Tag: CULTURE

  • FCMB promotes savings culture among youths

    FCMB promotes savings culture among youths

    First City Monument Bank (FCMB) Limited has urged Nigerian youths, especially students, to expand their knowledge base on financial literacy and its principles. This, the bank stated, can be achieved by imbibing a savings and investment culture at an early age, which will help to empower them and secure their future in a sustainable manner.

    Speaking yesterday during an outreach programme organised by FCMB for students of Federal Government Girls College, Akure in Ondo State, the bank’s Vice President/Group Head, Corporate Affairs, Diran Olojo, who represented the Group Managing Director/CEO, Ladi Balogun, said imbibing financial principles at an early age will go a long way to help students and the youths manage their resources effectively, appreciate how money works and how it can be channeled to productive ventures.

    FCMB adopted the school for a full year as part of its financial literacy programme support. This adoption will result in the participation of the bank’s staff in various mentoring projects, the provision of teaching services to the students and other support activities during the next 12 months. In addition, the Bank also announced the donation of a power generating set to the school.

    The outreach session forms part of activities to commemorate the 2016 edition of the Global Money Week and Financial Literacy Day celebration, an initiative of the Bankers’ Committee in collaboration with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). The financial literacy programme is focused on educating youths in Nigeria on the country’s economic environment, the importance of saving, financial control, planning and knowledge of basic financial concepts, amongst other benefits.

    Principal of Federal Government Girls College, Akure, Mrs. Florence Ejikeme, praised the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and FCMB for committing both human and financial resources to execute the financial literacy initiative.  She described the outreach programme organised by the Bank as, ‘’an eye-opener and empowerment tool not just for students, but also the members of staff of the school’’.

  • Alaafin’s recipe for culture

    Alaafin’s recipe for culture

    As the custodian of his people’s mores, the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi, is always interested in championing the cause of the Yoruba culture and tradition. For all time, he stresses the imperatives of language, culture and traditions as prerequisite for peace and development. This he canvassed at a lecture he delivered during the cultural day at the Law Faculty of the University of Ibadan (UI). BODE DUROJAIYE reports.

    The Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi may not be a show man, but the paramount ruler exhibits the stuff of a genius whenever he is invited to occasions.

    Not only does he impress the audience with his mastery of colonial history, his captivating speeches usually attract rounds of applause that leave the audience wondering if he is indeed a monarch or a visiting Prof. of African History.

    A story teller and incorrigible performer, Alaafin remained the first African monarch to arrive at the John F. Kennedy Airport in the United States of America (USA) with a large traditional drummers who thrilled every passenger with delightful tunes.

    It was when the paramount ruler was invited by captains of industry of the American Chambers of Commerce and Industry held at Dallas early last year.

    During his recent invitation by the Faculty of Law, University of Ibadan to give a lecture on “Secret of Language and Culture”, Alaafin left no one in doubt that he could have been famous had he opted for a career in the academia or public speaking.

    On arrival at the institution, the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Administration), Prof. Aiyelari Ambrose, who represented the Vice-Chancellor, now Minister of Health, noted that “one enviable and remarkable highpoint in the life of this great monarch is his deep knowledge and high sense of recounting historic events with facts and figures; and with an accuracy that will beat the imagination of youthful intellectuals.’’

    In his welcome address during the cultural day of the Faculty of Law, the Dean of the Faculty, Prof. Adeniyi Olatunbosun described the Alaafin  as “embodiment of Yoruba culture, as well as the synthesis of the aspirations and goals of the nation’’.

    He stated that ”this is not only in social values of veracity, egalitarianism, justice and democracy; but in dress, utterances and comportment. He is a monarch with a class. The foremost traditional ruler is of the conviction that a people without a cultural identity of their own would be lost in world history and their contributions to human civilisation forgotten very easily.’’

    He added that all these attributes informed the Faculty’s decision to invite the Imperial Majesty to attend the event.

    In his lecture at the colourful event, Oba Adeyemi decried what he called “gradual extinction of Yoruba customs and traditions.

    The paramount ruler, who was disturbed at how modernisation has been allowed to bombard Yoruba traditions, warned that “as things move at the present time, it will be disastrous if we fold our arms and allow our traditions to dwindle into oblivion in the face of permissiveness.

    “How many Yoruba sons and daughters can brilliantly articulate their local language? It is frightening that our languages are dangling on the pit of extinction while preference is accorded to foreign languages, especially the English language. Languages often hold the only record of a people’s history, including their songs, stories, praise poetry and ancient traditions.’’

    Continuing, Alaafin said: “In particular, many indigenous cultures contain a wealth of information about the local environment and its resources in vegetation, based upon thousands of years of close interaction, experience and problem-solving.

    “With the extinction of a language, therefore, mankind also loses access to local understanding of plants, animals and ecosystems, some of which have important medicinal value and many of which remain undocumented by science.

    “Thus, the survival of threatened languages and the indigenous knowledge contained within is an important aspect of maintaining biological diversity.”

    Oba Adeyemi asserted that “languages are now becoming extinct faster than birds, mammals, fish or plants. Of the estimated 7,000 unique languages spoken in the world today, nearly half are likely to disappear in this 21 Century, with an average of one language lost in every two weeks.”

    It is most likely that in less than 50 years from now, even some major Nigerian languages, if not encouraged, can become extinct and lecturers in our universities would have cause to excite their students with great lectures in a course on, say, “Ancient Igbo” or “Ancient Yoruba languages”, and of which they would speak thus, with nostalgia: ‘They once flourished in the distant past but have now become extinct’. This is a disheartening possibility for anyone who cares about our indigenous languages, the history and unrecorded knowledge they carry within them.’’

    He also spoke on African traditional religion which he said clearly plays a distinctive role as the ultimate source of supernatural power and authority that sanction and reinforce public morality.

    “It is pressed into full service to maintain social order, peace and harmony. Traditional Africans believe that success in life; including the gift of offspring, wealth and prosperity, are all blessings from the gods and ancestors. They accrue to people who work hard and who strictly adhere to the customs and traditional norms of morality of the community, people who strictly uphold the community ideal of harmonious living. Only such people could entertain a real hope of achieving the highly esteemed status of ancestorhood in the hereafter.

    “The vast majority of norms, taboos and prohibitions are directed towards protecting the community and promoting peace and harmony.

    “Communal farmland, economic interests such as the market places, streams or shrines, are generally surrounded with taboos, including who may or may not enter and when and under what circumstances people are permitted or not to enter such places. Stealing is abhorred. It is, in fact, an abomination to steal things relating to people’s vital life-interests and occupation,” he said.

    Religion, according to him, may be distinct and separate from morality, as many scholars have rightly argued.

    “For traditional Africans, however, the line dividing the two is very thin indeed. African traditional religion plays a crucial role in the ethical dynamics of the different groups. In the traditional African background, ‘gods serve as police men’. African traditional worldviews invariably outline a vision of reality that is at once ethical in content and orientation. Humankind and their world are the focal centres of a highly integrated universe. Human conduct is

    seen as key in upholding the delicate balance believed to exist between the visible world and the invisible one,’’ the monarch said.

    Alaafin’s speech, which was interjected with unique dance steps to delightful traditional beats were awesome sight to behold, as the crowd hailed the monarch amid resounding ovation.

    Alaafin pledged the donation of a bus to the Faculty, following students’ request. He was later presented with an award by the Faculty’s Dean, Prof. Olatunbosun.

  • When Ooni challenges pupils about African culture

    When Ooni challenges pupils about African culture

    PUPILS of Queensland Academy, Okota, Lagos last week enjoyed the rare privilege of meeting the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi in his palace during a four-day excursion.

    Proprietress of the school, Mrs. Adenike Okudor, said  the excursion tagged: ‘Know your country’, was to help participants understand their cultural heritage.

    For the pupils, the experience would linger in their memory for a long time.

    The monarch, who encouraged them to study hard, also urged them to learn about their cultures and their parents’ home lands.

    Oba Ogunwusi conducted them round his palace, showing them interesting things, including a mysterious well, which he said from history is regarded as the first wife of every man who eventually becomes the Ooni.

    “This water is the wife of everybody who becomes Ooni in Ife. You can’t see her but I do see her. She is beautiful and nice. It is the wife of our great grandfather that turned out to be the water after she was offended and we must respect her because we inherited her in the palace,” he said.

    He advised school owners to include value for African culture in their curriculum, noting that civilisation started from Africa, and so  African culture, which he described as  ‘the richest in the world’ should not be neglected.

    Oba Ogunwusi, however, regretted that Africans are losing their values daily and challenged the youngsters to preserve them.

    He said: “It is one of my plans to create awareness about our cultural heritage from primary to secondary school and even to the tertiary institutions.

    “This is important because we are losing values and we must encourage our children to preserve it.

    “We need to understand where we hail from and the culture we are practising very well. We also need to derive joy in African culture because development started here. Africa is the oldest continent in the world.

    “There are proper documentation that shows that development started from Africa. We need to preserve this heritage. I also want to encourage you to aggressively embark on domestic tourism for our children to know that we have good things in Africa.

    “Children, I want to beg you for a favour: make sure you understand the culture of your tribe very well.

    “If you are from Igbo land, make sure you understand Igbo culture. If you are from Hausa, make sure you understand Hausa culture, and if you are Yoruba, make sure you learn Yoruba cultural heritage very well. That is who you are and what you should stand for.

    “I want you to understand that you are all Nigerians and we are one. We should be proud of our heritage. If we are proud of our continent, we won’t be regarded as second class citizens of the world.”

    Earlier, a Director of the school, Mr. Segun Akinyelure, who spoke on behalf of Mrs Okudor, said the visit was to establish a relationship with the monarch especially in the area of agriculture.

    He said the school chose Osun for excursion in the Southwest because it is one of the states certified by UNESCO for agricultural development and tourism in Nigeria.

    He said the school’s mission is to promote tourism and agriculture and inculcate self-reliance in the pupils early in life.

    “The school is also trying to help the pupils know their culture and where they come from. Some of them have travelled far and wide but they don’t really understand their culture. They have gone on excursion to Europe and USA but this time around, we felt it is good for them to know their culture. We also want to know how we can partner with Kabiyesi in the area of agriculture.

    An SS 1 pupil, Favour Ifechukwu-Okafor, was  awed by the cultural artifacts.

    “The kabiyesi has demonstrated high level of understanding on how to encourage children.

    “He taught us how to secure a prosperous and fulfilling future. The most amazing thing is that of the mysterious water he showed us. It is an unforgettable experience. When I get home, I will tell my parents, friends and family to ensure they also visit here for more enlightenment about our culture,” she said.

  • Itsekiris: Their culture, our culture

    All hail the king, HRM, Ikenwoli 1, the new Olu of Warri. Long live the king. In Owo dialect,” Iken” means the Crown Prince and “Woli” “means has entered the house” which could be translated to mean the crown prince has come.  The Owo, Iken lives in “Oke Idaniken”, away from the palace. In Edo, a crown prince is called Edaiken .Linguistically, the Itsekiri dialect is about 60 per cent of the original Owo dialect which unfortunately is going into extinction as it may not be understood by an indigene below the age of 40, especially those raised outside the town. My children always remark that my version of the dialect is long dead.  For instance, Oritsejolomi a popular Itsekiri name means God has beautified me in Owo dialect. Similarly, Aghofen means palace in both dialects.

    Historically, the itsekiri are of Edo origin. The Edo and Yoruba accept they are related which means by implication, the Itsekiri are of Yoruba origin too. It is on the basis of this assumption that the OPC, a socio-cultural militant Yoruba group went to the Niger Delta to defend the Itsekiri against the aggression of the Ijaws a few years back.

    A further proof that the itsekiri are of Yoruba origin is the name of the Olu, HRM Adewole. Socio-politically, the late premier of the western region, Chief Obafemi Awolowo who might have seen them as Yoruba minority in the Niger Delta, shielded them from persecution and even promoted them above the majority Urhobo tribe in Warri.  Hence the title of Olu of Warri and not Olu of Itsekiri as recognised by the Urhobo. The title, Olu in Yoruba language means head. Thus, Oluwa means God, Our Head or Our Lord (Oluwa wa). As a further proof of the Yoruba acceptance of the itsekiri, a prominent  Itsekiri Leader, Chief Ritalori Ogbebor is a member of the executive council of the  Yoruba Education Trust Fund (YETFUND) under the leadership of Senator Olabiyi Durojaiye who succeeded, the late Pa Ola Vincent, a one time Governor of the Central Bank.

    At the coronation of the new Olu, the Yoruba race was represented by the spiritual Head of the race, the newly crowned Ooni of Ife, HRM, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi 1 and the political head, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, With the above antecedent, the question may be asked that at what point did the Itsekiri’s discover that they were of no Yoruba origin?  Otherwise why should the former Crown Prince and son of the immediate past Ogiame Atuwase be denied the throne simply because his mother is a Yoruba and not Edo or itsekiri as demanded by their culture?

    As a member of an international press to the North Korea in 1985, I asked a professor who was interacting with us on international relations why there was no mention of God in that country. His response was ‘when we were fighting the Japanese, we did not see God; we only saw our great leader (Kim il sung)’. This may mean that quite unlike the Koreans, the Itsekiri’s are our kinsmen in times of war and remember they are Edo’s in peace time.

    Back home in Owo our people have a saying that “if you don’t eat yam because of palm oil, you eat palm oil because of yam” as they are inseparable. This proverb may not make meaning to the Itsekiris. The culture of accession to a throne in Yoruba land is patrilineal but this has been modified in some cases to accommodate exigencies. While the itsekiri are entitled to their culture, a culture that once allowed a prince born by a Portuguese woman  to be crowned the Olu but denied a prince born of a Yoruba woman  the throne leaves much to be desired. It is discriminating and unfair.It calls to question the genuineness of the itsekiri’s relationship with the Yoruba race.

    Perhaps if the Ooni had reflected on this affront to Yoruba race, he might have merely sent a delegation like the Oba of Benin to the coronation. Where do we go from here? Culture is said to be dynamic and therefore the itsekiri may need to take a second look at their succession laws to accommodate a prince born of a Yoruba woman if indeed they are related to the Yoruba race.

    The Odua race should see what has happened to their daughter and his son in Ode Itsekiri as not only an humiliation of the race but a rejection and may therefore  make this known to the people for remedy otherwise enough should be enough.

    Gboyega Amoboye, a public analyst, writes from Lagos.

     

  • Ada Day: A celebration of culture, unity

    Ada Day: A celebration of culture, unity

    Indigenes of Ada in Osun State converged on the Ada Secondary Commercial Grammar School to celebrate their pristine culture that unites the old and the young and links the past with the present. ADESOJI ADENIYI reports that the carnival-like event revealed the indigenes’ love for Ada as several millions of Naira was realised for various community development projects.

    All the signs that the town was in a festive mood were there. Exotic cars, gaily dressed residents, itinerant drummers and cultural performers.

    It was all at this year’s Ada Day celebration. Ada in Boripe Local Government Area, Osun State, is the home of MicCom Golf Hotel and Resorts – Nigeria’s first privately-owned golf course.

    And that day, culture became a tool to pave the road to a sure future in the development of the community.

    The chief host was the Olona of Ada, Oba Abimbola Olalekan Abioye II.

    During the cultural fiesta, several millions of Naira was realised  for various projects.

    Prominent indigenes, including the Asiwaju of Ada, Chief Kola Oyadeji, the pioneer community leader, Pa Gabriel Oguntunde, MicCom Group chair, Prince Tunde Ponnle, former community leader Prince Lekan Idowu, member representing Odo-Otin/Ifelodun/Boripe Federal Constituency at the House of Representatives, Hon. Yinka Ajayi, Prince Ademola Adetona, Chief Dele Ajayi, the chairman of Ada community, Mr. Gbenga Adewale and chairman Ada 2015 Planning Committee, Mr. Benson Ojetayo, among othersý were at the Ada Secondary Commercial Grammar School, venue of the event to celebrate Ada’s pristine culture.

    Senator Gbenga Ashafa, who chaired the ceremony, was represented by Hon. Segun Adefila. The chairperson, Mother Celestial Folasade Akinlabi, the Chief of Staff to Osun State Governor, Alhaji Gboyega Oyetola, the Asiwaju Iree, Chief Adenrele Afolabi, member of the House of Representatives, Hon. Zakari Mohammed and Kwara State Commissioner for Energy, Hon. Tunde Ayandele, paid glowing tributes to citizens of the town and their sense of industry.

    Ashafa praised the community for genuinely and vigorously pursuing human development, construction of structures, empowerment of women and school pupils as well as maintaining security of lives and property.

    According to him, Ada community has continued to keep the Yoruba culture and tradition alive.

    He said: “The festival has made us to remember our past, to appreciate our present and realise the promising tomorrow, especially for the upcoming generation. So, the great sons and daughters of Ada and their neighbours have continued to build bridges among the ‘haves and the have nots’, the old and the young and between the past and the present.

    “This annual event is one of the greatest initiatives I have ever known and which I will always want to be identified with. The bottom line is to assist our people, reduce poverty, increase knowledge, encourage and reward hard work and most importantly to develop our communities.”

    Speaking earlier, Adewale said the town was making progress in many spheres. He said it had been able to complete the Iso Ege Hall for the residents, particularly the women and farmers.

    He also said the construction of a modern palace was ongoing. He, however, appealed to the state government to help Ada by establishing some industries.

    He said: “Many of what we have here have been through the effort of the community and benevolent indigenes.”

    Oba Abioye expressed gratitude to those present at the 18th Ada Day. He enjoined the indigenes to take the day with seriousness, urging them to emulate communities that celebrate their community day in Christmas carnival manner.

    The traditional ruler also advised his subjects to co-operate and support the advancement of Ada, even as he urged parents to ensure that their children come home to help in developing the town. More importantly, he advised the indigenes to pay their taxes for the government to have the resources to develop the community.

    Chief Oyadeji thanked God, the Olona, the indigenes and members of the 2015 Ada Day Planning Committee for the success of the event.

    He called on the indigenes to live in peace and harmony, saying that the community could only progress when there is love among the people.

    Highlights of the event included the fund raising for community developmental projects, the cultural performances by dance groups and the presentation of gifts by market women to the Olona and other notable citizens of the town for their contributions to the development of the town as well as debate and speech competitions designed and coordinated by an outstanding teacher in the community, Mr. Yemi Omotoso.

    Cash donations were made for community projects.

  • Alaafin stresses imperatives of culture for peace

    Alaafin stresses imperatives of culture for peace

    The alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi, has decried what he called the “gradual extinction” of Yoruba customs and traditions. According to him,  “considering the rate at things move these days, it will be disastrous allowing our traditions go into oblivion in the face of permissiveness”.

    “How many Yoruba sons and daughters can brilliantly articulate their local language? It is frightening that our own language is dangling on the pit of extinction while preference is accorded foreign language, which is English. Languages often hold the record of a people’s history, including their songs, stories, praise, poetry and ancient traditions,” he said.

    Alaafin, who spoke at the Faculty of Law, University of Ibadan, as guest lecturer on Secret of Language and Culture observed that many indigenous cultures contain a wealth of information about the local environment and their floral and fauna resources, based on thousands of years of close interaction, experience, and problem-solving. He noted that with the extinction of language, man loses access to local understanding of plants, animals, and the ecosystems, some of which have important medicinal value, and many of which remain undocumented by science.

    According to the monarch, the survival of threatened languages, and the indigenous knowledge contained within, is an important aspect of maintaining biological diversity.

    Oba Adeyemi stressed: “languages are now becoming extinct faster than birds, mammals, fish or plants. Of the estimated 7,000 unique languages spoken in the world today, nearly half are likely to disappear this century, with an average of one lost every two weeks.

    “It is most likely that in less than 50 years from now, even some major Nigerian languages, if not encouraged, can become extinct, and lecturers in our Universities would have cause to excite their students with great lectures in a course on, say, ‘ancient’ Igbo or ‘ancient’ Yoruba languages, and of which they would speak with nostalgia, ‘They once flourished in the distant past, but have now become extinct’. This is a disheartening possibility for anyone, who cares about our indigenous languages, the history and unrecorded knowledge they carry within them.”

    The monarch also spoke on African traditional religion, which he said, clearly plays a distinctive role as the ultimate source of supernatural power and authority that sanction and reinforce public morality.

    Continuing, he said: “It is pressed into full service to maintain social order, peace and harmony. Traditional Africans believe that success in life, including the gift of off-spring, wealth and prosperity, are all blessings from the gods and ancestors. They accrue to people, who work hard, and who strictly adhere to the customs, and traditional norms of morality of the community, people, who strictly uphold the community ideal of harmonious living. Only such people could entertain a real hope of achieving the highly esteemed status of ancestor hood in the hereafter.

    “The vast majority of norms, taboos and prohibitions is directed towards protecting the community and promoting peace and harmony. Communal farmland, economic interests like the market-place, stream or shrine are generally surrounded with taboos, including, who may or may not enter, and when and under what circumstances people are permitted or not to enter such places. Stealing is abhorred. It is in fact, an abomination to steal things relating to people’s vital life-interests and occupation.’’

    Religion, according to him, may be distinct and separate from morality, as many scholars have rightly argued. “’For traditional Africans, however, the line dividing the two is very thin indeed. African traditional religion plays a crucial role in the ethical dynamics of the different groups.

    “In the traditional African background, ‘gods serve as police men’. African traditional world-views invariably outline a vision of reality that is, at once ethical in content and orientation. Human beings and their world are the focal centre of a highly integrated universe.  Human conduct is seen as key in upholding the delicate balance believed to exist between the visible world and the invisible one,” he added.

  • Why Culture ministry’s agencies performed badly, by Lai Mohammed

    Why Culture ministry’s agencies performed badly, by Lai Mohammed

    Information and Culture Minister Alhaji Lai Mohammed yesterday explained that agencies and parastatals under the defunct Federal Ministry of Culture and Tourism suffered leadership crises.

    The situation, he said, made them to perform badly.

    Mohammed, who spoke at a meeting with the ministry’s heads of agencies and parastatals, promised to correct the lapses.

    He said: “Without mincing words, the parastatals under the old Culture and Tourism Ministry, which are now under the new Ministry of Information and Culture, have suffered a crisis of leadership.

    “There are square pegs in round holes at the leadership cadre of some of the parastatals.

    “Sometimes where academicians are required, administrators are holding sway. There is a critical lack of understanding of the mandate of the various parastatals by some of the heads. Where they understand the mandate, there is a serious lack of capacity.

    “The implication is that those heading these parastatals simply invent their own agenda sometimes and impose such on us with devastating consequences.”

    “That explains why most of the parastatals are lying comatose,” he added.

    He urged the National Troupe of Nigeria to borrow a leaf from its counterparts in Uganda and Kenya.

    “In those countries, their national troupes perform for the public every two hours and it is a regular fixture to have long queues outside the performance venues.

    “Just imagine the kind of money these national troupes in Kenya and Uganda will be making. Not only will they be self-sufficient, they will have enough money for other things,” Mohammed added.

    Admonishing the agencies’ directors-general to brace for the task ahead, Mohammed said they were sitting on a gold mine, “but you have either refused to realise this, simply feigning ignorance or totally lacking the capacity to mine the gold”.

    He added: “It can no longer be business as usual. Stop feeling second class, snap out of your complex and mine your gold.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • AFRIMA honours Tinubu with Pillar of Arts, Culture

    AFRIMA honours Tinubu with Pillar of Arts, Culture

    •Urges African youths on unity

    For about three hours on Sunday night, the best of African music was rewarded at the Expo Hall of the Eko Hotel and Suites, Victoria Island, Lagos, during this year’s edition of the African Union-endorsed All Africa Music Awards, AFRIMA.

    Right from the entrance which was packed full, posters of great African musicians adorned the walls, as sentries, dressed like Zulu warriors and elegant ushers with a touch of East African fashion welcomed guests.

    Hosted by Kenyan Davidson Ngibuini (DGN) and Ivorian Aurelie Eliam, AFRIMA, which beamed live in over 84 countries, had in attendance some of the biggest music stars and celebrities from different parts of Africa.

    As the African musicians intermittently climbed the stage to receive their laurels in regional and continental categories, the audience too savoured the glamour of the night, roaring occasionally at different moments such as when it was announced that YBNL’s Olamide’s song, Shakiti Bobo won the artiste the Best Male West African Musician Award.

    Spiced up with various live performances from African musicians such as Adekunle Gold, AKA, Dark Suburb, Stanley, Busiswa Ngoku, Sugar Band and Cobhams Asuquo, there was no dull moment at the fully-packed venue.

    It was amid the fun, glitz and good African music that Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, national leader of the ruling All Progressives Congress, noted that music is a good platform for unity.

    Tinubu who was named the Pillar of Arts and Culture in Africa by the African Union Commission (AUC) and AFRIMA was described as a man with unequal passion and support for arts and entertainment in Africa.

    Receiving this Special Recognition award, Tinubu called for a moment of silence in honour of the victims of last week’s Paris terrorist attacks. “I want all of you to please stand up,” he said. “Be on your feet and let’s observe one minute of silence on behalf of those who were gunned down in the war against humanity that unfolds in Paris, France,” he said, standing on the stage with a retinue of supporters behind him.

    Moment after, people rented the air, chanting ‘Jagaban’, another of his traditional title.

    “Say no to terrorism, Africa,” Tinubu said, urging the audience to repeat the pledge after him.

    Continuing, the former Lagos State Governor described music as a potent tool to unify Africans.

    “I’ve enjoyed the night,” he said. “But tonight, we’re demonstrating to the rest of the world that culture, talent and music are a unifier. The unity of Africa is demonstrated here tonight.”

    “This is a great opportunity and demonstration that you the young ones, the youths across Africa – you are our future. And you can do more to unite us with culture around the world. We can conquer poverty; we can defeat and break the shackles of ignorance, disease, by recognising and promoting our talents.”

    Aside other African artistes and celebrities, AFRIMA attracted other Nigerian celebrities such as Timi Dakolo, Clarence Peters, Teemac Omatshola Iseli, Hasfat Abiola-Costello, Kunle Afolayan, Gbenga Adeyinka and Alibaba and Steve Ayorinde, Lagos State Commissioner for Information.

    Organisers of the event say AFRIMA is a combined effort to recognise, award, promote and preserve Africa’s rich music culture. In partnership with the African Union, AU, the show is expected to be the biggest music event in Africa.

  • World Savings Day: CBN educates students on savings culture

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has emphasised the need for every Nigerians to imbibe the culture of saving so as to have better economy and citizenry.

    Speaking at a World Saving Day programme organised for students of St. Peters Unity Secondary School in Akure, the Ondo State capital, the state branch controller of CBN, Mrs. Adeyemi Yusuf, said there is need for parents and guardians to start training their children on how to save.

    Yusuf noted that CBN has decided to take its enlightenment programme to schools so as to lay a foundation in the minds of the children at their early age.

    According to her, students from14 secondary schools in the six geo-political zones benefited from the mentoring programme.

    Adeyemi said it is only savings that translate to investment; saying without it there cannot be investment, which also means there cannot be development.

    Her words: “Savings habit is not very encouraging in Nigeria, and I think it is not peculiar to Nigeria; it is worldwide. So, I think it is necessary for this kind of commemoration to come up and create awareness from time to time

    “The commemoration of the World Savings Day is one of the platforms the bank is using to raise awareness of children and youths on the importance of savings, which is expected to lead to an increase in the levels of financial literary, financial inclusion (number of people that have banking relationship with financial institutions) culminating in a stable and sound financial system and ultimately a positive economic environment”.

    Adeyemi stressed that those, who are in the habit of savings are contributing to the economy of the country, and making themselves bette, citizenry for Nigeria.

    “If we are saving, we are saving for ourselves, when you save for yourself it also affect the country at large,” she added.

    She called on the state government to leverage on the CBN initiative to further create awareness and sensitise the people on the importance of saving.

    A staff of Consumer Protection Department of CBN in Abuja, Mr. Damola Atanda, who gave a talk at the event, said there is need to train the system irrespective of amount of money they are given.

    He noted that students, who have developed a saving habit, have been included into the country financial system, adding that it would translate to more money in the economy.

     

  • ‘Imbibe hand hygiene culture’

    Nigerians have been urged to imbibe the culture of hand hygiene.

    This, according to the General Manager, Unigloves Medical, Kevin Onah,would keep the people safe from hygiene-related diseases and outbreaks. He said this in an interview in Lagos.

    Onah urged healthcare workers to always protect themselves and the patient by wearing hand gloves while working.

    He said outbreaks have a multiplying effect because an individual can transfer a disease to other people quickly.

    His words: “Depending on the severity, for every patient they treat, health care workers should change their hand gloves. This may be subject to the sorts of procedures that are  being carried out. It is not only about wearing gloves, but about wearing the correct size and wearing it appropriately.”

    He said the effectiveness of any medical practice depends to a large extent, on infection control procedures, especially those that will be used in patient care pre-operative, during the operation and post operative.

    He said healthcare providers tend to give excuse that not wearing gloves regularly save cost, “but what cost are they saving when people are dying. You should not wear gloves or sanitise your hands only when there is an outbreak“.

    Onah said when gloves and sanitisers are appropriately used; there would be massive reduction in diseases, adding: “It would inprove the economy of the country because a healthy nation is a wealthy country. A country cannot grow economically if it does not have healthy people.”

    Hygiene, he said, has to start from the grassroots, which is why the firm was previously in schools to teach children on how to properly wash and disinfect their hands. “We tried to instill the habit of healthy hygiene so they can grow with it,” he noted,” he said.

    He added: “We would be visiting medical schools and teaching hospitals to advise medical students on the need to wear gloves in all procedures. Also, the various types of gloves to use in different procedures maybe sterile or non- sterile, powered or powder free.

    “We do not encourage the use of powdered gloves in clinical settings because powder can cause a lot of problems to some patients. Gloves are powdered for easy wearing, but powder free can also be used,”he said.