Tag: burden

  • Nigerian men don’t want  any burden—Liz Anjorin

    Nigerian men don’t want any burden—Liz Anjorin

    What other better way to start the New Year than this. Popular Yoruba Nollywood actress Liz Anjorin has landed a mouth-watering endorsement deal with DODAN Industries, a tomato paste company. The deal which came her way on the third day of the New Year with an official car is certainly making the actress glee with excitement.

    Since signing the contract, the De-sella Tomato Ambassador has been full of thanks to God and is not hiding that fact.

    The deal which came five days to her late mother’s one year remembrance, without a doubt, brought some nostalgic feelings. In this interview with MERCY MICHAEL, Liz captures her nostalgia and opens up on life after her mother’s death. She also speaks on her new passion and marriage. Excerpt:

    ONE year after your mother’s demise, what would you say you miss most about her?

    What I miss most about my mum? Of course I miss her prayers. I miss the motherly care. I also miss her jokes. Oh! My mum jokes a lot. Each time I recall some of her jokes I just smile. My mum will say things like E ti de la ti travel (You are back from your trip. Se e mu bumper short wa fun mama (hope you brought me bumper short). You can imagine it yourself, a very old woman at that time, asking if you brought her bumper short. She had a great sense of humour. There’s another one she says, A n lo si Abuja o (We are going to Abuja o).

    When I reply her, Eyin ati tani? (you and who?).She will say to me, ‘Do you think I’m not in town’ (Se o ro pe mi o si n le ni?). Then there is also the normal slang, maybe you and her are having an argument over something she will say, Gbe mi lo tation n gbayen’ (take me to the station then). Really, sometimes when I remember some of her jokes I laugh out loud!

    Actors are known to run busy schedules. Were you beside her at her last moments?

    No, because I didn’t even think it would happen. She died January 8, 2012. It was a New Year. We were preparing for strike so I made some provisions for her for and asked someone to take them to her. So when they got there they just called me to tell me they met her corpse.

    How did you take it?

    Though she was old, very old, it was still a shock and painful for me. Immediately, I started to imagine how I’m going to cope without her. I thought to myself, if I offend anybody, who will they report me to? And who is going to talk on my behalf? Who is going to take care of my daughter? At least, we visit grandma from time to time. My daughter was always fond of saying, ‘let’s go grandma’s place’. So her death was very painful.

    Now that there is no grandma to look after your daughter, with your busy schedule, do you make out time for her?

    Thank God my daughter is not a baby. She’s in boarding school. Moreover, it’s a matter of setting your priorities. When I’m supposed to spend time with my daughter, like when she’s on holidays, I give her my all.

    So prioritising is the word. With that you can’t go wrong. During her holidays, we come here; we come to my shop together. If I’m going to buy my stock I take her long. I try to show her one or two things with respect to the business. Though I don’t take her with me when I’m travelling abroad to get things but I’m already making plans for her to study abroad after her secondary school.

    At a young age, you’re already involving her in your business. How old were you when you started doing buy and selling?

    I actually started at a tender age; very, very tender. My mother used to tell me that as a woman if you can’t work with your hands you will work with your body. So the choice was mine to take. And then she would add, it’s what you labour for that lasts long. I realised I love business so it was easy, my mother didn’t have to force me to do it. Some people say it’s the Badagry in me. That Badagry people love business a lot.

    How do you feel when they call you an Egun girl?

    I like it when people make that their usual snag, omo Egun. I’m not a bastard. I’m proud to be an Egun girl. My Egun name is Oyenukume. If you check my BB, you will see on my display, Elizabeth Anjorin Oyenukume. And the meaning of Oyenukume is Ni sho ju won ni mo ma se se rere (I will succeed while they are alive). If I’m travelling to Babagry at times and I tell them my name is Oyenukume, they give me special treatment. They treat me like a queen.

    Then they start to speak Egun. That’s when I now tell them that I don’t understand the language. I’m proudly Egun. Some people will be like omo Eko ni mi (I’m a Lagosian) when in actual sense they are not, but not me. I’m not ashamed of my heritage. There was this guy I know who’s from Badagry and when I said to him, he denied. He said he’s from Lagos Island. And I told him that anyway, me, I’m a proper Egun girl. Don’t I look beautiful? Egun people are beautiful.

    How long ago did you set up this place?

    About ten months ago. ‘Peak Me’ was formerly at Abule-Egba. But I relocated to Ogba, like I said about ten months ago, and the name changed from ‘Peak Me’ to ‘Peak Me Reloaded’ Super mart.

    The beads that I see here are a quite unique and I’m shocked to find out that you actually do them yourself. So what time did you have to go and learn how to make beads?

    Initially I had people who were beading for me. But there was a day somebody ordered for six beads at very good prices. I called my bead maker and gave her the money and told her when to deliver the beads based on my agreement with the customer. But to my surprise, the very day the person was supposed to pick up the bead, I called my bead maker to bring the beads for me and she said, she had been busy, that she didn’t have time.

    To crown it all, she said, ‘I’ve not even touched your job yet’. Upon hearing this I was mad. When the customer arrived I pleaded with her and told her about the situation. To my surprise, she said, ‘Oh don’t worry. You can keep the money. When I’m back from my travelling I will come and pick them up.’ After that incident, I started trying my hands on beads.

    As God would have it, it all just started to fall into place. After sometime, I became more creative than I ever imagined. My beads are unique as you can see. I rarely admit to people that I never learnt it formally because it’s hard for them to believe but honestly that’s the truth. I can call one of my staff to confirm it to you. But that’s by the way. Whenever I travel I get brooches and glass crystals. With those two, our beads look unique. I’ve seen customers who say to me, Lizzy, I don’t like beads but with all these that I’m saying, I’m falling in love with beads. With bead you’ve got to be super calculative. If you have ten steps of bead when you get to the tenth one and you are not correct about it you have to lose the whole thing and start from the scratch. Beading is hard really. Its complex but I love it. I have passion for it just like I have passion for acting.

    What class of people in the society are your clientele?

    I have beads as low as N7, 000, N10, 000, N15, 000, N20, 000 upward. We have bead of N150, 000, so you see I carter for all levels of the society. For me it’s not about the money really. It’s about the creativity that I put into it, that each time people see my work that they go like, wow! Who did this? So that is it really. I believe in being the best in everything that I do.

    Back to your acting career, for 2013 what are the things you are working on?

    I’m working on Kofo The First Lady. It’s a continuation of Kofo Tinubu. The movie Kofo Tinubu centres on the physically challenged in the society, their plight, among other things. In Kofo The First Lady is a governor and his physically challenged wife. Now, are the people going to accept the woman as his first lady? How is she going to cope among other first ladies? These and many more is what the movie seeks to address.

    Is it a real life story?

    No. It was inspired by my idea of what the physically challenged in our society go through daily, the rejections and all. It’s a well known fact that they are discriminated against. People condemn them. People don’t want to have anything to do with them. Even their parents are so shy of them. They are not proud of them. They keep them in the house away from people. And they go through emotionally tortured.

    You seem passionate about this. Do you have a firsthand experience of something like that?

    No. But after Kofo Tinubu, I came up with Liz Anjorin Foundation for the physically challenged. I went to their different schools and home. And I saw different cases. Some of them have been locked up in one room since the past fifteen years. They just open the room, throw food at them and lock the door against them. Some of them have never seen day-light before. These scenarios were actually what led to the Liz Anjorin Foundation (for the physically challenged).

    How has the foundation been of help to the physically challenged?

    We’ve been to the school of the blind for instance. I went there. Spoke to them. When I was leaving, I gave them some things. I let them realise that in disability there is ability. I made them realise that being physically challenged is not a death sentence. It’s not the end of one’s life. Basically, I advised them in company with my team. We hope to revisit them soon.

    What I’m trying to do is to let people know that these people do exist and need all the love, care and attention that they can get. As an individual you can go and see them and appreciate them with little gifts. I can assure you that it goes a long way. Truth is some people do not know that we have such people in our society.

    Like me, for instance, if I hadn’t done Kofo Tinubu and had not gone to see them I wouldn’t have known that some of their cases are really extreme like that. Home or Orphanage is different from theirs. In homes we have able bodies, just that they do not have mothers and fathers. But these people that I’m talking about, some of them do have mothers and fathers but they’ve been disowned by their own parents.

    There is the story making the rounds that you just landed yourself an endorsement deal. Tell us about.

    It’s not a rumour. It’s true!

    Is this your first endorsement? And how do you feel about it?

    Yes it’s my first. I feel happy. I feel great because first, coming in the beginning of a New Year, 3rd of January to be precise, it’s a great thing. It’s something to be thankful for. It’s a blessing from above. Coming five days to my mum’s one year remembrance, indeed, my mum lives on.

    How financially rewarding is this endorsement?

    I can’t tell you how much is involved but I can tell you for sure that it’s financially rewarding with an official car (laughs).

    How many years’ contract did you sign with them?

    It’s a one-year contract.

    What is the name of the brand?

    DODAN Industries.

    This is your New Year and already goodies have started to come your way. What are your resolutions for the year?

    For me, I don’t like to make resolutions. All I can say is pray for me that God should give me long life, strength, wisdom, knowledge and understanding. With that I can do things. Me I love surprises. So I don’t like forecasting that 2013 I will be this I will be that. I don’t own myself. God owns us all.

    What are those things you did in 2012 that you would want to do differently in 2013?

    Everything I did in 2012 was perfect, except my mum’s death. January 8, 2012 was pathetic. That event took a toll on me because I didn’t really plan for that. Imagined, I and my mum had talked about my movie Kofo Tinubu. We had fantasised about its release but unfortunately, when we released it she was no more. But by and large, 2012 was a great year.

    After her death I opened this shop. I did her final burial and dad’s final burial too. I did a lot of things. And I thank God for my life. I bless Him; exalt His name because for everything He was there for me. I can’t think of anything I want to do differently this year. When my mother was alive, being the only child, there were insinuations that my mother was instrumental to my success.

    I don’t know if you understand what I’m trying to say. What they mean is that spiritually, my mother was my back bone. So immediately my mother passed away, a lot of them were like, let us see how she’s going to continue to make it big. Seeing that many of them were expecting my downfall, I went to God in prayer, seeking His face and telling him about their thoughts and asking Him to intervene because He’s my father and mother. And I thank Him for proving Himself faithful. If I know where that man lives, I will go there, wash His clothes, iron them and cook the best meal for Him. I mean my God!

    As an upwardly mobile chic, with all the ‘extras’, doesn’t it sometimes scare men away from you?

    That’s there cup of tea o my sister. Now, Nigerian men are crazy o. They don’t want to carry any burden. If you are hearing such thing as, ‘my sweetheart, ‘my heartthrob’, na money. But looking at it, should it be a put-off for men? I think it should encourage any serious man.

    Are you saying that you’ve never met any man that got intimidated by your success?

    No, in fact they fall in love crazily because I’m an entrepreneur.

    How are you sure it is not because of your money that they fall crazily in love with you?

    Money, I don’t have money. Business woman no dey get money. For where? As a business woman, everything we make we put back into the business. You can’t find money in our accounts.

    Frankly speaking, when are you going to say the words ‘I do’?

    Soon

    We’ve been hearing this soon for some time now. It is likely to be 2013?

    I don’t know. You wan give me your papa? He will buy me a stretch Limo (laughs).

    Recently in one of your interviews, you got into an issue with a fellow actress, Iyabo Ojo. Tell us about it.

    No don’t let us go there. We’ve settled. Iyabo Ojo is my best friend. As a matter of fact, she was the first person that greeted me for my mum’s one year remembrance today. So she’s my best friend.

  • Borrower’s burden

    Borrower’s burden

    •There’s no justification for FG’s planned $9.3bn loan 

    THE Presidency seems to have suddenly become conscious that the original $7.96bn (N1.9tr) it proposed in the 2012-2014 Borrowing Plan it earlier submitted to the National Assembly would be inadequate, and has interestingly reviewed its projected foreign debt profile to $9.3bn (N2.1tr) for the two-year period. The amended borrowing plan, which showed an increase of $1.4bn (N230bn) is aimed at infrastructural development, particularly in the agricultural, housing, education, health and transport sectors. With this development, Nigeria’s external debt would stand at $14.1bn by 2014, up from the current level of $6.2bn.

    The additional external loan, according to Minister of Finance Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who defended the new plan, is expected from a Euro Bond that the government would issue next year ($1bn), a Diaspora Bond ($100m), the African Development Bank ($200m), the World Bank ($300m) and China-Exim Bank($500m).

    A breakdown of how the entire $9.3bn would be spent includes $450m for erosion and flood control projects in the South-East states and Cross River State; $200m for the FADAMA agriculture projects in some states in the North; $150m for educational projects in Edo State; $243m for power projects in Zungeru; $136m for water supply projects in Zaria; and $500m for the Abuja Light Rail Project.

    Okonjo-Iweala, who in 2005 ironically achieved dubious stardom as a minister who was the arrowhead of negotiations that successfully freed Nigeria from the foreign debt trap, resulting in the country’s exit from the Paris and London clubs of creditors, painted a bright picture to the House Committee on Loans, Aids and Debts, arguing that the loan had “zero interest” rates, “soft terms” and a repayment period of 40 years, and another 10 years of grace. Justifying the planned borrowing, she added that the infrastructural and other needs of the country are substantial, and would gulp between $10billion and $14billion, equivalent of more than N1.5 trillion a year for the next three years. “If we take that from our budget, it means the totality of our capital budget,” she stated.

    If Okonjo-Iweala expected that her arguments for increased external borrowing were beyond criticism, she probably needs a rethink. In particular, many question why the country cannot spend from its savings, especially with a reported external reserve of about $46bn. The minister’s answer: “The lower you run the reserve the more the Naira will depreciate, so we must maintain a level of reserve and we believe that for our economy, we should push it to $50billion and $10billion of Excess Crude Account because of the uncertainties in the world.”

    However, this seeming economic wisdom flies in the face of logic and common sense, considering the size of the country’s reserve in relation to the amount of the planned borrowing. Furthermore, it is unclear what level of spending from the reserve would devalue the Naira, as she claims. Also, based on her analysis, we wonder what level of reserve the country must maintain to sustain its economy.

    There are more worries: If the country’s budgetary resources can accommodate infrastructural and other needs, as she implies, why borrow then? If we are making more money than we can spend, and not spending as we ought to spend in that the current budget is even under-implemented, do we really need to enlarge our foreign debt burden? Since the loan has to be repaid anyway, is it not counter-productive to commit the country to a debt that it has the financial resources to avoid in the first place?

    What these questions show is that it is certainly not enough to appeal to expertise or professional knowledge, as the minister seems to be doing in this matter, because her reasoning is simply unconvincing. The futility of the projections is further compounded by the fact that Nigeria has hardly spent any loan judiciously in recent years. And, given the way the present administration is going about the anti-corruption war, there is nothing to suggest that things will be different now.

     

  • Orji Kalu and the burden of history

    Orji Kalu and the burden of history

    I must have to say it that former governor of Abia State Orji Uzo Kalu is wasting his talent. My strong belief is that since he has exhausted all his bags of tricks and deceit in the political arena, the only option available to him, since he is bent on circulating public mischief is to pick a role in the entertainment industry and give Mr. Ibu (John Okafor) and Osuofia (Nkem Owoh) of the Nollywood fame, a run for their money in acting as clowns.

    Always dabbling into political gamble on the deluded impression that every body is capable of being hoodwinked, Kalu appears to be a very poor student of history. In the past weeks, he has embarked on the Nicodemus mission to launch himself into relevance within the political firmament. And what other topic could have presented him a platform than the burning issue of 2015 Presidency. What an irony or tragic comedy that of all the serious-minded leaders of Igbo extraction, it is Orji Uzor Kalu that is now shouting hoax that an Igbo should be president in 2015. Good talk and possible mission, one will say. But the truth will in future hunt those who to bury it yesterday for today’s vainglorious acquisition, which is what Orji Kalu has done with the Igbo conscience.

    While the intention of this piece is not the dwell on his latest contrived mischief, it is pertinent to remind all Igbo including those who had not come of age then, that the only time an Igbo man had assiduously worked to clinch Nigeria’s Presidency for real, was at the February 27 1999 Jos Convention of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party, where an when the untainted and authentic Igbo son, Alex Ekwueme ran a powerful campaign for the ticket of the PDP then, but saw the god-father of betrayal from his own brother Kalu who in alliance with his masters, played out his spoiler-nature, and as a good errand boy, made sure Ekwueme did not succeed. This also due to the personal ambition he had which he felt then will clash with overall interest of Ndigbo.

    That was how he sold out his brother and mortgaged the future of his kinsmen. The truth is that there are situations that arise in life when in the face of hydra-headed calamities one is forced to throw away the baby alongside the bath water, which is the stage Ndigbo should deal with Orji Uzo Kalu now in reaction to his latest ranting.

    The recent outpour of emotions and respect to the former Vice-President Alex Ekwueme whom Kalu hates to love is a loud attestation that Ndigbo truly know their destination despite what secret and evil plots the mischievous elements among them are hatching. How can a race of intellectually endowed and superb mortals settle for less in their search for a leader? God forbid.

     

    Who says it rains? No, it pours. As if that is not enough, feelers indicate that Abia State government has concluded plans to probe the era Kalu called the shots in the state, even as the authorities and the judiciary are yet to conclude his criminal trial for embezzlement of funds belonging to the state.

    From the reports from Umuahia, the present administration believes that the former governor should be made to explain and untie knots behind Infrastructure Development Funds during his time. This is money alleged to have been diverted by the former governor while in office. The move by the state seems to be the joker that has started giving Uzor Kalu the pimples. He has immediately fired back at the authorities in Umuahia.

    But rather than address the issues raised by his accusers, he chose to engage in argument against the man, by hauling unfounded allegations against the governor and his family. In a recent statement, Kalu alleged that the governor has used up resources of the state to buy up estates abroad while servicing the wallet of his sponsors. This is quite interesting. A monkey now catches monkeys.

    It is also s sign of Armageddon to hear a character like Kalu pontificate about what he did in Abia as governor when it is common knowledge to those born even after he left office that the infrastructure and economy of a once budding state was brought prostrate and comatose owing to the greed of this one-chance politician and his rapacious family.

    Kalu also spoke of roads he did as well as obligatory payment of salaries. Yet, he lacked the honour which is even a virtue among thieves to admit that he bequeathed unimaginable network of dilapidated roads and infrastructure as well as years of arrears of pension and severance allowance of public officers who served under him, including legislators to the incumbent governor. To further show his moral bankruptcy, an Orji Kalu dared to talk about development of the state capital under his administration. What a shameful claim coming from a man who presided over Abia as if fighting an ancestral war with the people of Umuahia, a reason many thought made him relegate the capital city to the status of a global village, while channelling resources and attention to his native Igbere.

    Posterity will always be the judge. Thank God that today the governor who is on the saddle is conscious of history. Thank God he has put down monumental structures and edifices that will save him the stress of unfounded claim. His works will surely speak for him. And if only Kalu had remembered that his day of reckoning will come, he would have spared a thought to serve the people of Abia with all his heart. He would have spared the resources of the state. He would have saved the people of Abiriba from the manipulated crisis that took toil on the economy of the state until the incumbent came and restored the years lost to the locust. He would have thought of creating a better welfare and working conditions for the state Civil Service which he bastardized. He would have uplifted the infrastructure in the Judiciary. He would have left his footsteps on the sands of time. And there would have been no need for this heavy burden on him which he will continue to rue for a long time to come.

    But for now that he is caught in the web, whether as a repented apostle of Igbo emancipation or a “gamji” man who took more that the owners (Ndi-Abia) actually noticed, Orji Kalu being the architect of his current travails remains the very person to purge himself his mess.

     

    • Amanwandi writes from Awka.