pilots lacking flying hours and a shortage of experienced captains in certain developing markets. He added however, that not all cockpits are closed. There still are some jobs in the market for young cadets, though offering not the best view a young dreamer wants to see from the cockpit window, as it might be not even piloting Airbus or Boeing.

    He added that more than 2000 aviation professionals study annually at the Baltic Aviation Academy (BAA) and each of them spends up to 12.000 hours in flight simulators. As an academy, BAA is an institution that specialises in aircraft crew training, aircraft crew formation, consultation services as well as the initial flight courses for the private pilot license which are held at the pilot and flight steward training centre in Vilnius or through a range of European flight simulation centres network.

    He said that according to Boeing Current Market Outlook of 2010, the need to support fleet growth and retirements, an additional 466,650 pilots will be required over the next 20 years by the commercial aviation industry, which represents a need of around 23,300 per year. He adds that, Asia Pacific has been the most demanding region over a 20-year period, yet, it requires 180,600 pilots. Similarly, China alone accounts for 70,600 Europe forecast a need for 94,800, North America 97,350, Latin America 37,000, the Middle East 32,700, Africa 13,200 and the CIS 11,000.

    But here in Nigeria, it is said that the problems of unemployed aviation graduates are not just compounded by decline in the economy, it is more so because domestic airline operators shun Nigerian pilots as many of them rather prefer to pay extravagantly to hire foreign pilots. This development, aviation expert say, is the major cause of the exceptional increase in the number of unemployed pilots in the country.

    Another official told The Nation that there can be little hope for domestic pilots as Nigeria’s chartered and local airline operators prefer foreign pilots. “In fact, even billionaire jet-owners are guilty of same. Yet, most of the job-searching pilots don’t even mind being employed as co-pilots. Can you believe that most of our airline operators do not want to train our local pilots because the money they would spend on them. Up till today, most aviation graduates from Nigeria and overseas flying schools complete their courses with about 250 and 500 flight-hours whereas many airlines are asking for pilots that have between 1,000 and 1,500 flight-hours to employ. So, you see that we have a dilemma on our hands. That is why you are seeing our pilots trained in NCAT, many from South Africa, United States of America (USA), and others from aviation schools in Europe, as well as a few others, being made redundant by Nigerian airline employers.”

    Expressing her concern over the development, NCAT Chief Executive Officer, (CEO), Captain Chinyere Kalu, said things were not like this in the past. “Few years ago, airlines used to employ pilots and train them on the job. It is thus a big blow why the tradition was unexpectedly stopped by domestic airline operators. She said it seems what the airline operators may be dodging is training of home-based pilots to get the type-rating.” According to her, it often costs airliners a fortune to send pilots for type-rating on Boeing 737 for instance. Another aspect the airliners are wary of is that some of the locally trained pilots could leave their services for higher paying jobs after they might have spent huge sums of money in training them.

    On an optimistic note a new government policy on pilot employment is already in the offing to address the problem. If implemented, the policy will spell out to she says airline operators that after training the students, they have to work for their employers for a minimum number of years before they can leave.

     

    Hope on the horizon

    Kalu, expresses the hope that as regional airlines are being set up will provide a soft landing for freshly graduated pilots from NCAT and other colleges where they could work and build up the required number of hours to acquire, at least, jet engine rating to be like a stepping stone for them to get to the next level. That is being highly hoped for. Sadly, many of the regional jets are also being manned mostly by foreigners. “But I believe that with a policy in effect, Nigeria will insist that our own trained citizens must be the ones flying the aircraft as that is what obtains in the USA and most countries of the world.”

    Meggison adds: “My heart bleeds at the plight of these brilliant set of Nigerians. And you can’t tell me they are the future of Nigeria when as a matter of fact, you, the government, makes no provisions for their future, which already, is wasting away today.

    “As we speak, there are over 600 of them though they don’t want to show their faces and names lest they are dubbed rebels. But I weep seeing how their future ebbs by the day and their hopes for career as pilots dim. So, you want to ask, why do we have many foreign pilots in the country and allow our own trained to remain unemployed? Have you tried to see the brilliant resumes of some of these young pride of ours in the country? You need to see them and then you will agree with me that we must address this issue as a matter of urgency.

    “I had expected that the newly introduced government policy on private jet would address the problem. But alas, we are still on it. You have governors, the Nigerian Police and many private owners purchasing private jets and still employing the services of expatriates. Why don’t they give these ones a chance, watch them grow as experts and then, Nigeria’s future is richly ensured? But no, they won’t do that. Unless we get foreigners, we are not sure of our own. For me as a person, I am seriously displeased that foreigners have taken over pilot jobs from our young pilots. And unless this is stopped, their numbers will rise.

    “We have some that had been out of jobs as pilots for upward of 10 to 12 years. They don’t just want to show their faces. Some of them have taken up other menial jobs for survival. Many of them had first degrees before delving into training as pilots. So, we are not talking about failures or layabouts. We are talking of brilliant, promising Nigerians. ”

    A female aviation official said the high number of foreign pilots is as a result of the fact that the bulk of the planes are foreign-registered and are on “wet-lease”. This means that the aircraft can only be flown by foreign pilots.

    She added, “Expatriate pilots must not continue to dominate our aviation market to the detriment of our local pilots. We have an estimated minimum of 800 expatriate pilots flying in Nigeria whereas we have just about 200 Nigerian pilots out of job. So, all we need is for our government to make it a 50-50 case by saying every one foreign pilot must have a Nigerian co-pilot in the cockpit. We need to have deliberate transfer of technology and skills to the younger generation. That is the only way our Nigerian pilots can have a fair share of the jobs in the Nigerian aviation industry. ”

    However, many experts spoken to say that the reasons for not employing many of these young Nigerian pilots could be that they are not type-rated to work on certain aircrafts. They then suggested that the situation can only be resolved when our government shows commitment to the plight of this young Nigerians, formulate policy and above all, invest in standard aviation facilities particularly in the areas of training and simulation capabilities.

  • Fayemi, Fayose,  Bamidele and Ekiti poll

    Fayemi, Fayose, Bamidele and Ekiti poll

    After what must rank as the most extraordinary feat of realpolitik ever, former Ekiti State governor, Ayo Fayose, has been made the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) standard-bearer in the June 2014 governorship election in the state. The choice before the party big wigs in Abuja was to either get Mr Fayose elected or appointed as candidate. In the circumstance, neither election nor appointment was applicable or appropriate. He had to be made a candidate by the most pernicious sleight of hand the party could muster. With his coronation on March 22, a crowning that is unlikely to be overturned notwithstanding the grumblings from within the state PDP and from among those who contested the ticket with him, Mr Fayose will in June take on Governor Kayode Fayemi for the now ennobled governorship seat of Ekiti State.

    Mr Fayose, it will be recalled, ran a populist campaign from 2001 to 2003 to win the governorship seat. But he was impeached in 2006, a year before his first term in office came to an end. The feisty 53-year-old is a study in irony. He has been out of power for about seven years now, and he tends so easily to overreach himself, not to say exaggerate his puny gifts. In his rather violent but abridged first term, he enunciated and implemented horrendously amateurish policies. Not only did he do very poorly in his three years in office, he also reacted very badly to challenges to his power in the typically intolerant fashion of African rulers.

    Though Mr Fayose is still being tried for alleged corrupt practices, it is striking that the same PDP – not a different PDP – has found him a fit and proper person to fly their flag in the coming poll. The manner of his emergence itself may have been dubious, and his opponents in the party either weak and ineffective or embarrassingly ingratiating and unprincipled, however, party bigwigs at the state and national levels have curiously and even joyfully turned a blind eye to the strong-arm tactics he employed in muscling his co-contestants into submission. This has prompted many commentators to judge the real objectives of the party in the Ekiti election to be both deceptively intrusive and brutally detached. It must take a huge dose of cavalier politics, they argue, to plot such intrusive machination, and unprincipled indifference to ignore the salient implications of being represented by a man apparently so shorn of ideas and honour as Mr Fayose.

    The only explanations for this strange choice of candidate seem to be located in the unearthly inability of the PDP federal government to be identified with noble ideas and standards. First, it is suggested that what the PDP hopes to achieve is not really to win the governorship, but to have a fighting chance of winning sizeable votes for the presidential election in 2015. If this was the aim, the party would still need a man with some dignity and noble carriage, not to say common sense or native wisdom to prise a healthy amount of votes from the ruling party in the state. It is also suggested that having dismissed Mr Fayose’s co-contestants as incapable of discomfiting the more cerebral Dr Fayemi, the Jonathan presidency was prepared to embrace a roughneck. Since Dr Fayemi is expected to conventionally assail his opponents with much learning and self-assurance, the PDP probably guessed that only a southpaw, a brute and a scoundrel could unhorse him.

    The choice of Mr Fayose is however more importantly a reflection of the nature and character of the PDP and the Jonathan presidency. The two entities reinforce each other’s callous disregard for sane and elevated politics. They are obviously not thinking in terms of the great heights the country should aspire to, or of the fine ideas it should project. The image of Mr Fayose is settled. No one disputes his mediocrity or his predilections for strong-arm tactics, or even, as evidenced by his last days in office, of his lack of coordination and composure and of his inebriated and insensate gibberish under pressure. What is in dispute, in effect, are what strange motives gingered the Jonathan presidency into abandoning all pretence to principles, principles the president says are anchored on his frantic Pentecostal theology.

    There is a general consensus that Mr Fayose indecently and brutishly secured the candidacy of the PDP for the Ekiti poll. There is also hardly a whisper against the open and indisputable fact that he is the wrongest candidate to represent the PDP in the election. If the state and national PDP expect him to win, they have not disclosed on what ideas, past achievements or even penitence they base their expectations. Mr Fayose has not propounded any idea, nor can he, for he is incapable of the robustness and sophistication that Ekiti has managed to acquire in the past few years. As for achievements, there is none for him to showcase, and he cannot dredge up any even by the uncanniest abracadabra. As far as remorse goes, he has sworn to some sort of personal conversion without indicating exactly in what areas of his indistinguishable worldview he practices newness of life, and has also sworn to some sort of maturity without demonstrating any practical evidence of the wisdom that sometimes comes with age.

    If normality prevails, Ekiti is unlikely to dignify Mr Fayose with even 10 percent of the votes. (See box). They were grossly mistaken about him in 2003; they won’t like to be caught with pants down again or, after having achieved some sanity and enviable heights in decorous politics, succumb to the lure and fantasies of the juvenile politics propagated by Mr Fayose. However, his entrance into the race and the helping hand the federal forces are expected to give him, are likely to make the June poll a two-horse race between the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the PDP. For all his faults, Mr Fayose is a colourful politician, exuberant, gregarious but simple-minded. These attributes are unlikely to be vitiated by his mediocre ideas and lack of philosophical depth. And so, he will draw attention with his egregious remarks, whip whatever crowd he is able to rent into some animated frenzy, and hope, like his PDP counterparts in Osun State, that whenever he foments trouble, Abuja will back him up.

    The logic of Nigerian politics favours the ruling party in any state except where its performance is woeful. The APC government in Ekiti has brought a lot of practical and implementable novelties to the state. On account of its programmes and projects, the party is certain to receive a good hearing. And having been governed for about four years by probably the most cerebral governor in the country, and notwithstanding the poor finances of the state, Ekiti is not expected to want to fix a problem that does not exist. So, where does this leave the Labour Party whose ambitious candidate is the former ACN/APC man, Opeyemi Bamidele? My guess is that he will be strangulated in the middle. The APC and PDP will hug all the limelight, and the LP candidate will be left in the shadow of the two, shouting himself hoarse and receiving little hearing and sunlight. It is possible Mr Bamidele indeed has a great programme for Ekiti and a passion to do right by the state, but he has the misfortune of facing in one election both a performing APC governor and a federally-backed and boisterously loud PDP candidate. His timing is appalling, and his haste exposes to his many admirers a great flaw in his character – an unwholesome and devastating lack of a sense of proportion.

    Dr Fayemi is of course not impeccable. He incredulously began his re-election campaign even before he became the candidate of his party, thereby indicating unnecessary overconfidence. His opponents may have no democratic credentials whatsoever, but he himself will need to polish his democratic credentials, for his distinguishing qualities, nobility and definitive and futuristic leadership claims rest on those credentials. In a country rife with false democrats and open and closet tyrants, Dr Fayemi’s blots are unlikely to diminish his campaign, let alone threaten his anticipated victory. But he must be acutely aware of the need to project his democratic credentials and beliefs with deep, effortless and philosophical conviction. His admirers must not sense that these values are merely expedient rather than intrinsic.

    If peaceful elections can be guaranteed – a tall order given the presence of Mr Fayose – the June poll may even end up an anticlimax. Mr Fayose’s scaremongering and PDP’s chicanery can only be effective in a close race. With the passage of years, Ekiti voters have become more aware of their environment than during the Fayose or former Governor Segun Oni years. They will forcefully try to sustain the heights they have attained nationally, for the alternative will be too grim for them to contemplate.

  • Nigeria’s increasing  grounded pilots

    Nigeria’s increasing grounded pilots

    The monster of unemployment spares no sector as Assistant Editor, Investigations, Joke Kujenya, discovered when she recently met with a few out of about 200 unemployed pilots in Lagos.

    BEFORE now, unemployed pilots were virtually unheard of. Being a pilot was glamorous, exciting, and highly rewarding. With their fascinating uniforms, crisply white or black, featuring single-breasted blazers with gold or silver braiding and decorated with insignia akin to naval uniforms, representing his or her duties on board an aircraft, almost every youth coveted becoming a pilot.

    Today, things have changed. As at the last count, Nigeria is said to have between 400 and 600 trained but unemployed pilots. Currently grouped under the aegis of Nigerian Professional Pilots (NPP), they are trained and Nigeria licensed.

    Kano State is said to be currently training about 100 pilots in Jordan, while the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) is training about 74 in South Africa. The NCAT, Zaria, is set to graduate about 125 in December, while several others are being trained in Ilorin. This means that Nigeria could be having about 500 pilots joining the already swamped market of unemployed pilots in about another year with nowhere to work.

    Speaking on the scary scenario, Captain Nogie Meggison, JEdAIr CEO, and Chairman, Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON) told The Nation on Sunday, “the situation is this bleak because it is unlike many years ago when the aviation sector was booming, when the profession created a huge demand for commercial pilots, foreign and domestic, landing airline jobs immediately after graduating from flying schools. Then, it was more like something on the tip of a finger. But now, things are no longer so. Today, hundreds of trained pilots, both in Nigeria and in other countries of the world, now roam the streets in search of very scarce aviation jobs. As I speak to you, we have about 180 of them in the NPP list, all with Nigerian licenses. We have some Nigerians getting trained in the USA and other places and if you add all of them, we are talking of about 500-600 Nigerian youths getting trained as pilots waiting to further bloat the ranks of the unemployed in Nigeria. So, what bleeds my heart is that in another year, pilots, who are like fresh breath could become stale, no one would be willing to take the stale breath over the fresh ones. A pilot that does not get into the cockpit after six months is mandated to go for re-training. By the time they are two years out of work, they are no longer considered pilots. They must go for recertification. And we are talking of pilots who have been on ground for two, three, four five years and more.”

    Lamenting the state of unemployment in the industry, he said “Today, we have a rough figure of about 150 private jets in this country. And out of these, foreign pilots spend at least 60percent of their time in our country flying these jets. That automatically makes them residents in this country. And to every plane, there are two pilots. What we are saying is, take one foreign pilot and pair him or her with one home-based pilot, and this number will start reducing fast, and let the pair do a rotation one month on and one month off so that the routine will cover every professional pilot. Multiply 150 by four, that gives you 600. Today as we count, those private jets have roughly about 600 pilots flying our air space. But here, we have Nigeria’s younger blood willing to work but not being provided the platform.”

     

    Economic meltdown

    Reports show that this problem started with the economic recession of the 1980s and 1990s causing not only stagnation of aviation market, but also huge downsizing, according to an aviation operator at the international wing of the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Ikeja, Lagos.

    He said “As usual, we all thought that the tough times for a record number of unemployed pilots, would not be something that would become a dilemma. But seeing our future generation of Nigerians still awaiting landing a job with major airlines immediately after graduation is heart-rendering. Truth is, I see the golden-era for piloting job being gone, unless something drastic, as making a law forcing all airline operators to ensure that they employ one foreigner and a Nigerian as the co-pilot. If that is not done, our own younger pilots, being churned out of the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT), Zaria, every year, may have a very long time of waiting for elusive jobs as a pilot. In other words, they may have their dreams easily shattered.”

    In India, it is reported that the current situation in aviation job market is equally demoralising, with the mood of job seeking pilots, being largely depression.

    On a Facebook wall of non-working pilot, it was said that India reports around 6,000 unemployed pilots.

    In Europe, online information reports around 8000 jobless pilots being predicted to be residing in that region. And according to what is described as ‘sad statistics results’ on the situation in Europe, it is said that this shows in negative comments in news portals and aviation forums reflecting expectations heavily down in ever getting return on investment in acquiring commercial pilots’ certification.

    And according to the Head, Lithuanian Pilot Training Academy, Baltic Aviation Academy, Indre Sveistryte, “life has been tough for the young cadets at the moment and talks have been on the current situation, reasons and solutions.”

    He noted that there is a new term “frozen ATPL”, which has become common in the industry as slang for the young cadets with a Commercial Pilot’s license meeting the requirements for issuing of a full ATPL licence to pilot a commercial aircraft, but lacking 1500 hours of flight time to land their dream job offers at commercial airlines.

    Sveistryte said when the new wave of students graduated from the flight schools, a downturn was already on with the airline jobs interview doors’ closed. As a result, commercial aviation market at the moment is facing complex challenges- that is, a global surplus of fresh cadet pilots lacking flying hours and a shortage of experienced captains in certain developing markets. He added however, that not all cockpits are closed. There still are some jobs in the market for young cadets, though offering not the best view a young dreamer wants to see from the cockpit window, as it might be not even piloting Airbus or Boeing.

    He added that more than 2000 aviation professionals study annually at the Baltic Aviation Academy (BAA) and each of them spends up to 12.000 hours in flight simulators. As an academy, BAA is an institution that specialises in aircraft crew training, aircraft crew formation, consultation services as well as the initial flight courses for the private pilot license which are held at the pilot and flight steward training centre in Vilnius or through a range of European flight simulation centres network.

    He said that according to Boeing Current Market Outlook of 2010, the need to support fleet growth and retirements, an additional 466,650 pilots will be required over the next 20 years by the commercial aviation industry, which represents a need of around 23,300 per year. He adds that, Asia Pacific has been the most demanding region over a 20-year period, yet, it requires 180,600 pilots. Similarly, China alone accounts for 70,600 Europe forecast a need for 94,800, North America 97,350, Latin America 37,000, the Middle East 32,700, Africa 13,200 and the CIS 11,000.

    But here in Nigeria, it is said that the problems of unemployed aviation graduates are not just compounded by decline in the economy, it is more so because domestic airline operators shun Nigerian pilots as many of them rather prefer to pay extravagantly to hire foreign pilots. This development, aviation expert say, is the major cause of the exceptional increase in the number of unemployed pilots in the country.

    Another official told The Nation that there can be little hope for domestic pilots as Nigeria’s chartered and local airline operators prefer foreign pilots. “In fact, even billionaire jet-owners are guilty of same. Yet, most of the job-searching pilots don’t even mind being employed as co-pilots. Can you believe that most of our airline operators do not want to train our local pilots because the money they would spend on them. Up till today, most aviation graduates from Nigeria and overseas flying schools complete their courses with about 250 and 500 flight-hours whereas many airlines are asking for pilots that have between 1,000 and 1,500 flight-hours to employ. So, you see that we have a dilemma on our hands. That is why you are seeing our pilots trained in NCAT, many from South Africa, United States of America (USA), and others from aviation schools in Europe, as well as a few others, being made redundant by Nigerian airline employers.”

    Expressing her concern over the development, NCAT Chief Executive Officer, (CEO), Captain Chinyere Kalu, said things were not like this in the past. “Few years ago, airlines used to employ pilots and train them on the job. It is thus a big blow why the tradition was unexpectedly stopped by domestic airline operators. She said it seems what the airline operators may be dodging is training of home-based pilots to get the type-rating.” According to her, it often costs airliners a fortune to send pilots for type-rating on Boeing 737 for instance. Another aspect the airliners are wary of is that some of the locally trained pilots could leave their services for higher paying jobs after they might have spent huge sums of money in training them.

    On an optimistic note a new government policy on pilot employment is already in the offing to address the problem. If implemented, the policy will spell out to she says airline operators that after training the students, they have to work for their employers for a minimum number of years before they can leave.

     

    Hope on the horizon

    Kalu, expresses the hope that as regional airlines are being set up will provide a soft landing for freshly graduated pilots from NCAT and other colleges where they could work and build up the required number of hours to acquire, at least, jet engine rating to be like a stepping stone for them to get to the next level. That is being highly hoped for. Sadly, many of the regional jets are also being manned mostly by foreigners. “But I believe that with a policy in effect, Nigeria will insist that our own trained citizens must be the ones flying the aircraft as that is what obtains in the USA and most countries of the world.”

    Meggison adds: “My heart bleeds at the plight of these brilliant set of Nigerians. And you can’t tell me they are the future of Nigeria when as a matter of fact, you, the government, makes no provisions for their future, which already, is wasting away today.

    “As we speak, there are over 600 of them though they don’t want to show their faces and names lest they are dubbed rebels. But I weep seeing how their future ebbs by the day and their hopes for career as pilots dim. So, you want to ask, why do we have many foreign pilots in the country and allow our own trained to remain unemployed? Have you tried to see the brilliant resumes of some of these young pride of ours in the country? You need to see them and then you will agree with me that we must address this issue as a matter of urgency.

    “I had expected that the newly introduced government policy on private jet would address the problem. But alas, we are still on it. You have governors, the Nigerian Police and many private owners purchasing private jets and still employing the services of expatriates. Why don’t they give these ones a chance, watch them grow as experts and then, Nigeria’s future is richly ensured? But no, they won’t do that. Unless we get foreigners, we are not sure of our own. For me as a person, I am seriously displeased that foreigners have taken over pilot jobs from our young pilots. And unless this is stopped, their numbers will rise.

    “We have some that had been out of jobs as pilots for upward of 10 to 12 years. They don’t just want to show their faces. Some of them have taken up other menial jobs for survival. Many of them had first degrees before delving into training as pilots. So, we are not talking about failures or layabouts. We are talking of brilliant, promising Nigerians. ”

    A female aviation official said the high number of foreign pilots is as a result of the fact that the bulk of the planes are foreign-registered and are on “wet-lease”. This means that the aircraft can only be flown by foreign pilots.

    She added, “Expatriate pilots must not continue to dominate our aviation market to the detriment of our local pilots. We have an estimated minimum of 800 expatriate pilots flying in Nigeria whereas we have just about 200 Nigerian pilots out of job. So, all we need is for our government to make it a 50-50 case by saying every one foreign pilot must have a Nigerian co-pilot in the cockpit. We need to have deliberate transfer of technology and skills to the younger generation. That is the only way our Nigerian pilots can have a fair share of the jobs in the Nigerian aviation industry. ”

    However, many experts spoken to say that the reasons for not employing many of these young Nigerian pilots could be that they are not type-rated to work on certain aircrafts. They then suggested that the situation can only be resolved when our government shows commitment to the plight of this young Nigerians, formulate policy and above all, invest in standard aviation facilities particularly in the areas of training and simulation capabilities.