Tag: abroad

  • Ex-First Lady travels abroad

    Former First Lady Patience Jonathan has travelled to Europe. Former President Goodluck Jonathan is still in their home in Otuoke, Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State.

    It was gathered that the wife of the former President might have left for London, the United Kingdom (UK) on Saturday after attending an interdenominational thanksgiving service organised in their honour by Governor Seriake Dickson.

    A source, who spoke in confidence, said Mrs Jonathan appeared unhappy at the events organised to receive them by the Dickson-led administration.

    “She was not happy associating with anything Dickson. But she was compelled to attend some of the events just to fulfil righteousness. She didn’t waste time in Otuoke. She left for London immediately after the thanksgiving service,” the source said.

    Mrs Jonathan has been embroiled in a battle of wits with Dickson over next year’s governorship election.

    The former First Lady has not hidden her dislike for Dickson and his administration.

    She was said to have pulled many stunts that unsettled the governor.

    Mrs Jonathan controls a faction of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which is bent on denying Dickson his re-election bid.

    Jonathan yesterday attended a service organised by his kinsmen at Anglican Church in Otuoke.

    The former President was accompanied by Dickson, some of his former aides and some members of the governor’s State Executive Council (Exco).

    At the thanksgiving service on Saturday at St. Peter’s Anglican Church, Yenagoa, Mrs Jonathan took the second Bible reading from Psalm 121:1-8.

    The former First Lady sang an appreciation song to God for helping her family throughout their tenure in Abuja.

    She got a present from a group of Abuja women, led by songstress Onyeka Onwenu.

  • Living life abroad

    Living life abroad

    TITLE : Diaspora and Imagined Nationality
    PUBLISHER: Carolina Academic Press.
    AUTHOR: Koleade Odutola
    REVIEWERS: Wale Fatade

    Nigerians love to talk and we are proud of our ability along that line. Outside the shores of our country, we are not afraid of airing our views and holding court on issues affecting the motherland. Among the hotly debated issues is whether or not Nigeria is a mere geographical expression, to use the words of a late political leader, or has emerged fully into a nation. While those living within the borders of Nigeria are engaged in debating this, those in the diaspora too are not left out.

    KoleadeOdutola’s Diaspora and Imagined Nationality: USA-Africa Dialogue and Cyberframing Nigerian Nationhood is an attempt at using the digital space to explore nationhood issues. The book is a revision of the author’s PhD dissertation, which required extensive re-work of the initial research. “The whole idea behind my PhD was to make sense of what Nigerians discuss online,” Odutola said in an online interview.

    “I discovered there are many issues and I choose how the issue of nationalism is discussed online. It is a book that can be read in part by different audiences depending on their social location and background. You can just read the exchanges without the theory and methodology sections and it will still make sense to you.”

    In his research, Dr. Odutola discovered that “Nigerians in diaspora are very passionate about Nigeria. They want a change like yesterday.” He added that the style of writing of most Nigerian scholars look toward Europe and America for authorities when it comes to complex issues like nationhood and “I thought I could locate Afrocentric ideas about nationhood but somehow I’m still searching.” Asked whether the concept of nationhood is alien to Africans then, he responded, “No, just that there are not many authorities who have articulated the concept.”

    He added, “Most of us confuse the State with the nation but Dr. Adebayo Williams expressed the idea of State-Nations for most postcolonial countries instead of Nation-States.”

    Three concepts are therefore evident: The nation; the State, and the country.  “A nation is like a dream, it exists first in the imagination of a few before it finds vent in text or in discourse. In the same way a virtual nation is normative in conceptualization. It is constructed through conversations and reflections. It speaks to how a nation structurally and functionally ought to be as opposed to how it is. The virtual narrative depends on external ideas to a great extent and on intuition in very rare cases. The purpose of a virtual concept of nationhood is to act as a parameter on which the real nation with all its imperfections and contradictions are judged. One issue the idea of virtual nationhood brings to the fore is that of legitimacy; who is qualified to discuss how a nation ought to be? Should the task be left to those who are within the malfunctioning national space? Or should the task be left to those who are located outside of the national space but depend on mediated communication and information for their knowledge?”

    Odutola equally acknowledges the eternal debate of ‘inside/outside’, which complicates the situation in that those inside may also be outside of the system and thus alienated. Immigrants, especially those in well developed countries with functional systems and coordinated structures take more than passing interests in the political affairs of their homeland and there are many examples of immigrant groups that have facilitated change sin their homelands using different information and communication technologies to connect and mobilise and organize geographically dispersed members.

    Does this then mean that Nigerians in the Diaspora engage more with nationhood issues than those in the country? “No, I can’t say that, please,” he answers. “I made a research decision to focus on Nigerians in the Diaspora because I was going to use a virtual ethnographic methods that relies more on text than on the ground observations. I know that Nigerians at home verbalize their concerns at different spots in the country. A visit to a vendor’s stand would provide enough data to do the same thing I did online.”

    Asked if he thinks Nigeria would evolve fully into a nation based on his findings, Dr. Odutola says,” Ha, that’s a very tough question for a researcher without a crystal ball but reading what Nigerians in the Diaspora express online, I think Nigerians want the nation to survive beyond that “mere geographical expression.”?Divided into five chapters, the book concludes that when identity is no longer anchored on location, home and nationhood become indistinguishable.

  • Studying abroad better than monetary gains

    International study may be expensive but the career prospects and returns on investments for the students come in many folds reports SAMPSON UNAMKA

    Learning new skills and starting a new life have become the popular catchy phrase for European and American universities competing to recruit Nigerian students into their campuses.

    Across the globe – Europe, USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, there is a growing  belief that Nigerian students are just the raw intellectual diamonds waiting to make their academic classes more engaging. The best must come in return for scholarship and the promise of a good life.

    And to Nigerians, the fees don’t matter, the night spent in isolation while gradually being forgotten by friends and family are not daunting, neither are the strange accents and languages that sound baffling.

    Overseas studies come in many shapes and shades. It might be a six-week holiday camp, a semester programme, a year foundation study or a full undergraduate degree to postgraduate studies.

    The benefits of studying abroad are as bright as broadening your mind, improving your career prospects and making friends from all over the world, according to Ms Ayobami Adebayo of Euro-American Study services, who represents over 60 universities and colleges across nine countries including United Kingdom (UK), United States (US), Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Holland and Ireland.

    But investigations have shown that many of these universities charge the equivalent of millions of naira in  foreign currency as tuition fees.

    For instance, an average foreign university charges about two and half million naira per session while a local private university charges about one third of that amount. Ayobami agreed that cost can be an issue, but she said the prospect of scholarship and global recognition of the certificates cannot be wished away.

    “Wherever you go, the value of overseas study is far more than the monetary gains. Living and studying in another country offer a unique perspective, and provide the chance to travel, learn languages and meet people. In fact, the skills acquired by those who study overseas are clear. They are, by and large, better at communicating complex details. They’re also used to being put in group situations and are better at building a rapport quickly,” Ms Adebayo said.

    She added that universities in Holland charge either low or no tuition fees with a relatively low cost of living, while others like UK and US schools offer a lot of scholarships, bursaries and grants to take students through their programmes.

    “As you are looking at courses and fees, it’s important to check how the qualifications are regarded because while many degrees from local universities are recognised locally, European, American, Canadian and Australian universities enjoy a growing academic reputation.

    “Therefore, their qualifications are internationally recognised and well thought of and that can make you more employable in many ways too, as we are operating in an increasingly global economy, where knowledge of different markets, cultures and languages is very important,” she said.

    An IT specialist, Mr Kehinde Ogunleye, who studied for his Bachelor of Science degree in the U K, also averred that infrastructure must be significantly improved in Nigeria for the local universities to compete with overseas schools.

    More so, he said, having a taste of another world cannot go wrong. “In fact, it was the best decision I ever made. I would definitely vote for an accomplished university in a developed society because of the global recognition of its certificates and the offer of different social activities. I was able to learn a lot of life skills, develop my sporting ability and now have friends all over the world. It was the best time of my life so far,” he said.

    A Lagos based educationist, Mr Chuka Ikediashi, said the government and privately owned universities in Nigeria have not been on top of their infrastructure in terms of maintenance just as they have issues with curriculum despite the potential and human resources to be leaders world wide.

    “I have seen some local universities offering computer studies with old style desktop computers scattered around a room called laboratory with cables lying all over the place in the name of connecting to internet. And the teachers are not properly motivated -not even a personal ipad of their own to catch up with the latest updates worldwide. So it is still very helpful to send our students out to learn more in the area of sciences, engineering and management sciences if that would help us to catch up with the rest of the world,” Ikediashi said.

    Mr Ishola Shittu of Divine Assurance Travels noted that the government versus lecturer squabbles over pay resulting into endless industrial actions cause students to remain stuck to the same level for long and that do not portend well for good curriculum development.

    “I have actually seen one ironic situation where a student purchased his ticket from my company to start undergraduate studies in the UK and returned after seven years with a Ph.D in engineering for his NYSC while an intern in my office already undergoing a diploma programme the sametime the boy was traveling overseas, who was only able to complete her first degree and they both met again at the NYSC camp for the national service,” he said.

    Findings showed that applying to study abroad even come with the advantage of lower entrance requirements, flexible intake route and longer application window in January, April and September when compared with the local universities requirements in terms of admission eligibilities, which include course options and sticking to the single September admission window.

    Overseas, the academic choices are as varied as you might find. For example, the US is known for continuous assessment, whereas in Europe, courses are more specialised and passing depends on one or two examinations. And this is in addition to its perks, which Ayobami described tourism magnets such as multicultural Europe; the Australia waves and the cultural quirks of the US and Canada.

    Ayobami, a former banker, who  runs a tourism and hospitality business provided further insights into the recruitment and the admission process of Nigerian students by these foreign universities when asked about the leading destination of Nigerian students.

    “I would say many Nigerians prefer the UK, US and Canada in that order while Australia and New Zealand are just emerging as a force because of its offer of employment and other opportunities after studies. Many were able to find employment and support their families back home after their studies.

    Regarding the admission process, she said: “We facilitate the process all year round through our partnership arrangement with the universities and other organisations. We engage with the prospective students to help them decide on the country, course, city and university. This is very important for suitability purposes. We then proceed to verify their documents to ensure they are genuine. And thereafter complete the admission forms and forward to the school with recommendation on behalf of the prospective students.”

    When asked if the negative news from Nigeria does not deter the foreign schools from coming to recruit more Nigerian students, Ayobami said the integrity of agent/partner such as Euro- American Study Services, have been very helpful. “The Universities trust us to act on their behalf because of our long-standing integrity and straightforwardness in dealing with students issues such as identifying genuine students, verifying their certificates, helping with selection of courses and completing the placement arrangement including travel, ticketing and overseas accommodation arrangement.

    While some argue on the cost of oversea’s education, many are of the view that the benefits of studying abroad – such as broadening your mind, improving career prospects and making friends from all over the world can make digging out your passport really rewarding.

  • Emenike gets offers from abroad

    Emenike gets offers from abroad

    Fenerbahce striker Emmanuel Emenike claims he has received offers from foreign clubs including a Russian Premier League team, with reports also linking him with a move to England in the winter transfer market.

    If those reports are to be believed hook, line and sinker, the Nigeria international has emerged as a target for Arsenal, Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur and Spartak Moscow in the January transfer window.

    ”I have some good offers; including from a Russian club,” Emmanuel Emenike told Information Telegraph Agency of Russia.

    ”As far as I know, Fenerbahce have not received a formal proposal from Spartak Moscow about my transfer.”

    Roman Askhabadze, CEO of Spartak Moscow, has played down suggestions that the 2013 African Cup of Nations top goalscorer will be returning to the The Red-Whites, saying there’s no chance of him representing the club in the near future.

    Emmanuel Emenike is nowhere near the end of his contract with Fenerbahce, as it’s due to run out in the summer of 2017, having joined the Turkish champions last August.

  • IBB extends medical trip abroad

    IBB extends medical trip abroad

    Former military President Ibrahim Babangida on has extended his medical trip to Germany by two weeks, one of his aides said yesterday.

    Gen. Babangida who was billed to return yesterday, extended his stay by two weeks on the orders of his doctors, to enable him have enough rest, one of his aides told our reporter in Minna last night.

    The former leader left the country on September 6 accompanied by his second son, Aminu, for his routine medical checkup.

    The aide however allayed fears that the health of the former military leader is threatened.

    He said: “It is true that Oga (IBB) has postponed his return date from Germany. He was expected (yesterday) but we learnt his doctors asked him to stay behind for some observation.

    “Since he left, for a routine two weeks medical checkup we have been in regular contact with him. We speak with him everyday. He is in good frame of mind and in good health”.

    When told that the doctors might have extended IBB’s stay in because of a deteriorating condition, he said: “We are in constant touch with him. His health is not failing. He was only asked to rest formore days. Oga is in good health”.

  • ‘Why Nigerians shop abroad’

    ‘Why Nigerians shop abroad’

    Many wealthy individuals prefer shopping abroad to patronising Nigerian malls. What is surprising to many is whether this trend results from better deals offered by such upscale malls in places such as the United Kingdom, Dubai and Paris or a manifestation of status symbol? TONIA ‘DIYAN writes.

    Undoubtedly, Nigerians, especially the wealthy ones, love shopping. However, they love doing their shopping abroad.

    Their penchance for shopping abroad does not indicate that the items they need are not available in local shops.  It also does not indicate that the prices of the items they desire are extremely exorbitant.

    Again, there is no indication that the products they need are of low quality. Perhaps, they prefer shopping abroad to prove their social standing or as  status symbol.

    This has been a source of worry to policy makers and economic planners who see such attitude as an act of sabotage to the growth and development of local industries that into the production of such goods that Nigerians go abroad to purchase.

    Worried by this demeaning attitude, economic experts maintain that the country’s economy will remain under-developed if Nigerians continue to patronise foreign goods to the detriment of the locally manufactured ones.

    One of the experts in the hospitality industry, John Obayuwana, insists that “the current consumption of luxury goods by Nigerians in shopping destinations such as Paris, Dubai, and UK shows the spending power of Nigerians in the luxury sector.”

    Obayuwana, who is the founder and Managing Director of Polo Luxury Group, disclosed that wealthy Nigerians have a huge appetite for luxury goods from shops abroad.

    He spoke at this year’s  ‘Financial Times Business of Luxury Summit’ held at the St. Regis Hotel in Mexico City. He explained that the preference Nigerians exhibit when consuming luxury goods abroad is because “in Nigeria, customers are not just looking for logos; they are looking for quality and great service.”

    Admitting that opportunities exist for international luxury brands in Africa, particularly in Nigeria, he said there are several challenges that have inhibited the luxury goods industry in Nigeria from expanding. He listed such challenges to include, but not limited to lack of power supply, high cost of operation, lack of human capital and lack of retail infrastructure.

    A report by Reuters corroborated his views about Nigerians’ penchant for shopping abroad. The reportrated Nigerians as the fourth biggest foreign spenders in UK, as they spend an average of £500 in each shop where they make purchases –four times the spending power of an average UK shopper.

    Reuters also stated that the widespread corruption and debilitating infrastructure that plague Nigeria–including daily power blackouts that are smoothed over by millions of generators – push up the costs of running businesses here, making most people to dependent on informal market-style retail.

    This is why holidaying or visiting relatives abroad is increasingly open to millions of middle-class Nigerians, with the number of visitors to the UK increasing by more than 50 per cent to 142,000 a year, according to the Office for National Statistics.

    Obayuwana, however, stressed the importance of paying attention to the middle-class in order to ensure the sustainable development of the luxury goods industry in Nigeria. He said despite the dearth of infrastructure, Lagos alone could generate $2-3 billion in luxury sales.

    As a result of the increasing tendency of Nigerians to shop abroad,a Nigerian woman, for instance, would stock up everything she needs for the next six months on her twice-yearly visits to Dubai or any other country. She would basically carry out food shopping in Nigeria. One of such women who often does her shopping in Dubai is Ikeoluwa Adebayo, a Geologist with a Lagos-based firm. She believes that everything in Dubai is better both in terms of price and originality compared to what is sold in Nigeria markets or shops.  She said: “It’s not that you can’t get these things in Nigeria, but made in China goods have taken over and you can’t always vouch for their quality.”

    However, forAdebayo and other Nigerians who may have been driven by the search for quality and competitive prices to shop abroad, ongoing effort by relevant authorities to ensure the application of international standards in the retail luxury industry in Nigeria is certainly a welcome development.

    The ‘Financial Times Business of Luxury Summit’ is focused on the economies and the luxury industry of Turkey and Africa. The event attracted senior executives, industry leaders, brand experts, executives and decision makers in the luxury industry such as Designer and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of OBE, Stella McCartney; Founder of Christian Louboutin, Christian Louboutin; President of Carolina Herrera, Caroline Brown; CEO of Italia Independent, Lapo Elkann; and Executive Chairman of the Estée Lauder Companies.

    Others were William Lauder; President of Bottega Veneta, Marco Bizzarri and Fashion Director and Chief Fashion Critic of the New York Times, Vanessa Friedman, including Burak Celet and William Hutchings.

  • Help from abroad

    Help from abroad

    Brown and the UN plan to protect northeast schools reveals failure of Jonathan’s government

    The symptoms of a failing state, especially in view of the near breakdown of law and order in most parts of the north, are prominently apparent for all to see now. Yet, the Nigerian government has not exhibited convincing capacity to curb the security threat that is threatening the nation’s cohesion. In view of the debilitating prevailing circumstance, we are not astonished that the United Nations is considering assisting Nigeria in protecting schools in the Northeast, in the wave of persistent armed attacks on the schools and abduction of students/pupils by Boko Haram terrorists. This is at least a refreshing contrast to our own president dancing at a political rally hours after the abductions. It tells of how we value human lives, compared to how people in more civilised climes value same, especially when students and children generally are involved.

    Mr Gordon Brown, former British Prime Minister and a United Nations special envoy on education, unfurled the global body’s plan through a piece that was published in The Guardian of London and on CNN’s News Live while expressing the international community’s concern over the recent abduction of 234 students of Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, by members of the Islamist sect.

    Brown was very clear on the initiative when he declared: “We’ve got to help Nigeria to do this. The UN is going to make proposals on how to protect school areas …The disturbing news like this goes beyond Nigeria. If young school girls are kidnapped in Nigeria, and it is happening in Pakistan and Iraq, it raises huge question about the future, the first thing for now is the safety of the girls. Boko Haram means western education is a sin and the Islamic militant group is determined to use schools as battleground to prosecute its campaign. We’ve got to make schools more secure. Nigeria needs international support to correct this and we’ve got to deal with lack of facilities and safety too.”

    We are aware that the violent killings through bombings and abductions going on, not only in the northeast, but also in the entire north have defied domestic control. We cannot but agree with this proposition because, to deny the need for foreign assistance at this point will be tantamount to denying the obvious, and the consequence might be too severe – an absolute annihilation of the entire region with very dire consequences on the general wellbeing of the nation at large.

    The gory catalogues of bombings and abductions have terrible effect on the already traumatised psyche of people of this troubled nation. In Yobe State alone, over 137 students were reportedly killed in four separate attacks on its schools between June 2013 and February, 2014. The Boko Haram sect has serially invaded and wantonly killed students of Government Secondary School, Damaturu, and Government Secondary School, Mamudo, Potiskum local government of Yobe State, where 29 students were slaughtered in a midnight attack. The untiring terrorist group also stormed College of Agriculture in Gujba local government area, also in the state, where not less than 40 students were killed in another midnight raid.

    We recollect that at a point last year, schools in Yobe State were shut down because of serial attacks on schools and students. Such wanton assaults on public schools and students’ lives are equally rampant in Borno State, with the latest being the abduction of yet-to-be rescued 234 students of Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok.

    It is alarming that Boko Haram has been callously responsible, in the past five years, for the killings of a conservative 5,000 people in northern Nigeria. More worrisome is the harsh reality that majority of the victims were pupils and other innocent civilians caught in the web of this group’s senseless actions against the state. Consequent upon these heinous acts, most parents have withdrawn their wards from schools in a region where literacy level is far below, not only international standards, but also the appreciable literacy level in other regions of the country. If only to create safe havens for learning by students in the entire north, we agree with Brown that henceforth, schools should become protected places, under the auspices of the United Nations, like hospitals and the Red Cross. The Nigerian government has failed in its duty of protecting educational institutions in that region.

    This UN initiative is very good but it is technically a signal to the world that Nigeria is at war with herself and needs foreign intervention to put her house in order. It is sad that outsiders are now more concerned about protection of lives in Nigeria’s territory than the country’s government that has proved, through tepid approach, that the enormity of the challenges is beyond its ability.

    Why then is the Federal Government against the idea of a state police which could have considerably helped in this regard?  Except this foreign aid comes in earnest, which is an equivalent of outsourcing the state, the country might be on her way to destruction since safety of lives and property can no longer be officially guaranteed.

  • From the Villa: Ending Nigerians’ medical tourism abroad

    From the Villa: Ending Nigerians’ medical tourism abroad

    Every year, Nigeria continues to lose huge sums of money when her citizens travel abroad for medical attention.

    While the actions of some of these Nigerians can be justified because of lack of standard equipment or personnel for the particular medical service needed by the individual, others simply prefer the services abroad as they do not want to risk their lives in the course of being handled by local medics.

    In 2012, the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) said Nigeria lost $500 million on annual medical tourism by Nigerians abroad.

    The NMA President, Dr. Osahon Enabulele had maintained that over 5,000 Nigerians travel out every month to India, Egypt and Ghana to treat ailments that could mostly be handled in Nigeria.

    “Indeed, it has been shown that India earns over $260 million from medical tourism from Nigeria alone,” he said.

    He specifically challenged Nigerian political office holders to go beyond lip-service in order to change the story in Nigeria.

    Challenging politicians in 2012, he said: “Indeed, the NMA is convinced that if President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, Vice-President Namadi Sambo, the Senate President, Senator David Mark, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Aminu Tambuwal, members of the Federal Executive Council, Governors, Deputy Governors, and other political office holders, make it a point of duty to stand on the same queue with ordinary Nigerians to seek medical care and conduct health checks in public hospitals in Nigeria, the confidence of ordinary Nigerians and foreigners in Nigeria’s healthcare system will be re-ignited and bolstered.”

    But almost two years after the call, nothing seems to have changed in Nigeria’s healthcare system.

    Speaking at the Presidential Summit on Universal Health Coverage (UHC) at the Banquet Hall of the State House, Abuja Monday last week, President Goodluck Jonathan, through the Vice-President Namadi Sambo, further lamented the capital flight arising from medical tourism of Nigerians abroad.

    He said: “We still have the largest number of people in Africa and the developed world travelling out of the country to seek healthcare services. The scale of capital flight lost to medical tourism is enormous, not justifiable and needs to be speedily addressed for the survival and development of our local health practitioners and industry.

    “Government is not unaware of the numerous challenges limiting the attainment of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) in our country and the importance of political commitment in surmounting these challenges.

    “The World Bank’s case study of 11 countries that have made significant progress in UHC, affirmed that political leadership and commitment is the key driving force for achieving UHC.”

    Speaking at the summit, the Ondo State Governor, Olusegun Mimiko, citing the successes being recorded in his state, urged government to go beyond lip-service and show the necessary political will needed to attain universal health coverage in the country.

    According to him, due to political will, his state is recording success in a programme called ‘Abiye’ for safe motherhood, which is done in partnership with the World Bank.

    He said: “The programme essentially is about tracing every pregnant woman from conception to delivery, using very simple modern methods. We also trace them to the communities through primary healthcare provider. We have been doing all of this and completely eliminating financial barriers through budgetary allocation, through pooling of funds from partners.

    “Strengthening the core system is also very important because no matter how much you put into the system, if the health system is not strengthened and accountable, you may not get the output you desire.

    “In two years of ‘Abiye’, we were able to increase percentage of attendance by more than 80 per cent. By now, it must be over 1,000 per cent. We were able to reduce the unit cost of care. The cost of taking care of a pregnant woman has been reduced to N4, 000, including caesarean delivery. That means if I give you N40, 000, I’m expecting 10 live babies. It is cost-based analysis; you can measure your outcome.

    “That means that if you eliminate financial barriers, if you engender confidence in the core system, what you spend to take care of each patient goes down. The cost you incur in complications gets reduced.

    “It will also interest you, Mr. President, that in four years, facility-based figures, with clear empirical evidence, we were able to reduce maternal mortality rate by more than 70 per cent. What that means is that with political will, with the necessary backings and technology, we can achieve universal health coverage. “It is not all about money; it is about effective and efficient management of resources that we have. What we need is political will, effective and efficient modernisation of our health system.”

  • Nigerians studying abroad reach out to needy

    Nigerian undergraduates studying in the Diaspora have put smiles on the faces of about 1,000 underprivileged youths.

    Last Friday, they set up a soup kitchen called New Year Soup Kitchen 2014, at Aunty Ayo’s Girls Comprehensive Secondary School, Ikoyi, Lagos to from where they served food to the youth.

    The students raised funds with which they provided food, clothing, shoes, drugs as well as doctors to examine the youth.

    Coordinator of the kitchen, Miss Korimobi Gbonene, who is studying Supply Chain Management, at the University of Maryland, said for the first time, the initiative was being imported to Nigeria from the United Kingdom (UK) and US to impact the society.

    She said: “Soup kitchen is everywhere in the U.S. and UK, and it is about helping the needy in the society; that is why I think we should bring the idea back home and encourage the youth. Do not just think about yourself, think about everybody. I think that is how we can move forward as a nation.

    “We raised the donations from concerned people, who believe in our course and some people donated online and we were able to achieve drugs, cloths, food, shoes, drinks we bring in qualified doctors to examine the state of health of the children and mothers.

    “I am very happy with the turn out of the people, because we targeted 1,000 people and we achieved it through the collaboration of the trinity house church.”

    The head of planning, new year soup kitchen 2014, Miss Motunrayo Odu, an undergraduate of Law and Business Management from University of Derby, UK, said next year, the group hoped to reach about 5,000 youths.

    “Our aim is to help the needy and children because we do such in the UK. Our target next year is to feed over 5,000 people, clothe them also and give out books to the children.

    “Our message to the government is that, the youth are ready to take over leadership role in our society for a greater nation of our dream,” she said.

    Lauding the programme, Hon. Gbolahan Yishawu, representative of Eti-Osa 1 constituency at the Lagos State House of Assembly, said: “Though they have a very splendid background, they have decided to give to the poor; this is why we are talking about values of nurturing. I think we should all encourage them, we should ask other youths to emulate this.”

    He called on corporate organisations and Nigerians to continue to support the novel idea.

     

  • Playing football abroad

    Often we have youths that are interested in plying their trade as professional footballers abroad and some have gone to the extent of selling almost all the property of their parents as well as borrowing money from friends and relations all in the name of processing the needed documents to travel abroad through so-called agents that claim to have made arrangements with a foreign team.

    I am very disturbed at this development that has seen many youths stranded in various parts of the world and most of all living in very deplorable conditions as most of them do not have the skills to survive outside playing football. Some have been detained and the lucky ones have been sent back home while others are languishing in perpetual hardship and have refused to come home because they are unable to pay their way back.

    I think there is the urgent need for the government to step in to stop this crude act of taking our youths outside the country only to be abandoned with no money and no direction. Drawing from my experience, we hear stories like ‘there is a tournament abroad being facilitated by a foreign club’ and as such they want an academy or youth club from Nigeria to participate and ‘if you do well you are automatically signed on as a player of the said foreign club.’

    First of all, as much as I will not want to say that all of such proposals are lies, I am very much aware that there are some people who have made it their trade to come to Nigeria and recruit young talented players and take them abroad to participate in tournaments with the belief that the players are all going on trial in a Europe-based club.

    I remember meeting a young man in Liberia who informed me that he came to Liberia to play professional football he claimed to have been doing well at home while playing in a Nigerian club, but that the temptation came when a friend of his travelled abroad to play and came home better than when he left. So, he had to make sure that he also played abroad, unfortunately, his ‘abroad’ ended in Liberia and he was stranded with no job, no money, no football.

    A similar story was told to me when I visited China by a group of Nigerians that we met at the African restaurant in Beijing that they came to China to play professional football and after arriving in China they were checked into a hotel and abandoned by their so-called agent. In South Africa, the case was worse as we met a lot of boys who claimed that they came to play professional football but the deals were never sealed and now they were stranded, loitering around the Nigerian restaurant

    While in Germany, we also met a young man who claimed that he was brought to Germany to play football only to arrive at the airport and the number of the man he had been talking to was not reachable anymore. It took him great courage to step out of the airport. Luckily, he had a return ticket and a hotel reservation but as at the time he was speaking to me, he was a waiter in a restaurant

    I have also had been receiving phone calls from parents and guardians of football players asking if I know anyone that can assist their wards to travel abroad to play professional football. I can’t help but advise that it is not as easy as they are made to believe by some criminally-minded individuals parading themselves as agents. I am also aware that so many players have been duped right here in Nigeria by these fake agents and till date both their money and in some cases their international passports are in the hands of these agents.

    While I’m not out to state categorically that there are no genuine player agents in Nigeria, I think the authorities governing our football as well as the Nigerian Immigration Service should work out a pact that will protect these innocent young Nigerians that are taken out of this country through the borders and in some cases our airports only to be stranded abroad thereby constituting a nuisance to their host communities and an embarrassment to Nigeria.

    The reason why I won’t dwell much on the role of the parents is because most of the parents of these lads are not literate and the lads are always so aggressive to pressurise their poor parents to go the extra mile in borrowing money for them to travel abroad. Most of these boys hardly finished secondary school and as such may not even know how to read and write, thus worsening their case as what they say is never coherent.

    My advice therefore is that if you want to play professional football, please do not turn your back on education because that is what will sustain you even after you have secured a professional football job.

    Education is key and as such any one that wants to play football should be interested in going to school because after football what will you be doing? And to those youths that are of the opinion that without football they cannot do any other thing, I think you need to rethink very well.