Tag: daily

  • StarTimes’ daily subscription rises

    Pay TV provider, StarTimes Nigeria says it has recorded a rise in the number of new and existing subscribers who opted for its daily or weekly subscription package tagged “pay-per-day”.

    The company made this known in a statement issued yesterday, adding that it was happy to have been able to ease the financial burden associated with monthly subscription in the country prior to this time and gradually fulfilling its promise to deliver affordable quality entertainment to every African home.

    In a statement, its Brands & Marketing Director Qasim Elegbede said: “Our subscriber base continue to soar fast and statistics have revealed that most of our new subscribers come in asking to be placed on the pay per day plan, which is the latest package that allows you pay only for the number of days you wish to watch.”

    He added: “Being the only pay TV operator that offers daily subscription package, it is not surprising that this has been in our favor as most people no longer want to pay for TV subscription they hardly watch.”

    StarTimes had  last year announced the take off of daily, weekly subscription, saying that subscribers could watch as many as 30 channels for N60 daily and over 40 TV channels with just N300 weekly on Nova bouquet.

    For Basic bouquet subscribers, daily subscription was at N90 daily and N450 weekly while classic bouquet subscribers will pay N180 daily, N900 weekly and Unique bouquet N240 daily and N1800 weekly on DTT Platform.

    On the other hand, subscribers on the DTH Nova bouquet is N60 per day, N300 per week and 900 per month; N120, N600 and N1, 900 for the subscribers on Smart bouquet.  However, the Super Bouquet subscribers will enjoy low rate of N240, N1, 200 and N3, 800.

    StarTimes owns a featured content platform, with 440 authorised channels consisting of news, movies, series, sports, entertainment, children’s programs, fashion, and religion and broadcasts to over 10 million homes across Africa.

  • IPMAN: we now get 80 trucks daily

    IPMAN: we now get 80 trucks daily

    The Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) has raised the hope of an end to petrol scarcity, saying its members now get a supply of 80 trucks of petrol from Ejigbo satellite in Lagos and Mosimi depot in Ogun State.

    IPMAN Lagos Chairman Alhaji Alanamu Balogun in a statement said before the petrol crisis, the NNPC was supplying IPMAN members only six trucks daily, but in the last five days, the NNPC had increased the supply to 80 trucks per day. He said with the increase in supply, IPMAN members and NNPC employees had been working 24 hours daily to ensure that petrol is supplied all over Lagos and Ogun States.

    Alhaji Balogun said the NNPC had repaired all the existing facilities at Ejigbo satellite depot to enhance fuel supply. According to him, the NNPC had promised to repair all its facilities in Ilorin, Ibadan and Ore depots to ensure regular fuel supply nationwide.

    He commended the DPR Lagos zone to ensure good relationship between the NNPC, PPRA, DAPMAN, MAN and other stake holders.

  • Lagos targets 2m water passengers daily

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode yesterday opened three newly acquired executive boats, with a plan to divert at least two million passengers on the waterways daily.

    This, he said, will reduce traffic on the road.

    Ambode pledged to explore the tourism and economic potentials of the waterways.

    Speaking at the unveiling of the boats held at Caverton Jetty in Civic Centre area of Victoria Island, the governor said he was committed to the implementation of the integrated transport management system designed to scale up water, rail and land transportation.

    He said the boats and four Jet Skis recently acquired by the government was to ensure safety and fight crime on the waterways, while in coming months, the state would take delivery of additional seven commercial ferries.

    He said: “This is a significant day for Lagos State as we commission three boats belonging to the Lagos State Government. We discovered that sometimes, we do not have the ability for our officials to go on the waterways to address issues relating to people and citizens that live alongside the waterways.

    “As you aware, 25 per cent of Lagos is water and it is important that we put in the right initiatives that can actually make activities on our waterways to thrive and the also people living along the waterways to bring them into proper perspective.

    “Sometimes when dignitaries come from other States or countries, they are not able to see the true side of Lagos from waterways perspective and that is one of the reasons we decided to procure the boats to promote tourism in the state so that people can see the great potentials of Lagos State.”

    Commissioner for Waterfront Infrastructure Development Adebowale Akinsanya said about 30 commercial routes on the waterways have been identified for dredging and channelisation, while 10 jetties spread across the state were being constructed.

    The ministry, he said, was working with the Justice ministry to enforce compliance with safety standards and checkmate any illegal activity by operators.

    Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) General Manager Tiamiyu Adeshina said the Jet Skis would be deployed to aid rescue operation in case of emergency, and helps to fight crime.

    “Each of the Jet Skis has the capacity to carry two divers and the idea behind this is that when an incident occurred on the water, there is a Jet Ski that will move divers fast to the incident scene while the rescue boats are coming behind and when they get there, divers are dropping into the waters and as soon as they rescue people, we put them into the rescue boat and take them to hospital,” Adeshina said.

    Lagos State Waterways Authority (LASWA) Managing Director Damilola Emmanuel, said the commissioning was the beginning of sustainable development for the waterways, adding that apart from efforts by the agency to enforce safety standards, the government has concluded plans to license 10 new operators who would provide better ferries.

  • 81-yr-old Islamic scholar’s undying passion: Whether I’m in Nigeria or passion, I must eat pounded yam DAILY

    81-yr-old Islamic scholar’s undying passion: Whether I’m in Nigeria or passion, I must eat pounded yam DAILY

    PROMINENT Islamic scholar, 81-year-old, Sheik Al-Mukadam Muhhamed Robiu Adebayo, is the founder of Jam’iyyat Lutfil-Laai International, an Islamic society with branches in several countries across the world, including the US and the United Kingdom.

    Sheu, as members of the society call him, came to Lagos as a 10-year-old boy in 1948. The son of an Ilorin, Kwara State-born Islamic scholar, Robiu Adebayo was sent to Lagos by his father to study the Quran under the tutelage of an Islamic scholar.

    “Though my father was a very prominent Islamic scholar in Ilorin, he preferred to send me to a Quranic school in Lagos,” he said with a touch of joy in his eyes.

    His father’s decision to send him to Lagos, Sheik said was informed by the belief that it was better for him to go out of his immediate family setting to get a good education.

    “The old people of my generation believed that a child may not be able to learn if he was taught by his parents. They also believed that a child needed to go outside his family to learn some things about life.”

    Asked if he was happy with his father’s decision at the time, he said: “In those days, you dare not argue with your father’s decision. Even your mother is compelled to support whatever decision the father made. It was the same in my own case. My father wanted the best for me, hence his decision to send me to Lagos.”

    His father’s decision to send him to Lagos will remain the best influence on his life. Young Adebayo arrived in Lagos without any formal education, but with the determination to make success of his father’s dream.

    Growing up, Sheik said he was always desirous of becoming an Islamic cleric. “You know that was the job that our father did. And since they worked for God, they wanted their children to follow in their footsteps, and that was what I did.”

    He arrived in the Kosoko area, Lagos Island area of Lagos, where he spent most of his younger days, and chose to focus his attention on his mission, which was to attend a Quranic school.

    “You know that I told you that my father wanted me to study the Quran, so that was what I focused my attention on at the time.”

    As a young man, Robiu Adebayo loved sports and participated actively in sports like football, boxing and table tennis.

    “For most young men of my generation, you had to love one sport or the other. For me, I loved football, boxing and table tennis and I was really active in these sports.”

    But, his arrival and survival in Lagos was not on a roller coaster. As a young man from the hinterland of the country, he was often referred to by his peers as an Ara oke (one from the hinterland). That tag, he confessed, put some limitations on young men at the time.

    “I came to Lagos from Ilorin, Kwara State. At the time, people who came from the hinterland part of the country were called ara oko. It really affected some young men who began to display inferiority complex.”

    But young Adebayo refused to bow to the tag and mixed with other young men. “I came as a young boy and I mixed very well with other boys of my age,” he said with a sense of pride.

    He also realised that he needed to do something that would earn him money. “I joined some other young men to fish. We would go to sea to catch fishes, which we sold to make some money. There is no island between Lagos and Badagry that we didn’t go during our fishing expeditions.”

    All the money he made, he said was spent on his quest for Islamic education and to fulfill his father’s advice that he must go to a Quran school.

    “All the money that I made was spent on Quran schools. My father insisted that I must go to a Quranic school and I just had to make sure that I heed his instruction.”

    In 1957, Sheik realised that he needed to get some form of formal education and decided to learn driving. At the completion of his training, he joined the employ of Leventis Motors, where he worked as a store keeper.

    While his boss’ wife loved him because he was always neat, some people in the company wanted the boss to sack him because of his lack of education. After sometime, the boss later heeded the advice and asked him to resign.

    “Some people went to the boss to sack me, but his wife really loved me because I was always neat. They told the boss that because I didn’t go to school, it would be easy for thieves to steal the cars in my care. After sometime, I was asked to resign.”

    After losing his job with Leventis, he got another job with the Nigerian Railway, where he worked till he started Islamic cleric job.

    After his decision to go full time into Quranic calling, Adebayo went back to an Islamic school, located in the Ebutte Metta area of Lagos.

    “In 1968, I decided to go to a Lebanese school in Ebutte Metta. It was a full time Islamic school built by the Lebanese government. It was also tuition-free. I spent three years at the school.”

    Sheik said he studied under the tutelage of about 10 Islamic scholars during his quest for knowledge and understanding of the religion. Doing that, he said, helped him to acquire different types of knowledge from different people.

    “In our time, we needed to ensure that we got full understanding of Islam. For me, I attended about 10 Quranic schools and each of them impacted on me in different ways.”

    Speaking on the seeming tension among religious groups, he said there was no need for it, insisting that only a religious leader that has a ‘hidden agenda’ would create tension among religious bodies.

    “There is no need for all this misunderstanding among the religions. There are several books that can enlighten the people on the right thing to do,” he said, before adding: “Let me tell you this, whatever religion you claim to profess, you’ll know in your heart if you are doing the right thing or not. A religious leader who is deceiving his followers knows what he is doing. But judgment should be left to God, because it is only Him that knows who is truly worshipping Him or not.”

    On his simple lifestyle, Sheik Adebayo wondered why a true man of God would go round town with unbridled display of opulence and aides. “While it is not wrong for a religious leader to have aides that would go round with him, what I don’t seem to understand is the way some people do it. If you go round with 1,000 aides, that does not stop you from having a stomach upset if you would have it. And funny enough, none of those around you would feel the same way with you. Most of the things that happen to man have been listed by God to happen. And if you see a true man of God, he would not come out himself to proclaim it. It is the people around him that will go round to speak of his good deeds.”

    At 81, Sheik Adebayo has barely slowed down on a few things she used to do before now. His day starts early in the morning when he rises to say his prayers. That is then followed up with a little exercise, which he said has been difficult for him to stop. “It is difficult for you stop doing a few exercises in the morning if you did sport in your younger days,” he said smiling.

    But one thing that the Sheik has found difficult to stop is his love for pounded yam. According to him, whether he was at home in Nigeria or anywhere outside the country, his daily meal of pounded yam remains a must.

    “My best food is pounded yam. And I eat it daily, irrespective of where I am. Whether in Nigeria, UK, US or anywhere, my day is not complete without a meal of pounded yam.”

    While the Sheik may not have any form of formal education, his understanding of English language is high. Asked how he was able to speak English, he laughed before saying: “I’ve lived in Lagos for more than 70 years. Who would live in Lagos for that number of years without being able to speak English language? Besides that, I have visited several foreign countries where I have my members. So, it should not be surprising that I speak English.”

    He, is, however, not resting on his oars in his quest for better education for the people. Aside from his Quranic school, his organisation has founded a nursery and primary school, with students cutting across religious divides.

    “What we are doing is to train better leaders. We observed that some Islamic teachers need to improve themselves in formal education. You can imagine a scholar who is not able to speak English language? So, we decided to establish a school. We have also acquired a large sparse of land in Ilorin where we hope to start a university very soon.”

  • GOC: we arrest Boko Haram suspects in Lagos daily

    •Army probes alleged coup plot

    The Nigerian Army yesterday said suspected Boko Haram insurgents are daily arrested in Lagos and Ogun states.

    General Officer Commanding (GOC) 81 Division, Gen. Isidore Edet stated this during an interdenominational church service at Saint Charles Lwanga Catholic Church, Ikeja Cantonment, to mark the Army Day celebration.

    He said the army is investigating an alleged coup against the government, warning soldiers to be mindful of the things they say and do.

    “That is why we are asking soldiers to be on the alert. We have reasons to be on the alert more than before when we fought Boko Haram fiercely.

    ‘’Almost on a daily basis, we arrest Boko Haram members in Lagos. They have seen that the war is being won so they are running. The army in conjunction with other security agencies arrest them almost daily.

    ‘’Initially, they deny when we ask them questions, but when we profile them, they start revealing where they fought, how they killed soldiers, how they detonated bombs in post office, Maiduguri, and so on.

    ‘’By this, we do what we need to do by sending them to the higher authorities to do what the laws and the constitution of Nigeria says it will do with them. So, you must be on the alert and watch out for strangers who may stroll into the barracks. Ask them questions and report such persons to security agents to know the person’s mission.”

    ‘’Many of our colleagues have died in this war against Boko Haram. Some of them, we have seen their graves and some we did not see. So, we have every reason for those that are still alive to thank God for giving us victory against Boko Haram.

    ‘’So many others are amputated, some are even using crutches because they fought against Boko Haram so that we would have one country. About a year ago, we were the object of public ridicule, those of us in uniforms, if we talk, the public will say go and fight Boko haram and stop making noise.

    ‘’But we thank today that the Almighty God, who trained our hands for war, has taken the shame away. And now, the Nigerian people are proud of us again as their soldiers, saying we are in the front line.”

    Sounding a strong warning to officers and soldiers on the alleged coup, Edet said: “Within the military where there are rumours of coup, whether they are perceived or real; soldiers should be careful in the company they keep and the things they say. “Army is investigating the coup rumour. Even during military rule army investigated to know the veracity of coup rumour.

    “Be watchful of the people that come to our barracks and enter our mess. Be careful what they say because when people want to plan such things, they come into our barracks and incite soldiers.

    “Be careful of such people and report them. Do not allow yourself to be in their company because you may be in the wrong place.

    “Even in your telephone conversations you should be careful. Whatever you say on air is being monitored and being collated. We expect a 100 percent loyalty. Avoid the company of people who come with misguided utterances against the government.”