Tag: abroad

  • Things those moving abroad don’t talk about

    Things those moving abroad don’t talk about

    The desire to “japa” or relocate from Nigeria is a trend that has become very popular in recent years, motivated by the attraction  of better opportunities abroad. 

    While the opportunity can be exciting, it’s important to consider the possible drawbacks before making such a significant decision. 

    Here’s a look at some of the challenges that are less talked about:

    * Cultural displacement/shock

    Moving to a new country often means leaving behind familiar cultural practices, traditions and a support network of family and friends. The sense of cultural displacement can be challenging and may lead to feelings of isolation and homesickness. For instance, Nigerians living abroad often miss significant cultural celebrations such as weddings, festivals, and religious gatherings, which can impact their sense of belonging and overall happiness.

    *Racism

    Racism is an issue that people often don’t mention when talking about living abroad. You might move to a new country thinking it will be a perfect experience, only to encounter different forms of discrimination. In some places, people might make assumptions about you based on your appearance or ethnicity, which can affect everything from job opportunities to social interactions. Even in countries that pride themselves on diversity, you might still face challenges related to racism, such as being treated differently in public places or having difficulty accessing certain services. It’s important to be prepared for these realities and to seek support if you encounter such issues. 

    Read Also: Nigeria leads African oil production with 1.61mbpd

    *Cost of living

    While some countries offer higher salaries, the cost of living in many of these places can be significantly higher than in Nigeria. For example, the rent for a small apartment in cities like London or New York can be several times higher than in Lagos. Expenses such as housing, healthcare, education, and daily necessities can quickly eat into your earnings, leaving you with less disposable income than anticipated.

    *Job market challenges

    Securing a job abroad may not be as straightforward as it seems. Many countries have strict visa regulations and preference for local candidates, which can make it difficult for newcomers to find employment in their desired field. For instance, some Nigerian professionals have found themselves working in jobs well below their qualifications due to the competitive job market and visa restrictions.

    *Professional recognition

    Qualifications and professional experience from Nigeria may not always be recognised or valued equally in other countries. This could mean additional certification processes, further education, or starting your career from scratch. Nigerian doctors and engineers, for example, often need to undergo lengthy re-certification processes to practice in countries like the US or UK, which can take a lot of time  and financial investment.

    *Social integration

    Integrating into a new society can take time and effort. Language barriers, cultural differences, and potential discrimination can make it challenging to feel fully accepted and part of the community. For example, some Nigerians in non-English speaking countries like France, china, have struggled with language acquisition, which affects their ability to socialize and integrate fully into the society.

    *Legal and Immigration issues

     The legal and immigration systems in a foreign country can be complex and time-consuming. Visa restrictions, residency permits, and potential legal issues can create uncertainty and stress. For instance, some Nigerian students abroad have faced visa renewals challenges, leading to uncertainty about their legal status and future in the host country.

    *Economic instability

    No country is protected to economic downturns. Relocating does not guarantee financial stability, and you may find yourself facing economic challenges similar to or worse than those you left behind. For example, during economic recessions, job security can be as challenging abroad as it is in Nigeria, and you might find yourself unemployed in a foreign country.

    *Healthcare access

    Access to healthcare varies greatly from country to country. In some places, healthcare services may be expensive or difficult to access, especially if you do not have comprehensive health insurance. For example, in the United States, healthcare costs can be prohibitive without insurance, leading to significant financial strain in case of medical emergencies.

    *Impact on mental health

    The stress of adapting to a new environment, potential social isolation, and the pressure to succeed can take a toll on your mental health. The mental health struggles of immigrants are well-documented, with many experiencing anxiety, depression, and stress due to the challenges of settling in a new country. Consider whether you have the resilience and support systems in place to cope with these challenges.

    While relocating can offer new opportunities, it’s important to weigh the potential downsides/drawbacks carefully. 

    By making an informed decision, you can ensure that your move aligns with your long-term goals and well-being. 

    Relocating is a major life change that requires careful planning and consideration of all the potential impact

  • Stranded abroad   

    Stranded abroad   

    That students on Federal Government’s scholarship are abandoned abroad leaves so much to be desired

    Education is the greatest legacy any nation can bequeath to her children who invariably are the leaders of tomorrow. Development is dependent on the value countries place on education. The more developed nations are not divine gifts. They are products of well-planned systems top of which is investment in education. The result of lack of proper attention to the education sector can be seen in the position of Nigeria in the global index of out-of-school children that stands at an outrageous 20 million and counting, with the dire economic circumstances that continue to take off more children from schools. Nigeria has never matched the United Nations annual budgetary allocation of 26% benchmark to the education sector and the effects can be seen in the quality of schools and welfare of teachers generally in the country.

    The alarm raised by some Nigerian students on Federal Government scholarship in countries like Russia, Morocco, Algeria, China, Hungary, etc. about their ordeal after the government reneged on paying their stipends for about eight months is quite disturbing.  Scholarships are financial support awarded to students either by governments, individuals, foundations or companies.

    Nigerian government seems to have become notorious for not keeping to the terms of agreements with those on Federal Government scholarships abroad. Even the beneficiaries of the Niger Delta Amnesty Scholarship Programme were on the streets of London a few years ago protesting the failure of the government to pay their tuition. Some other ones in the Philippines carried placards describing their ordeals as their dues had been delayed and they could neither study nor come home.

    The President of the Union of Nigerian Students under the Federal Government-Controlled Bilateral Educational Agreement Scholarship, Ayuba Anas, who articulated the students’ concerns expressed worries that they are unable to meet their daily expenses. Being a student in a foreign land means that a lot of things must be paid for by the students; rent, council taxes, electricity/water bills, internet, transportation and feeding. Paying tuition is not synonymous with living stipends. The payment of tuition is just one part of the education expenses.

    Read Also: Senate passes N446bn FIRS 2024 budget

    Reneging on Bilateral Education Agreement terms is a diplomatic issue and must not be condoned at all. It says a lot about the country if people who are seen as the country’s representatives are exposed to certain hardships like being ejected from their accommodation or being unable to pay the living bills. Most of the bills are linked to the supply chain and gets cut off if payments are not made. It is a huge embarrassment to have Nigerian students being subjected to such indignities that might push them into committing crimes to make money to be able to pay bills.

    The Federal Ministry of Education must be held accountable for this embarrassment. The scholarship board must have explanations to make about this sad situation. Are there cases of corruption, negligence or official ineptitude?  This report is not a one-off issue. It has been happening for a long time. These students are sent off to foreign countries and the official negligence and insensitivity expose them to hardships. It is better the scholarship schemes are abolished if there isn’t enough fund to fully sustain them, than exposing students to the harsh realities of being abandoned half-way.

    The attitude strips the students of any patriotic zeal because it shows they are not valued. No caring country abandons its students on scholarships that they earned. We believe that those responsible for this embarrassing situation must face official sanction to serve as deterrent to future officers. In the interim, efforts must be made to offset the payments that have now piled up to eight months.

    But the Nigerian government must not just instruct that payments be made, there must be an investigation to expose those embarrassing the country through official negligence and insensitivity. It might not be impossible that some people have been shortchanging both the students and the nation at large. Humans must survive and these poor students might be frustrated into crimes that would further dent the image of the country. We want the culprits to be sanctioned in a name-and-shame way so that the system can be rid of such unpatriotic elements.

  • Melaye travels abroad, alleges threat to life in Kogi

    •Senator petitions IG, UN, others •’I’m willing to be quizzed in Abuja’

    EMBATTLED Chairman of Senate Committee on Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Senator Dino Melaye yesterday raised the alarm over alleged threat to his life.

    Melaye, who made the allegation through his lawyers, Messrs Ricky Tarfa & Co, claimed that he is abroad “on an official trip”.

    His lawyer said the plot was brought to Melaye’s notice abroad and he :immediately informed us yesterday that the plans to set him up and frame him on spurious gun-running charges have been perfected and that some suspects would be paraded as having named him as their sponsor yesterday”.

    He alleged that a plot has been hatched to “murder him extra-judicially” by his “political enemies” in Kogi State in collusion with men of the state police command.

    The Kogi West senator made the allegation in separate petitions to the United Nations (UN) Resident Representative, members of the diplomatic corps – including the Ambassadors of the United States, Germany, Canada and the High Commissioner of the United Kingdom.

    Others he sent the petition to include Amnesty International, Transparency International and the Human Rights Watch.

    He also forwarded the petition to Inspector General (IG) Ibrahim Idris.

    He urged the police boss to raise a neutral police team to investigate the allegations of “gun running” levelled against him by the Kogi State Police Command and the Kogi State Government

    He sought for the intervention of the IG, members of the international community and human rights bodies to save him from what he described as “willful, intentional harassment, oppression, political victimisation and threat to life”.

    Melaye prayed the UN and other envoys in Nigeria to help guarantee his fundamental human rights to liberty and safety from fear and harm to his person as well as threats to terminate his life allegedly by agents of the Kogi State Government.

    Part of the petition reads: “As things stand, I live each day in constant and reasonable fear for my life, looking over my shoulders and being harassed by the named politicians. The police are a willing tool in the hands of these politicians.”

    Melaye, who endorsed one of the petitions, said: “I am a law-abiding citizen, who voluntarily submitted myself before the FCT High Court to answer to charges, which I know are unsustainable.

    “However, the situation I am in right now gives me reason to believe that the law enforcement agencies, particularly the police, are in cohorts with my political enemies and can even go to the extent of terminating my life extra-judicially.

    “I, therefore, seek your intervention in the circumstances to ensure that my fundamental human rights, which both Nigeria and your countries are party to, are guaranteed and my life protected.”

    Tarfa, SAN, in another petition to the IGP on behalf of Melaye, said: “The fact that our client is now the one alleged to be a gun runner by the police in Kogi State is, therefore, extremely suspicious and with all due respect smacks of a set up.

    “Our client who is abroad on an official trip had it brought to his notice and immediately informed us yesterday that the plans to set him up and frame him on spurious gun-running charges have been perfected and that some suspects would be paraded as having named him as their sponsor yesterday…”

    Melaye, in his “save my soul letter” to the UN and members of the diplomatic corps in Nigeria, traced his present ordeal to his vocal stance in the Senate.

     

  • NYSC scholars: NUC abandoned us abroad

    NYSC scholars: NUC abandoned us abroad

    Some 16 corps members, who recieved the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) Presidential Honours Merit Award are hanging on to threads of hope that the Federal Government will continue funding their PhD programmes in various universities in the United Kingdom (UK).  They are blaming the Natioanal Universities Commission (NUC) for their dilemma.  However NUC denies blame reports KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE.

    • NUC: we are not to blame; no funds with us

    In 2010, former President, Dr Goodluck Jonathan, added a juicy incentive to the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) Presidential Honours Merit Award for corps members who distinguished themselves in the course of their service year. It was a scholarship to study for Masters and PhD in any university in the world as long as they got admission within two years of the offer.  That year, there were 51 of such recipients.

    That Federal Government gesture was an icing on the cake for corps members, considering that they had already secured automatic employment in the government civil service for winning the award.

    Jonathan said back then that the scholarship was to encourage young graduates to work hard.

    The Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) and the Petroluem Development Training Fund (PTDF) were to provide funds for the programme with the National Universities Commission (NUC) acting as the clearing house.

    While TETFund was in charge of scholars in medicine, sciences and other fields, the PTDF was in charge of scholars in the engineering field. The scholarship was to cover tuition (amount varied according to programme/institution), research support (10,000 British Pounds Sterling), living expenses (820 pounds monthly) – with additional allowances for passages, warm clothing, and laptop.

    The former President made it a yearly affair, announcing the same award for 52 beneficiaries in 2011, and combined awards for 2012, 2013 and 2014 batches (about 164 in all) in March 2015 before he left office two months later.

    However, the initiative has caused heartache for many beneficiaries, particularly those under TETFund as the funding stopped while many were still undergoing their programmes.  They fear they might be forced to stop the programmes and deported as their institutions have already made repeated demands for payment.

    The first set of beneficiaries left Nigeria for various universities, especially in the United Kingdom (UK) in 2012. On completing their Master’s programme, some went ahead to pursue their PhD.

    Sixteen of them got approval from the NUC to begin their PhD programme with full sponsorship.  Taiwo Shittu, a graduate of Agriculture from the University Ilorin (UNILORIN), Gini Joshua, a medical doctor trained at the University of Jos (UNIJOS), Oluwabamidele Kogbe, a graduate of Public Administration from The Polytechnic, Ibadan, were among the 16 recipients who completed their Master’s programme in 2013 and got approval from the NUC to begin their PhD programme in 2014.

    They are presently in their third or final year of study.  In phone and chat interviews with The Nation they said that their third and fourth year tuition fees had not been paid.  While some received allowances for living expenses last year, others did not get any money from TETFund through NUC.

    Kogbe, who is undergoing his PhD in Politics and International Relations at the University of Dundee, said he was last paid in 2016.

    “NUC paid the tuition fees and allowances for my first year in 2015 and my second year in 2016 – that was the last payment I received from NUC.  Presently, the NUC has not paid my tuition fee for the third year and the remaining allowances for the third and fourth year.  What surprised me sometime last year was that NUC paid some of my colleagues their third year allowances despite that we all had the same approval and funds deposited with the NUC.”

    Shittu, undergoing his PhD in Molecular Pathology and Genetics at the University of Bedfordshire, UK, was one of the ‘lucky ones’ who got paid living expenses last year.  He said it did not come without several unreturned mails to the NUC.

    “Our living expenses fluctuate depending on the exchange rate.  It is between £11,000 and £14,000 yearly and we have to suffer and send many emails before NUC pays despite having our fund with them.  NUC has paid my living expenses for three years.  It remains for the fourth year.  Some of my colleagues have only been paid for two years,” he said.

    Gini, who is at the University of Liverpool researching “Clinical trials, pharmacokinetics and pharmacogenetics drug interactions and safety of antiretroviral drugs in HIV treatment”, has not also received funding since 2016.  He said the situation got bad after Jonathan left office.

    “We did not receive the best treatment during Jonathan, but at least our tuition was paid and occasionally someone responded to calls.  But payments stopped after Jonathan left,” he said.

    Gini said his university has given him until April to pay up or be shown the way out.  He is at loss as to what to do.

    The medical doctor also said he never got the full amount stated as living expenses and all efforts to get explanation for it was abortive as his mails were never replied.

    “A breakdown of living expenses is £820 per month – the total of £9,840 per annum.  Depending on the exchange rate and annual warm clothing allowance, it was supposed to be approximately £10,000 to £11,000 per annum.  But I have never been paid the complete amount.  I was paid at the rate of 600 per month approximately £7,200 plus allowances for the first year was £8,500 and £8,700 in the second year. All complaints were never replied.”

     

    Surviving without funds

     

    It has not been easy for the scholars to survive without funding from the Federal Government.  They told The Nation they have had to do all sorts to survive.

    Christabel Ihedike, who is pursuing her PhD at the University of Sunderland, said she has had some help from family to cover living expenses.  But tuition remains unpaid.

    “2016 was the last time I was paid.  My elder sister in USA and my parents have been shouldering my upkeep all this while but the school fees has not been paid.  School and School Credit control have sent mail and invoice to me on different occasions since my sponsor does not respond to their mails.  I have written severally to the New Executive Secretary but no response.  I am about to start my final year not knowing what the school will do this time because my last year fees has not been paid,” she said.

    With a Tier 4 Visa, Gini said he cannot work more than 20 hours in a week, which is insufficient to raise funds.  He said he has had to take menial jobs and depend on his wife to survive.

    “Even if I wanted to work, my PhD is so demanding I cannot do much outsid academics.  I also am not medically licensed therefore cannot practice.

    “(Surviving) has been a miracle.  I give credit to my wife. She does care job at night to take care of the bills.  I sold my car and other properties to cope.  The university at a point gave me a hardship assistance.  My supervisor also assists occasionally by giving me some in-house cleaning and maintenance to help me cope.  But everybody is getting tired now; it is becoming difficult to get help.  There are times when I have been stranded but miraculously help came from these mentioned sources,” he said.

    Shittu said of his experience: “I was nearly deported last year around August due to nonpayment of my fees to the university.  I had to borrow money to pay the university to restate my studentship.”

    Akin Oyawale, who is doing a PhD in Politics at the University of East Anglia, said he has had to borrow as well.

    “I work part-time and survive on loans from family and friends.  As a PhD researcher, I also teach at the university,” he said.

     

    Scholars blame NUC

     

    Many of the scholars accused NUC of refusing to pay their fees despite the funds being relesased by TETFund.  Kogbe, who described the scholars as “victims of administrative injustice”, said: “TETFund has paid my funds to NUC.  I was in Nigeria with Shittu in November.  We were at NUC.  They never denied the possession of my PhD funds.  TETFund only stopped paying for others who are not part of the already approved list of scholars.”

    Shittu also claimed same, saying: “The fund for our four-year programme was approved and released to NUC by TETFund (we have evidence).  The past President mandated TETFund to sponsor our programmes and to be honest, they have been doing well through the NUC.  My stand is that our money is with the NUC.  The present ES might not know ‘much’ about our case.  There are some directors that are involved from the onset -e.g. the present director of the ES office, Mr Chris Maiyaki; Director of Finance, Mr Sam Onazi.”

    Gini said though the NUC allegedly got all the funds from TETFund, the scholars were told they could not get all the money at once as the NUC had to monitor their progress.

    He said: “I remember we even asked them (NUC) a question, why not just give us the entire money and let us go instead of coming back and they said no, they needed to supervise our progress so they would pay as the invoice comes.

    “The first two years I sent them my annual progress report, nobody ever responded.  I sent letters because they were not paying the complete money.  They paid allowance to me for the first two years; they paid school fees to the school.  My problem was they were not paying me my complete allowance.

    “As I am in the fourth year, nobody has ever visited me to see whether I am in school or not.

    “In 2016, they sent us a letter after one year of not talking to us.  They said for the 16 approved they would continue paying.  I sent uncountable letters, nobody every responded.  They try to sweep this our case under the carpet as if they never received the money.”

     

     

    NUC, others’ reactions

     

    When contacted by email, the NUC Director, Corporate Communications, Ibrahim Usman Yakasai, said the Executive Secretary, Prof Adamu Rasheed, was on leave.  He however said the scholarship was now under the purview of the Federal Scholarship Board.

    He wrote in the mail: “Mail and attachment received. Will revert back after New Year as the ES is on approved leave. However, even he if sees it I can confirm to you that NUC did not receive any money and failed to remit as appropriate. I can also inform you that the said scholarship has been moved to Federal Scholarship Board. You may wish to contact them also to establish the truth.”

    The Public Relations Officer of the Federal Scholarship Board, Hajiya Fatima Jiddum, confirmed that the scholarship had been moved to the board – but without funding. She told The Nation it would be funded under the 2018 budget.

    “The scholarship was moved to us in July 2017 but came with no funding.  Some of the scholars seeking funding do not even have scholarship award letters from the Federal Government.  For those that have, we have included them under the 2018 budget.  Once the budget is passed, we will be able to pay them.  We are in touch with them and have told them so,” she said on phone.

    However, the scholars said they had not been contacted by the Federal Scholarship Board.

    Shittu, their leader said: “Federal Scholarship Board (FSB) has never communicated with us officially – no letter, no email.”

    Shittu also insisted the funds was with the NUC.

    “NUC may have transferred our file but they are still with our money.  NUC needs to be questioned.  Left to us, we don’t have anything whatsoever with FSB.  We are still with NUC because there is no official communication from NUC or FSB to us regarding us.  We are not politicians so they cannot be using us to play games,” he said.

    Efforts made to get Hajiya Jiddum to confirm that the names of the 16 scholars are among those to benefit from the 2018 budget proved abbortive as she did not respond to calls, texts and emails sent to her.

    Responding to claims that NUC failed to transfer the funding to FSB, Yakasai told The Nation on phone: “Like I said in my mail, we did not receive any money that we did not remit.  When we handed over to Scholarship Board, did they say see any money that we failed to hand over? The handover was done properly and they must have asked questions,” he said.

    Former Executive Secretary, Prof Julius Okojie, under whose  administration the programme started, refused to comment on the matter.

    “Please go to the NUC.  I have left the NUC for almost two years now.  But the others are still there.  You can ask them about the scholarship,” he said.

    However, a source at NUC, who did not want to be named because of non-authorization to speak, said the funding for the programme was stopped by TETFund.  The source said it was transferred to FSB when NUC no longer respond to invoices from the foreign universities.

    Efforts to hear from TETFund proved abortive as calls, emails and text messages sent to the Public Relations officer were not returned.

     

    State of the

    NYSC scholarship

     

    After the initial 16 scholars, subsequent NYSC scholars who did not get full approval from the NUC before starting their PhD programme, were forced to abort the programme as they were not funded.  Some of them were deported to Nigeria.

    In August 2016, the NUC wrote all the scholars (letter published on this page), saying TETFund attributed the delay in the release of funds to “the absence of a Governing Board which has the sole responsibiity for approving any financial allocation of this nature.”

    The NUC warned  the scholars abroad without approval they did so at their own risk.

    Those corps members who won in 2014 and 2015 have not been mobilized to do their masters programme outside Nigeria.

    The NYSC scholarship is not the only programme administered by the NUC that has been suspended.  The Nation gathered that the Presidential Special Scholarship Scheme for Innovation and Development (PRESSID) has also been suspended because of lack of funding by TETFund.

    The strictly merit-based scholarship was initiated to train the best of Nigerian graduates from both public and private universities for their masters and PhD in the top 25 institutions of the world.  A total of 100 scholars with the best scores after a test conducted by NUC were chosen for the programme. After the first two sets went in 2013 and 2013, subsequent sets have not been mobilized.

    A source said the suspension of PRESSID happened because some law makers claimed the scholars were only from some parts of the country while other parts were left out.

    “They stopped it because some parts of the country did not do well in the tests and so were not chosen,” the source said.

     

  • Olanipekun: let’s create jobs to end slavery abroad

    Olanipekun: let’s create jobs to end slavery abroad

    •Unemployment could spark revolution

    Eminent lawyer Chief Wole Olanipekun  (SAN)  has said the massive unemployment is a time bomb that can cause a revolution.

    Olanipekun urged governments and privileged Nigerians to create jobs for youths to stop them from going into slavery in foreign lands.

    He noted that a situation where PhD holders roam the streets for jobs and beg for survival is shameful.

    The legal icon was reacting to the footage of youths in dehumanising conditions at a slave camp in Libya.

    He said privileged Nigerians have abandoned the youth, adding that this may not augur well for the nation’s future.

    Olanipekun addressed reporters at the weekend at his Ikere-Ekiti home after the inauguration of the town’s Hall of Fame and launch of the community’s anthem at the palace of the Ogoga, Oba Adejimi Adu Alagbado.

    The Ikere Hall of Fame was inaugurated by the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, Ojaja II.

    The monarch urged Ikere sons and daughters, led by Olanipekun, to support their royal father for further development of the town.

    Olanipekun said the emigration of Nigerian youths to Benin Republic, Niger Republic, Chad Republic, Cameroun and their tortuous journey through the desert to Libya showed their frustration at home.

    The former President of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) recalled that he had at least six job offers after graduating from the University of Lagos (UNILAG) in 1975 and more job offers after leaving Law School but chose to go into private law practice.

    He said: “It is a shame at this period that Nigerian youths still travel abroad and the routes they take are very tortuous, very winding, very dangerous and very daring. They don’t even mind if the ship they are travelling in capsizes.

    “Why are they leaving? Some of them believe that ‘let me leave Nigeria because the Golden Fleece is somewhere else’; that the green pasture is outside Nigeria in Cotonou, in Cameroun, even in Niger Republic and Chad Republic.

    “Nobody sympathises with them. You can see the fate of our youths nowadays. I want to say those of us who are very successful are selfish and greedy. We are not speaking the truth to our government.

    “Our youths are going through another slave trade, and how do we stop it? The only way we can stop this is that we should create jobs for our youths. Government can encourage small scale and medium scale enterprises for our youths.

    “If we don’t take care of our youths, if we do not sympathise with them, empathise with them and do not create a better tomorrow for them, we are – directly or indirectly, advertently or inadvertently – planting a revolution for the future.”

    Olanipekun advised government not to muzzle the private sector but to empower it with good policies to enable it absorb jobless youths who migrate to foreign lands.

     

    Olanipekun is voice of the Yoruba, says Ooni

    The Ooni of Ife, Oba Enitan Ogunwusi, Ojaja II, has described eminent lawyer, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAW), as an asset to the Yoruba race.

    The frontline monarch spoke at the weekend when he visited Olanipekun at his native home at Ikere-Ekiti in Ekiti State.

    The Ooni poured encomiums on Olanipekun for his “legal feat and patriotism to the Yoruba cause”.

    He added: “I am here to pay a private visit to Asiwaju Wole Olanipekun and to commend him for the great work he is doing for the Yoruba race. He is one of our shining stars in Yoruba land. He is the voice of the voiceless and a legal icon, who has made us proud.”

    Oba Ogunwusi said he had been following his progress before he ascended the throne, adding that “Olanipekun is a brand the Yoruba is happy to flaunt”.

    He said: “You are our pride and joy in Yoruba land. I am happy to be here and I am most humbled by this reception.”

    Olanipekun described the Ooni’s visit as “symbolic and historic”.

    The eminent lawyer said he would forever cherish the visit.

    He said: “Today is the day the Lord has made and I will rejoice and be glad in it. To have a foremost traditional ruler, Ooni Enitan Babatunde Ogunwusi pay me a visit is worth cherishing forever.”

    Olanipekun extolled the virtues of the Ooni, describing him as a king, who prepared himself for the throne.

    He said: “Since he ascended the throne, he has been doing so much for the unity of the Yoruba race. He has gone to visit the Alaafin. Only a few days ago, he was at the coronation of the Akarigbo of Remo. He has gone to Efon Alaaye, Ijero Ekiti and other towns in Yoruba land. He has been going round the world to promote peace and unity among our people. Sometimes, I wonder where he draws his energy from. May God bless you, sir.”

    The Ooni presented a souvenir to the lawyer.

  • Ailing Ekwueme flown abroad

    Ailing Ekwueme flown abroad

    Ailing Second Republic Vice-President Alex Ekwueme has been flown abroad for further medical attention.

    The documentation of his travelling documents were completed on Friday, according to a family source.

    It was learnt that Ekwueme was flown out in a chattered ambulance with registration number N605AJ through the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu.

    The destination of the flight which took off at about 8.30am yesterday was not disclosed.

    President Muhammadu Buhari, on November 3 approved the movement of the former Vice-President abroad.

    Ekwueme, on October 29, collapsed  in his house at Independence Layout, Enugu.

    He was admitted at the Memphys Hospital, Enugu’s Intensive Care Unit at the Neurosurgery section.

    Read Also:  Buhari greets Alex Ekwueme at 85

     

  • Professor Johnbull exposes illegal means of travelling  abroad

    Professor Johnbull exposes illegal means of travelling abroad

    Illegal migration will be focus of this week’s episode of the TV drama series, Professor Johnbull, which is will be aired tomorrow  at 8.30.p.m. on the network service of the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), NTA International on DSTV Channel 251 and NTA on StarTimes.

    The repeat broadcast comes up on Friday on the same stations at the same time.

    The show is sponsored by telecoms firm Globacom, and features some of Nigeria’s best performers, including the doyen of Nollywood, Kanayo O. Kanayo, who plays the star role of Professor Johnbull.

    There are also Mercy Johnson-Okojie, who plays the role of the Professor’s maid, Caro; Funky Mallam who plays the role of Mai Doya, the yam seller; Bidemi Kosoko (Jumoke); Ime Bishop (Etuk)  and Yomi Fash-Lanso, who plays the role of Olaniyi the restaurateur.

    In this week’s episode, entitled: I Must Travel, the erudite Professor takes people who attempt to travel abroad by all means to the cleaners.

    The episode throws light on how people put their lives at  risks by going through desert and sea routes and unconventional vehicles in their bid to travel to America or Europe, where they believe that the grass is greener.

    In a preview of this week’s episode, Professor Johnbull is seen pontificating on the dangers of stowing away in the cargo sections or wheels of aircraft and decks of ships,  saying that such amounts to “signing an agreement with death”.

     

  • Nigerians in ‘private’ prisons abroad

    SIR: There are too many reports of Nigerians in foreign prisons these days.  The last report published with The Guardian of Wednesday, June 28, said that the number of Nigerians in private prisons in Libya is over 2,000.

    What is the meaning of private prisons? Aren’t these detention camps without government control?

    How long shall we continue to hear such sad news of our citizens being kept in prisons or of those who lost their lives in the seas? If the Nigerian governments can create jobs and provide enabling environment for its citizen, I don’t think Nigerians within the age of 20 to 35, who constitute the most productive part of our human resource would be dying just to travel out only to be locked up like animals in a zoo.

     

    • Assurance Ovie,

    Benin City.

  • Rejected abroad,  ‘kings’ at home

    Rejected abroad, ‘kings’ at home

    As people pour into farms to cash in on the business opportunity of feeding a booming population, concerns over the safety of the foods consumed by Nigerians have been brought to the fore with the banning of Nigeria’s food items exported to Europe, writes HANNAH OJO. 

    CAUTION ALERT. That was the mood triggered with the scary move of the European Union when it banned several food items originating from Nigeria in 2015 and 2016. Prior to the ban, cases of food poisoning leading to loss of lives were often reported in the Nigerian news space. Last year, a family of six in Kaduna reportedly died after eating contaminated beans cake.

    It is, therefore, not surprising that when the European Union rejected 67 processed and semi-processed foods from Nigeria as a result of poor quality, contamination and high levels of chemicals in the preserved products, food items such as beans, melon seeds, palm oil, bitter leaf, pumpkin, shelled groundnuts and live snails topped the list. The pesticide level of banned beans from Nigeria was said to be between 3.03mg per kg to 4.6mg per kg of Dichlorvos pesticide, while the acceptable residue limit is 0.01mg/kg.

    The chemical contents notwithstanding, findings revealed that Nigerians consume these food items with relish. Absence of labeling or inadequate labeling in many cases, renders many helpless as they are forced to buy food from the open market without gleaning proper information on the chemicals that have been used to preserve the food items.

    Findings show that melon, one of the exported food items banned by the European Union, which is a soup delicacy consumed with relish in Nigeria, can be compromised by aflatoxins. Aflatoxin is a toxin produced by certain fungi found on agricultural crops. Contamination of melons has become more rampant in recent time as  many no longer follow the conventional style of removing melon seeds from its protective shell but rather rely on ground melon wrapped in cellophane bags purchased in the open market.

    If melons are packed in cellophane bags, there is a tendency that the acids in the melon will react with the cellophane’s petroleum reside, making it to become oxidised overtime. This way, free radicals are stocked into the soup which would be later consumed with relish.

    Also, with Nigeria’s haphazard storage system and the long process in transporting food from the farms to ready markets, shelled groundnuts, another exported banned food items consumed in Nigeria, is easily infected with fungi. It reacts by denaturing the oil. Vegetables are also not immune to aflatoxins infection as they are quick to rotten.

    According to Dr Oladele Dokun, a veterinary doctor at the Nigeria’s Animal Care Laboratory, “Research has shown that aflatoxin causes infertility, abortions and delayed onset of egg production in birds as well as sudden losses in egg production in actively laying birds. Furthermore, loss of appetite, skin discoloration or even yellowish pigmentation on skin can be observed in fish.”

    Aflatoxic poisoning is also known as aflatoxicosis. In humans, it  may present as nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, convulsion, collection of fluid in the lungs (pulmonary edema), collection of fluid in the brain (cerebral edema), abnormalities of the blood, including blood cancer even in children, bleeding, liver damage and cancer,  kidney and heart damage and even death.

    Likewise, a  study on local African markets carried out by Dr J.H Williams of the University of Georgia, United States, reported that about 40 per cent of the commodities found in the open markets exceeded the permissible aflatoxin levels (in excess of the international standards of 10-20ppb) and that an estimated 4.5billion people in developing countries are at risk of uncontrolled exposure to aflatoxins.

    “It is known that high aflatoxin levels in the bloodstream depresses the immune system, thereby facilitating cancer, HIV, and stunting the growth of children”, the report quoted.

    Sharing a personal experience, Mr Femi Kusa, a columnist and fellow of the Nigerian Association of Physicians of Natural Medicine recalled how he once ordered 20 litres of fresh palm kernel oil from a region of the country but was shocked to find a white film over it some days later.

    “It was fungi! So, I threw the keg and its contents away and proceeded with the detoxification of my system. This sort of thing can make one ill, and an inexperienced doctor would merely provide drugs to suppress symptoms he observes and not uproot the cause(s).

    “If you shrug your shoulders in disbelief, saying our grandparents ate these things and lived to ripe, old age, you may not have looked at the other side of the equation. That other side was their diet. Did they consume sugar the way we do today? Did they eat junk foods? Were they stressed up the way we are? Did they not sleep longer and more restfully than we do? Their bodies were not as weak as ours, and probably didn’t collapse as easily as our do under aflatoxin bombardment”, Mr Kusa questioned in his piece titled “Aflotoxins in Nigerian Foods”, published in the Natural Remedies for Sound body and Mind column for The Nation.

    It was also gathered that a few years ago, the EU banned the importation of Nigerian cocoa after a high Gamalin-20 (a pesticide) was found in chocolates and ovaltine. Later, another import ban covered beans, sesame seeds, melon seeds, dried fish and meat, peanut chips and palm oil.

    Prof Kolawole Adebayo, a rural development expert lecturing at the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, believes that the influx of contaminated food in the country owes to activities in the informal food sector which produces most of the food consumed in Nigeria.

    “If you want to buy garri, you don’t look for the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) number because you are going to buy it in the local market. However, if you set up a company which sells packaged garri, then you need a NAFDAC number. This same rule applies if you want to export outside of Nigeria.”

    Commenting on the banned Nigerian food items in Europe, Prof Adebayo, who is also the Project Director of the Cassava: Adding Value for Africa Phase II (CAVA II), affirmed that once there is evidence of some unwanted bodies in a food crop, the importing nations are within their rights to reject it.

    “I think the problem the agric export sector faces in this instance is that some of the exporters did not get the required certificate, not because the food items in themselves were bad. This is a problem of the government perse in terms of how it implements its own programmes and policies and what it allows to go in or come out of this country”, he stressed.

    Explaining how insufficient labeling can cause food poisoning, Prof Adebayo described partly labeling as a poor agriculture practice.

    “If you are selling frozen food and it has been protected against weevils, the chemical you find in beans is not attacking it while in store or in transit, you need to label so that your customers buying it will know that this particular beans has been treated with an insecticide and will not be fit for consumption for another one month.”

    Emphasizing on the need for the active inspection of food items in the open market by regulatory government agencies, he likewise canvassed for the promotion of radio awareness jingles to enable consumers to be discerning.

    Also, the President, Federation of Agriculture Commodity Association of Nigeria, Dr Victor Iyama, in a chat with The Nation maintained that contamination of food from Nigeria is not as rampant as being orchestrated by the European Union.

    Speaking on unsafe foods in the informal sector, he averred that most of the contaminated foods imported into the country are compromised by their packaging and presence of preservatives. For foods of Nigerian origin like beans banned in Europe, he attributes storage as the cause of contamination.

    “The few contaminations from the farms would be those that use expired or banned chemicals. That is why we are trying to eject bad packaging, especially hydro carbon free bags and all that. We are also training farmers to adopt organic fertilizers, though that has its own cost because the yields would be limited but it is better to have safe foods than fantastic yield,” he said.

    Faced with the reality that some of the food items in the open markets are   usually infected with rodents, he said plans are on to embark on radio jingles to educate food vendors to cover their food, in order to prevent possible outbreaks of diseases like lassa fever.

    Early last year, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Audu Ogbeh, raised a warning signal, saying Nigerians might be killing themselves in installment through the food they eat.  Food items mentioned included moi-moi wrapped with cellophane and sachet water exposed to the sun at 28 degree Celsius. He also adds that many of the cows shepherded by herdsmen are already infected with tuberculosis.

    NAFDAC’s Director of Special Duties and Communications, Dr Abubakar Jimoh, in a phone conversation with The Nation stated that in an attempt to safeguard the health of Nigerians, the agency, which is charged with regulating processed foods, is also working with farmers to ensure that whatever they produce at home will not be rejected in the international community.

    “We have recently established a veterinary department which works closely with Nigerian farmers and even animals that have contaminated drugs administered to them. We do not want them to get into the body of an average consumer.”

    Dr Jimoh also averred that the agency has been educating farmers on correct chemical applications for food storage in order to prevent food contamination.

    On precautionary measures to be taken, Prof Ngozi Nnam, a former National President of the Nutrition Society of Nigeria, advised Nigerians to consume fruits and vegetables rich in powerful anti-oxidants in order to suppress the effect of contaminated foods.

    “Nature has a way of taking care of contamination but our problem in Nigeria is that we don’t take enough foods rich in antioxidants. Vitamins A and C are good sources that are derived from fruits and vegetables. Nigerians should consider adding fruits and vegetables to their diets as they help protect the body from harmful effect of contaminants,” she advised.

  • Horrors Nigerians endure doing business with our embassies abroad

    Everywhere you go, Nigerians are completely disappointed with the service, no, non service, being rendered them by their embassy in total contradistinction to what obtains in embassies of even far smaller African countries. 

    First, the good news.  I do not know if there is any Nigerian columnist who is not sick and tired about the seeming disdain with which those in government treat their suggestions towards making governance more relevant to the citizenry, and that is where they read you at all. It is in view of that ugly truism that I personally feel elated, seeing  indications of some actions of  government,  coming so soon after the publication, only last week of ‘Wither Nigeria’, even if they happen to be merely coincidental. I had written the article of that title from both personal, and communal, fear arising from the total breakdown of law and order in our country; a situation which has resulted in armed robbers, but more especially kidnappers, operating at will anywhere in the country, even seemingly gaining the upper hand over the Nigerian Navy the manner in which they daily use the waterways to transport their victims from the Ogun/Lagos riverine areas to their operational base in the Niger Delta area. You can then hardly measure my joy reading in the newspapers this past week that the Southwest Governors’ Forum will soon meet to discuss, among other things, “the activities of some criminal elements parading as militants, now ravaging parts of the region.” Given the fact that murderous Fulani herdsmen have become totally untouchable, it is my hope that the forum will, in discussing this menace, turn a blind eye to party affiliations and adopt the Fayose Model which, happily, has legislative backing, of dealing with this national irritant. There can be no two ways to it if we do not want to turn Yoruba land to another Benue where people are so helpless, they are being slaughtered in their numbers.

    Although the recruitment of 10,000 policemen which the Police Service Commission (PSC)  Chairman Mike Okiro said would cost N8.6 billion has now been scaled to 155,000, according to newspaper reports, I feel happy they remembered anything about it at all, probably after reading ‘Wither Nigeria’. Both organs of state, the SWGF and the PSC need no longer be told that Nigerians are direly expectant.

    Now, the truly worrisome.

    News from the entire five continents of  the world indicate that nothing could give a Nigerian a worse headache than having anything to do with the Nigerian embassy in his/her country of domicile. To douse doubts or any suggestions of exaggeration, I request my readers to kindly watch the video: http://www.cbc.ca/i/caffeine/syndicate/?mediaId=2402334111 – a RAW Frustration at Nigerian High Commission, this time, in Canada. This has become a perennial horror for our compatriots overseas most of who left  Nigeria during the 16-year PDP stranglehold over our country. It is benumbing that after two years in  office, the present administration has not done anything to make matters better but concerning that, as in many other areas,  President Muhammadu  Buhari must be blamed squarely for his retention of  far too many appointees  of the last administration to the  utter bewilderment, countrywide, ,of those who worked tirelessly for his victory.

    In a  CONSULAR ADVISORY COMMENTS By NJOKU SAINTJERRY (Beijing) & Vera  Sam-Aniagolu late November 2011, it was shown that similar videos have erupted from Bangkok, Malaysia, even Senegal. Everywhere you go, Nigerians are completely disappointed with the service, no, non service, being rendered them by their embassy in total contradistinction to what obtains in embassies of even far smaller African countries. And it is not as if the officials involved are not aware of their complaints. It just so happens that it is forever beyond the ken of Nigeria, and those manning her embassies abroad, to solve what are mostly everyday problems. For instance, one of the strategies they sought to adopt in founding solutions, under the leadership of our dear friend of blessed memory, Ambassador Olugbenga Ashiru, as Minister of External Affairs, was the Regional Conference for Heads of Missions divided according to the five regions. The minister, without any equivocation, “called on the countries heads of missions to consider the welfare of Nigerians that are resident in their respective regions their paramount responsibility.” How far those efforts, and possibly others, have gone in mitigating the problems of Nigerians in those countries are eloquently attested to by the following discussion, a few weeks back, on the ever vibrant Ekitipanupo web portal. Since I do not have their individual permission, contributions will not be ascribed. They are, however, presented, in seriatim.

    Happy reading.

    “Fact is that there are actually no public servants in Nigeria. They’re all public masters. You even beg them to do what they have been appointed to do and also have to send delegations to thank those of them who manage to do what is expected of them. It’s a different world in Nigeria”

    “They can’t even provide passport booklets which are usually paid for by Nigerians! I think it’s more than a shame”.

    “Even when the passport  booklets ‘finally arrive ‘from Nigeria, it takes between  3-4months for the Nigeria High Commission  in London,  that is not fit for purpose,  to process  and issue a new passport  —passport that should be a right of every Nigerian  and not a privilege as against  a maximum  of 2weeks to process  a British  passport. During  the time of Prince Ajibola as acting High  Commissioner, it used to take up to a year to get one if you were lucky and well connected or you were prepared to pay the EGUNJE fee!!!.What a rotten nation”.

    “Your mention of Prince Bola Ajibola who was the Acting Nigerian High Commissioner caught the eye. That man as far as I’m concerned had no clue of what the High Commissioner’s role should have been during his tenure. Siji Lapite’s case comes to mind when the poor boy,  bless him, was accused of being caught with drugs by the police in Hackney. He was later to die in police custody. Despite the fact that Nigerians came out en masse to protest the cruelty of the police in the way in which Siji was manhandled by the police that later led to his death, this man was busy blowing unnecessary grammar to the media instead of taking the British Government and their police to task for taking a Nigerian life. I should know as I was involved with the protest at the time and was part of the coordinators of my union showing disgust at the actions of the police.

    Nigerians in the diaspora are on their own as the Embassies are never there to protect them”.

    “l remember Lapite’s case very well. I am sure you are not surprised that the situation with our High Commission is the same today as it was during Lapite’s unfortunate tragic case. 23 or more Nigerians are deported every month from the UK. Those Nigerians are on their own with no inputs or help from our High Commission. The only time l can remember we had some semblance of what a High Commission should be was the five or six years Dr Christopher Kolade was our High Commis-sioner. I used to visit our mission then on regular basis for meetings and functions. Since he left, the place has reverted back to the dogs. l am sure you will recall the time of one hapless   Alhaji  Alhaji  was being  interviewed by the BBC and he couldn’t  look straight  at the camera  because  he was busy  reading  his prepared answers. Trust BBC to focus on his sheets of paper with his prepared answers. It was so embarrassing.”

    “My son who lived in England said that it made more sense coming back home to renew your Nigerian passport than to do so in London. He travelled home three months ago. He claimed that it saved him a lot in terms of money and time. The situation is even worse in a place like Canada, a country where many towns are separated from the capital by continental distances. There is no single consulate outside of the Canadian capital. It is therefore a big  project (air travel, hotel accommodation, hassles at the Embassy )to renew your passport.”

    To all of which I reacted thus: In a government of ‘change’, there should be change and we must all work towards it. I will, therefore, for the sake of our helpless compatriots in those countries, like to take this issue to the public space by running these comments in my column.