Tag: Christmas

  • 10 safety tips for a joyful Christmas in Nigeria

    10 safety tips for a joyful Christmas in Nigeria

    As Christmas draws near, Nigerians are gearing up to celebrate with family and friends. Amid the excitement, it is important to prioritise safety to ensure a happy and incident-free holiday.

    Here are ten essential safety measures to keep in mind:

    1. Fire Safety: Be cautious with candles, fireworks, and electrical decorations to avoid fires. Keep a fire extinguisher handy and working.

    2. Electrical Safety: Avoid overloading sockets and keep electrical cords away from heat sources.

    3. Food Safety: Handle and store food properly to avoid food poisoning. Keep hot foods hot and cold foods cold.

    4. Home Security: Secure your home with locks and alarms to prevent break-ins. Keep valuables out of sight.

    5. Travel Safety: Avoid traveling during peak hours and take necessary precautions if you must travel. Keep your vehicle well-maintained.

    6. Child Safety: Keep children away from decorations, fragile items, and potential hazards. Supervise them at all times.

    7. Pet Safety: Keep pets away from toxic substances, electrical cords, and fragile items. Provide a safe space for them.

    8. Water Safety: Be cautious around pools, lakes, and other bodies of water. Supervise children and pets near water.

    9. Health Safety: Take care of your health and get medical attention if needed. Avoid overexertion and stay hydrated.

    10. Emergency Preparedness: Keep emergency numbers handy, such as fire, police, and ambulance services. Have a plan in place.

  • 10 interesting things to do in Lagos this Christmas

    10 interesting things to do in Lagos this Christmas

    There is a reason December in Lagos has a name of its own. Once the month starts, staying indoors feels like missing out.

    The city becomes louder, brighter, and busier, and Christmas turns into a full experience, not just a date on the calendar.

    Here are 10 interesting things to do in Lagos this Christmas:

    1. Attend a Christmas-themed beach hangout

    Lagos beaches come alive in December. From private beach houses to open beach parties, Christmas by the water hits differently. There’s music, games, food, and that calm moment when the sun sets, and everything feels slower. Perfect for friends, couples, or even solo reflection with a drink in hand.

    2. Explore Detty December concerts and live shows

    December is concert season in Lagos. From Afrobeats stars to live bands and comedy nights, there is always something happening. Even if you do not attend the biggest shows, smaller pop-up events across the city offer just as much fun without the crowd pressure.

    3. Visit a resort or short stay for a night or two

    You do not need to leave Lagos to feel like you travelled. Resorts and short stays across Lekki, Ajah, and the mainland offer a quick reset. One night away from your usual space can make Christmas feel intentional and special.

    4. Take a food crawl across the city

    December is the perfect excuse to eat without guilt. Create a simple food list and spend a day hopping between spots. From street suya to rooftop restaurants, Lagos food culture shines brightest during the festive season.

    5. Go sightseeing and take new pictures

    Lagos looks different in December. Decorations, pop-up markets, outdoor lounges, and city lights give the city a fresh feel. Visit places you usually pass without stopping and capture moments you will actually want to remember.

    6. Host or attend a house party

    House parties are a Lagos December classic. Whether you are hosting something small or attending one, something is comforting about music in a living room, familiar faces, and laughter that does not feel forced.

    7. Attend a church Christmas event or carol service

    For many people, Christmas is not complete without a moment of reflection. Carol services, concerts, and end of year thanksgiving services bring a sense of grounding and meaning to the season, especially after a long year.

    8. Visit art spaces and creative hubs

    December is when galleries, pop-up exhibitions, and creative spaces showcase their best work. If you want something calm but inspiring, spend an afternoon engaging with art, music, and culture in a more relaxed environment.

    9. Take a day trip within Lagos or nearby towns

    Badagry, Epe, and other nearby locations offer history, nature, and quiet. A short day trip can be refreshing if you want to escape the chaos without planning a full vacation.

    10. Do absolutely nothing and enjoy it

    Sometimes the best Christmas plan is rest. Sleep late. Stay offline. Watch movies. Reconnect with yourself. Lagos will always be loud, but choosing stillness can be its own kind of celebration.

    Christmas in Lagos is what you make of it. Whether you are outside every night or indoors protecting your peace, the goal is simple. End the year feeling fulfilled, not pressured.

    If you choose joy, even in small ways, Lagos will meet you halfway.

  • Nwifuru approves N150,000 Christmas bonus for Ebonyi workers

    Nwifuru approves N150,000 Christmas bonus for Ebonyi workers

    Governor Francis Ogbonna Nwifuru of Ebonyi State has announced a N150,000 Christmas bonus to every civil servant in the state.

    The governor explained that the gesture aligned with his administration’s commitment to improve the welfare of civil servants despite dwindling revenue acruing to the state in the past one year 

    The governor spoke on Sunday during a church service at the Government House Chapel, Abakaliki.

    On the forthcoming local government election in the state, the hovernor made it clear that he has not anointed any candidate, promising a level play ground for all the aspirants.

    “As far as I am concerned, the will of the people must prevail, the people must choose their representatives without interference from any quarter.”

    The Governor renewed his directive to political appointees wishing to contest the local Government election to resign in line with the electoral guidelines.

    “It is not my duty to pick you as Chairman of your Local Government Area. If you are contesting for the Chairmanship position in the next year’s Council’s election as an appointee, you must resign as stipulated by the law”

    Governor Nwifuru also dispelled rumours of lethargy in Vincent Agwu Nwankwo Flyover, (VANCO), a monumental infrastructural marvel of his administration.

    “You cannot find any state in Nigeria that is doing such flyover currently”, he said, explaining the construction rigours inherent in the massive project that will automatically alter the ugly scenes and give the state a facelift when completed. 

    He decried social media contractors’ cloudy view of the project, maintaining that the administration is deliberately taking steps to ensure the state is seen in the comity of nations with advanced and modern infrastructures.

    “We are doing it not because we have money, we are doing it because we want to sign our signature” in the anals of history.

    He further stated that the State desires to be referenced in the global map of good governance characterized by modern infrastructures.

  • Frustration as skyrocketing air fares threaten Christmas travels

    Frustration as skyrocketing air fares threaten Christmas travels

    • Passengers weigh options; agents blame ‘Detty December’ factor
    • FCCPC expands scope of probe into exploitative air fares

    Christmas travel plans are changing in many homes as air fares continue to skyrocket beyond the capacity of  hundreds  of  thousands of families.

     Interventions by federal lawmakers and some government agencies  to bring about some relief have been unsuccessful so far.

    Only yesterday the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) announced that it was expanding the scope of existing investigation into pricing templates behind rates charged for tickets by some airlines on some domestic routes with a view to establishing possible violations of the provisions of the law.

     While the current security challenge in parts of the country, the bad state of some highways,  multiple security checkpoints, banditry and other encumbrances, may have rendered  the road option largely unattractive for some, others are prepared to go by air whatever the cost  , an investigation by The Nation has shown.

    Although the astronomical increase in airfares cuts across  routes, flights from Lagos and Abuja to the Southeast cities of Enugu, Owerri, Onitsha and Abakaliki as well as the South South cities of Benin, Asaba, Port Harcourt, Calabar  and  Uyo are attracting higher fares.

     And this is despite the entry of new carriers like  Pioneer Air, Enugu Air/Xejet Airlines, Binani Airlines, UMZA Airlines into the market.

     One way tickets for some of the flights  range between N300,000 and N600,000 as against the average of    N150,000 or N250,000.

    In effect, a  family of five travelling from Lagos to Enugu will have to cough out N1.5m at an average cost of N300,000 per head.

    Flight booking on the portal of one of the domestic airlines yesterday for a flight from Lagos to  Asaba, the Delta State capital for today showed that there were no more seat available.

    The only window to connect Asaba from Lagos on the said airline is only available  on Tuesday, December 16, 2025 for a fare of N432, 700.

    It is the same story for Lagos to Enugu flights  for this  weekend.

    But seats are available for the Monday , December 15, 2025 flight at a cost  of N430,700.

    Lagos to Port Harcourt on the same date  offers a fare structure of N430,700.

     As at yesterday, bus  fares from the  Oshodi Transport Interchange  in Lagos to the Southeast were  less than N30,000 for trips proposed for this weekend.

    Some  passengers who trooped to the local terminal in Ikeja yesterday even  considered  engaging limousine cabs stations at the airport under fractional charter arrangements to ferry them to their destinations.

    Airline officials, travel agents and destination management companies told our correspondent that  demand for seats is largely  dictated by market forces..

    Group Managing Director of FinchGlow Holdings, Mr Bankole Bernard told The Nation that  hope of a dip in airfares for now is  unrealistic as passengers keep surging to airports for their   end of year travels.

    Bernard said  business  projections for ‘Detty December’ , have  also occasioned distortions in pricing , not just for airfares, but have also had a debilitating effect on e- hailing rides, hotel booking, short letting facilities, prices for events, and other products and services associated with end of year celebrations.

    Bernard,a former president of the  National Association of Nigeria Travel Agencies (NANTA) said  high airfares stem from supply/demand imbalance, but are worsened by excessive government taxes, levies, and high operating costs (dollar-denominated expenses like fuel/lease).

    All these, he said, are forcing airlines to prioritise “yield over volume,” meaning fewer seats sold at much higher prices to cover costs, not passenger comfort.

    He asked  government to cut charges and manage airports as businesses for lower fares.

    While describing the fares as about the highest in recent years, he said multiple taxes and levies factored into passengers’ tickets by aviation agencies add up to the prohibitive charge regime.

    He said  ticket prices would  remain steep “as long as demand keeps outrunning supply.”

    According to him, the market would only  stabilize when more routes and frequencies open up.

    “With a ₦1,000 ticket, only ₦550 goes to the airline. The rest, almost half, is swallowed by charges from agencies. These are the real pressures driving fares,” he said.

    Attempts by the Federal Government to engage airlines on the matter have not yielded the expected outcomes.

    The House of Representatives has  raised concerns about the skyrocketing cost of domestic air travel.

    During Thursday’s plenary, the lower legislative chamber asked the federal government to cut aviation taxes by 50 percent to make flights more affordable for Nigerians during the yuletide.

    Read Also: Tinubu unveils new security, economic blueprint to harness Nigeria’s marine wealth

     The  House’s attention was drawn to  what its members  described as “exorbitant” airfares that have placed a heavy burden on families hoping to reunite during the festive period.

    Members  said Christmas, traditionally a season of joy and reconnection, now “looms under the weight of economic challenges” that have made travel increasingly prohibitive.

    “The unprecedented rise in air travel costs is not a mere anomaly in the market. It poses a direct threat to the traditions that unite our society during this cherished festive season, they said.

    Aviation and Aerospace Development Minister Festus Keyamo blamed the high airfares on aircraft scarcity and insufficient maintenance infrastructure.

    Keyamo said the federal government has no power to regulate or cap airline ticket prices.

    He highlighted that the industry has been fully deregulated since the Babangida era, giving private airlines the freedom to set their own prices without government intervention.

    “The industry has long been deregulated. The moment the federal government under Babangida said private airlines could come in and fly, they deregulated in terms of pricing and all, just like a free market. 

    “And so the government has absolutely no powers to fix prices for private enterprise, including the aviation industry,” Keyamo said.

    President of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association of Nigeria, Dr. Alex Nwuba, described the recent surge in domestic ticket prices as a recurring seasonal pattern.

    He said fares typically rise sharply every December because many travellers book late, pushing prices into the highest fare brackets.

    His words:“It’s not new. Every year, it’s the same. Prices go up at Christmas time. The forces of economics at play. It is a demand-driven price increase, and it is compensation for low fares during the low season.”

     He explained that airline tickets are sold in a “bucket” system, where early buyers benefit from lower fares while prices rise as flights fill up.

    With only about 0.02 percent  of the population flying, he noted that the industry cannot achieve economies of scale, unlike Europe and the United States, where annual flight volumes exceed population sizes.

    Additional factors, including limited aircraft capacity, a weakened naira over time, fuel costs approximately 17 percent above global rates, and multiple aviation charges, further drive up operating expenses for airlines, he noted.

     Nwuba called for a comprehensive overhaul of Nigeria’s aviation system, including reforms to taxation and operational charges, to make flying more accessible and reduce steep fare spikes during peak periods.

    FCCPC expands investigations

     The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) in a statement yesterday said it was expanding  the scope of existing investigation into pricing templates behind rates charged for tickets by some airlines on some domestic routes with a view to establishing possible violations of the provisions of the law.

    The ongoing investigation targets operators on the identified routes.

    Earlier in the year, a major airline, Air Peace, instituted a court action seeking to restrain the Commission from examining its pricing mechanisms, following the commencement of an investigation into its pricing model after widespread complaints from members of the public.

     However, the FCCPC said the ongoing inquiry is without prejudice to the case instituted against it  by Air Peace.

      “For the avoidance of doubt, we are not a price control board. But the FCCPA 2018 empowers us to check the exploitation of consumers,” FCCPC Executive Vice Chairman/CEO, Mr Tunji Bello, said.

     He added: “When we receive petitions or where we find cogent evidence, we will not stand by and watch Nigerian consumers being exploited under any guise.”

     The EVC/CEO emphasised that the Commission would not hesitate to act where evidence shows that consumer welfare or market competitiveness is being undermined.

    Bus/car fares may rise too

      Although road transport fares from Lagos to the Southeast and South South remained relatively stable yesterday,operators said the fares would go up as the festivity period draws nearer.

     As at yesterday,bus  fares from the  Oshodi Transport Interchange  in Lagos to the Southeast were  less than N30,000 for trips proposed for this weekend.

     An operator said by Thursday,December 18,the story would begin to change.

     Transport fares within and outside Abia State have also remained relatively stable  with

    fare to and from Umuahia, the state capital and Aba, the commercial nerve of the state costing  ₦1000-₦1,500.

     Fare  from Aba and Umuahia to Lagos and other parts of the country ranges  between ₦30,000 and ₦50,000 or more, depending on the distance.

  • Christmas: 20 nice places to visit in Nigeria

    Christmas: 20 nice places to visit in Nigeria

    Christmas is a time for joy, love, and celebration, observed by Christians and non-Christians alike. It’s a day to come together with family and friends, exchange gifts, and enjoy good food and company. The festive atmosphere is palpable, with decorations, carols, and traditions adding to the excitement.

    In Nigeria, Christmas is a significant event, with many people attending church services, visiting loved ones, and enjoying local delicacies like jollof rice, roasted chicken, and fruit salad. It’s a time for feasting, dancing, and merriment, with many communities coming together to celebrate the holiday.

    The origins of Christmas date back to ancient times, with the early Christian church choosing December 25th to coincide with the existing Roman festival of Saturnalia and the winter solstice. Over time, Christmas has evolved into a unique blend of religious and cultural traditions, with different countries and communities adding their own twist to the celebrations.

    Here are 20 places to visit for a memorable Christmas in Nigeria:

    Lagos

    1. Lekki Leisure Lake: Enjoy zip-lining, water sports, and stunning sunset views.

    2. Eleko Beach: Relax on the beach, swim, and enjoy picnics.

    3. Lekki Conservation Centre: Explore nature, walk the canopy bridge, and spot wildlife.

    4. Oniru Beach: Experience a lively Christmas with water activities and fresh seafood.

    5. Ikeja Shopping Mall: Shop, dine, and enjoy holiday excitement on a budget.

    Abuja

    6. Millennium Park: Picnic, relax, and enjoy the festive atmosphere.

    Read Also: 10 simple and debt-free ways to celebrate Christmas

    7. National Children’s Park and Zoo: A fun-filled day for families with playgrounds and animals.

    8. Wonderland Amusement Park: Enjoy rides, games, and festive decorations.

    Other Destinations

    9. Tinapa Resort, Calabar: Celebrate Christmas with culture, duty-free shopping, and water sports.

    10. Idanre Hills, Ondo: Hike, explore historic sites, and enjoy scenic views.

    11. Olumo Rock, Abeokuta: Climb the rock, explore ancient caves, and enjoy views.

    12. Obudu Cattle Ranch Resort, Cross River: Relax in the mountains, enjoy golfing, and horseback riding.

    13. Marina Resort, Calabar: Enjoy water activities, cultural exhibits, and great food.

    14. Abraka Turf and Country Club, Delta: Golf, horseback ride, or play tennis in a serene environment.

    15. Yankari Game Reserve, Bauchi: Go on a safari, spot wildlife, and enjoy nature.

    16. Oguta Lake Resort, Owerri: Relax by the lake, enjoy boat rides, and cultural experiences.

    17. Rojenny Tourist Village, Anambra: Enjoy thrilling rides, cultural displays, and budget-friendly lodgings.

    18. Port Harcourt Tourist Beach, Rivers: Relax, swim, and enjoy beachside activities.

    19. Ikogosi Warm Springs Resort, Ekiti: Feel the warm spirit of Christmas with natural springs and nature walks.

    20. Jos Wildlife Park, Plateau: Enjoy wildlife encounters, calm greenery, and a serene atmosphere.

    These destinations offer a unique blend of culture, nature, and festive fun, making them perfect for a memorable Christmas celebration in Nigeria.

  • 10 simple and debt-free ways to celebrate Christmas

    10 simple and debt-free ways to celebrate Christmas

    The festive season is often painted as a time for lavish spending, expensive gifts, and extravagant meals. But Christmas doesn’t have to break the bank or leave you in debt. With a little planning and creativity, you can enjoy a joyful, meaningful holiday without overspending.

    Here are ten practical ways to celebrate a debt-free Christmas:

    1. Create a simple budget—and stick to it

    Start by deciding how much you can comfortably spend after covering bills and savings. Break your budget into categories like food, gifts, decorations, transport, and giving or charity. Once your limits are set, commit to them. Staying disciplined now means a stress-free January ahead.

    2. Give thoughtful, low-cost gifts

    Love doesn’t have a price tag. Consider meaningful gifts that cost little or nothing: handwritten letters or prayers, a framed photo, homemade treats, “service vouchers” for help with errands or babysitting, or even books you already own. Thoughtfulness always beats expense.

    3. Host a potluck instead of full catering

    If friends or family are visiting, ask each guest to bring a dish. This way, everyone shares the load—and you won’t be burdened with covering an entire feast alone.

    4. Cook smart and cook simple

    With food prices on the rise, stick to meals that are both budget-friendly and meaningful. Think Jollof rice with chicken portions, homemade small chops, or a simple swallow and soup for an intimate family dinner. Avoid the pressure to cook every dish you see online.

    5. Use what you already have

    Repurpose decorations, lights, clothes, and gift bags. Christmas doesn’t need to be about buying new things every year. Often, the old favorites bring the most nostalgia and warmth.

    6. Avoid buying on credit

    Resist the temptation to borrow or use loan apps for the holiday. If cash doesn’t cover it, skip it. Celebrating within your means is far better than ringing in the New Year with financial stress.

    7. Create experiences, not expenses

    Some of the best Christmas memories don’t cost a dime. Organize a movie night at home, family devotions, Christmas-themed games, visits to relatives, or a walk to enjoy neighbourhood lights. Experiences build lasting joy in ways material gifts never can.

    8. Communicate with your loved ones

    Be open with family and friends about keeping Christmas simple this year. Honest conversations remove unnecessary pressure and set realistic expectations for everyone.

    9. Focus on what Christmas truly means

    Remember the heart of the season: Christ, love, peace, gratitude, and family. Christmas is not about competition, status, or showy displays—it’s about connection and meaning.

    10. Plan for January early

    Set aside a small “January fund” to cover expenses after the holidays. This simple step prevents post-festive financial stress and helps you start the New Year on a stable footing.

    This Christmas, choose joy over excess, memories over materialism, and love over lavishness. By celebrating thoughtfully, you’ll enjoy a festive season that’s not only merry but also financially wise.

  • Our age of jangled nerves breeding complex problems

    Our age of jangled nerves breeding complex problems

    • By Obiotika Wilfred Toochukwu

    Sir: Christmas is a season traditionally associated with love, reflection, and goodwill. Yet each year, as the yuletide approaches, the tension and impatience in our society become more obvious. In Nigeria, December exposes the cracks that have widened from January to November: unmet expectations, financial frustration, dashed dreams, and the widening gulf between the privileged and the ordinary citizen. What should be a time of communal warmth increasingly becomes a mirror reflecting the agitation, exhaustion, and moral strain of our age.

    These stresses become most visible during the Christmas season. In the Southeast, what should be heartfelt charity—sharing rice, tomatoes, palm oil, yams, or wrappers with widows—often becomes riddled with politics, favoritism, and suspicion. Acts of kindness lose their purity. Gifts are shared not out of compassion, but as tools for influence or manipulation. Even benevolence becomes tainted, turning a beautiful tradition into a display of inequality and competition. The implications of this high-tension age on the common man are far-reaching.

    First, the pressure creates complex personal and social problems. When people feel trapped, unheard, or hopeless, they begin to respond in desperate ways. Petty conflicts escalate. Road rage becomes common. Minor misunderstandings turn into violence. The psychological strain of living in an unpredictable country produces a new kind of citizen—one who is perpetually defensive, easily triggered, and distrustful.

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    Second, morality suffers. When society normalizes shortcuts, dishonesty becomes the currency for survival. Young people observe that those who succeed often do so through dubious means. When ethical behavior is punished while corruption is rewarded, moral clarity disappears. A generation raised in such confusion inevitably struggles to uphold integrity.

    Third, our nerve-racked age contributes to broken homes. Financial strain, emotional fatigue, and social pressure create toxic environments within families. Many homes fracture not because love is absent, but because stress overwhelms patience. Parents work endlessly to make ends meet, leaving little time for bonding. Marriages collapse under the weight of unmet expectations. Children grow up witness to conflict instead of stability, and the dysfunction multiplies into the next generation.

    Fourth, prolonged stress manifests physically—stomach ulcers, migraines, hypertension, and unexplained illness. Doctors increasingly report stress-related conditions among people who are not yet middle-aged. The body, weary of constant alertness, begins to fail.

    Until we restore calm to our hearts and conscience to our institutions, our age will remain neurotic and troubled. But if even a few choose a better path, renewal is still possible—one heart, one home, one community at a time.

    •Obiotika Wilfred Toochukwu

    Nkono-Ekwulobia, Anambra State.

  • Excitement, worries, as rice price drops ahead of Christmas

    Excitement, worries, as rice price drops ahead of Christmas

    The price of rice, the staple food and soul of any party, and the most sought-after grain in Nigeria at one point, remained relatively high compared to what it was years before. However, to everyone’s pleasant amazement, the price has gradually and consistently been dropping.

    About ten to twelve years ago, Nigerians were purchasing a 50kg bag of long grain foreign rice for between N10,000 and N12,000. That sounds like a mirage or almost impossible. However, to the consternation of everyone, the price began to rise and reached approximately N100,000 by December 2024, when demand was at its peak due to the Christmas celebrations.

    Happily, from early this year, when the demand dropped, the price started reducing to about N90,000-N86,000. Just about two months ago, Funmi Ayomide said she bought a 50kg bag of long grain foreign rice for N86,000 at the Ogba Retail market in Lagos.

    Just as people were anticipating a surge in the price due to the Christmas and Yuletide seasons, which come with a lot of celebrations, and rice meals being the most popular food in the events, the price surprisingly came down.

    A caterer, Miss Alice Ayomide, said the same rice she bought for N86,000 two months ago, now sells for N60,000 at the same place. Currently, 50kg bags of local rice in Lagos sell for between N40,000 and N59,000, while long-grain imported rice sells for between N53,000 and N65,000. However, in areas outside Lagos, 50kg of local rice sells even lower than N40,000.

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    The price fall has been linked to many market forces. Investigations revealed that there have been increased imports due to loose border controls and policy changes, allowing more imports, particularly from India, after its export ban was lifted. Rice from there has flooded the market.

    The typical October-December harvest period also contributed to a rise in local supply, increasing competition and lowering prices.

    A rice farmer and dealer who pleaded anonymity attributed the price drop to the reopening of land borders, which has allowed increased inflow of rice from neighbouring rice-producing countries. He said the development has caused a flooding of the market with both imported and locally produced rice, leading to a temporary fall in prices.

    A trader at the Oyingbo Market attributed the development to improved supply and reduced market stockpiles. He said that the government’s renewed support for local farmers and improved distribution channels contributed to the glut.

    However, consumers are joyful with the majority of them already stockpiling ahead of Christmas and the Yuletide season.

    Mrs Ngozi Iheanacho said the price drop was timely. “At least many households will be able to celebrate the Christmas season with enough food.”

    “I just thank God for this fall in price. Usually, many people fix weddings, burials and other events during this period, mostly because you are sure to do your parties without the distraction of rain. Jollof rice is the most popular meal served at such parties,” said Chinelo Owa.

    “We have a burial and a marriage in December. We are not taking chances; we have already bought all the rice we will need for the occasions because the price may rise again. This is Nigeria, you cannot guarantee anything.”

    Mrs Oluwaseun Alade said she hoped the prices would remain low to enable people to enjoy their Christmas. “Rice is essential during Christmas and the New Year. This drop, if sustained, means more families can celebrate without worry,” she said.

    However, the fear that the price will go up again before Christmas is prompting people to stockpile. Some churches and organisations that engage in welfare activities have started stockpiling rice, as this is the most preferred gift for the majority of households.

    One of the Anglican churches told its welfare department to start purchasing rice that will be shared with the less-privileged people during the Christmas season before the price goes up again.

    Many organisations are also doing the same now. Mrs Miriam Udoh, a rice dealer at Iddo Market, Lagos, said that a lot of banks have placed orders for hundreds of bags of rice. “Some of these people did not give out rice as gifts last year because of the high price, but we are witnessing a surge in demand for the product

    “Three different banks on the Island paid me for 300 bags of 50kg long grain rice. The smaller organisations ask traders to bag the rice in 25kg and 10kg bags. We are really happy as the decline in price has increased the demand for rice.”

    A visibly excited Mama Jumbo, as she is fondly called at the popular rice market at Daleko, Mushin, said she had been getting increased orders from organisations than she did since the last previous years. “Last year, only very few organisations ordered rice. Even those that did asked us to re-bag the 50kg bags to 25kg, 12kg and 10kg bags, but this year, they are buying much.”

    However, while consumers and a few traders are happy, some other traders are complaining. “Alhaji Ibrahim at the Iddo Market said that the recent crash in the price has left many traders struggling to recover their investments.

    He said that some traders are selling at a loss. “I bought several bags at N80,000 and N85,000 early this year, and now I have to sell them for as low as N65,000. The fall came suddenly, and it is tough on some of us.”

    Speaking further, he said that the government needs to be intentional in stabilising the price of rice in the country through regular support to local farmers to boost the supply chain.

    Many families last year could not really celebrate Christmas as they would have wanted because of the high price of rice and other food items, but this Christmas is already looking rosy, with rice prices and prices of vegetable oil seeming to be coming down.

  • Imo CP orders tightened security measures ahead of Christmas

    Imo CP orders tightened security measures ahead of Christmas

    As Christmas approaches, Imo Commissioner of Police, CP Aboki Danjuma, has directed Area Commanders, Divisional Police Officers, and Tactical Team Commanders to step up security surveillance across the state.

    Speaking at the Command Headquarters in Owerri on Tuesday, Danjuma warned that any security lapse or unprofessional conduct would not be condoned.

    He emphasised the need for stronger collaboration with other security agencies and ordered continuous, visible patrols around places of worship, schools, markets, recreational centres, and critical infrastructure to ensure peace throughout the festive season.

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    The police commissioner further instructed all operational units to remain vigilant, intensify patrols, and respond promptly to emergencies. He cautioned mischief makers to desist from trouble, stressing that anyone apprehended would face the full weight of the law.

    Danjuma also urged residents to support security efforts by providing useful information and verifying reports before sharing them to prevent the spread of false alarms.

    He added, “Suspicious activities should be reported to the nearest police station or through the Command’s emergency hotline: 0803 477 3600.”

  • Council celebrates Christmas with 350 children, parents

    Council celebrates Christmas with 350 children, parents

    Lady Iyabo Asafa, chair of the Otto-Awori Children’s Christmas Party has hosted the seventh edition with her husband, Prince Musibau Ashafa, chair of Otto-Awori Local Council Development Area (LCDA).

    At the event, over 350 children received school bags, T-shirts, and Christmas caps from Lady Asafa as part of her commitment to welfare.

    Read Also: Why fuel subsidy removal was necessary, by Tinubu

    She hailed the turnout. “The First Lady encouraged us to organise Christmas parties for children in our LCDAs. The turnout was far beyond what we anticipated,” she said.

    Lady Asafa noted importance of creating joyful moments for children, saying: “Being around children makes me happy. I am thrilled we could bring smiles to their faces and their parents. This edition is dear to me because, as chairperson, I gave something out …”

    She lauded her husband. “His response to my events is a blessing,” she noted.