Tag: Dubai

  • Nigerian dies in Dubai after watching Eaglets

    Nigerian dies in Dubai after watching Eaglets

    An unidentified Nigerian was declared dead by doctors in Dubai yesterday.

    They were unable to revive him when he slumped just after the Eaglets’ 3-3 draw against Sweden last Tuesday at the ongoing FIFA U17 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates.

    The fan was said to have collapsed after getting off a vehicle shortly after watching the Eaglets’ thrilling encounter against the Swedes in Al Ain.

    He was said to have been hospitalised after all attempts to resuscitate him proved abortive.

    He was placed under close observation for about four days before the doctor confirmed him dead yesterday, a witness told SportingLife.

    Members of the Nigerian community in Dubai who confirmed the report expressed shock at the tragedy.

    “I want to tell you that we just lost one of our own who was with us to support the Golden Eaglets against the Swedish U17 team.

    “He slumped shortly after he alighted from the vehicle that conveyed us from the match venue and remained in that condition from last Tuesday until today (Saturday) when we were told he was dead,” a source told SportingLife.

    The Eaglets eventually drew 3-3 after coming back from two goals down.

  • Nigeria shifts base to Dubai today

    Nigeria’s U17 players and officials will leave Al Ain’s Danat Resort Hotel this morning for Dubai, the venue of their third group match of the current FIFA cadet World Cup against Iraq, holding at the Rashid Stadium.

    The team’s Secretary, Taiye Egbayeilo told SportingLife that the Eaglets will be lodged at the Intercontinental Hotel, Dubai and will do so by 11.00am today.

    Egbayeilo said support for the Eaglets has been massive since the competition started, adding that Nigerians from Dubai and other neighbouring cities in the UAE have defied the distance to come watch their darling team in Al Ain.

    He predicted that the support would be massive in Dubai when the Eaglets entertain Iraq on Friday.

    “We shall be leaving for Dubai tomorrow (today). I have to state here that we have received enormous support from Nigerians in the UAE. They have all left their businesses to come support us despite the distance. We had over 300 fans from Dubai that came to watch our first match against Mexico and we are expecting more than thrice that figure when we play Iraq on Friday.

    “We shall be staying at the Intercontinental Hotel, Dubai. And we are leaving by 11.00am tomorrow (today),” Egbaiyelo stated.

  • Toyin Lawani on nine-month course

    PRETTY and very light-skinned Toyin Lawani’s appearance on the social scene has not been without idle talk. There were speculations that she was romantically involved with a prominent public official in Lagos State. A frequent party goer, Lawani’s flashy looks and highflying lifestyle set her apart. Well, the news making the rounds is that she is expecting her second child and she is currently in Dubai shopping for the unborn baby.

  • Six Eaglets pass MRI test

    Six Eaglets pass MRI test

    • Begin training in Dubai

    A final batch of six players passed the MRI scan before the Nigeria U-17 team jetted out of the country on a training tour ahead of the U-17 World Cup.

    MTNFootball.com gathered that the players were considered to be “on the borderline”, but they all came out with flying colours at the Abuja National Hospital to give the Golden Eaglets a massive boost ahead of the World Cup in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

    A squad of 25 players and 10 officials departed Nigeria for Dubai on Monday. The Golden Eaglets have since resumed training.

    Coach Manu Garba said there was no time to waste since the kick-off of the 15th edition of the global cadet competition is fast approaching, adding that it was important for the players to shake off jet lag occasioned by their travelling from Calabar to Lagos on Monday before embarking on another seven-hour nonstop flight from Lagos to Dubai.

    All the 25 players trained on Tuesday evening at the pitch of Higher Colleges of Technology located within the Dubai Academic City under a fine weather condition of 29°C with good visibility throughout the duration of about two hours training that started 4:30pm local time (1:30pm Nigerian time).

    “It is good we started today, this is important because we had our last training session on Saturday morning in Calabar; so it’s good we start conditioning ourselves to our new environment.”

    The Eaglets are expected to train henceforth twice daily with variations as the occasion demands before their departure to the city of Al-Ain which is about one hour and thirty minutes from Dubai by flight for their preliminary group matches against Mexico and Iraq on October 19 and 22.

    The team’s last match against Sweden will be played in Dubai on October 25.

  • 35 firms for GITEX in Dubai

    More than 35 local ICT firms have indicated interest to participate in the first Nigerian Pavilion at GITEX Technology Week inside the Dubai World Trade Centre, United Arab Emirate (UAE).

    The Nigerian Pavilion is being promoted by Information Technology Association of Nigeria (ITAN) and Pinnacle International Consulting with the support of the Federal Ministry of Communications Technology.

    In a statement by the organisers noted that the technology fair will hold between October 20 and 24 and will be led by a mix of the big, oldest and innovative players like Omatek Computer Ventures Plc, Programmos Solutions Ltd and Data Sciences Nigeria Ltd.

    ITAN Secretariat disclosed that several countries are already billed to have their pavilions on ground at the event to promote their local capacities. They include the USA, Germany, India, Brazil, Hong Kong and Malaysia. Others are Kenya and Morocco from Africa.

    GITEX Technology is the premier Technology event in the Middle East and South East Asia (MEASA), which now occupies over 78,000 sqm of space, and saw Infocomm and ITU (International Telecommunication Union) collocate with it in 2012. More than 150, 000 trade visitors and exhibitors from 144 countries attended Gitex 2012 which recorded over 25,000 visitors from Africa. Over 20,000 C-Level visitors at the event last year; $1.2 million was the average value per order placed during the event and 92 per cent of the exhibitors met their return on investment (RoI) expectations.

  • Firm, businessman in court over Dubai hotel project

    Firm, businessman in court over Dubai hotel project

    Can a court restrain an investor

    from deploying lawful means

    to retrieve his investment in what he perceived as a doubtful project? Does the law allow the court to compel an unwilling investor to invest in a project he doubts its actuality?

    These, among others, form issues to be determined when the Lagos High Court opens hearing in a suit instituted by a Dubai, United Arab Emirate-based real estate company, Sigma III Limited and five others against a businessman, Washington Agbons Umweni and one other. The other claimants are TFG Real Estate Limited, Nigel Burnside, Ms Tochi Izuchukwu, Miss Denise Igbokidi and Mac-Henry Isemede. The other defendant is Umweni’s lawyer, Tunde Abioje.

    It is the claimants’ case that the businessman, who had subscribed to its proposed hotel project in Dubai, changed his mind midway; having made about 20 per cent contribution, now seeks a refund of his investment and termination of the transaction.

    Umweni on his part denied any relationship with Sigma III and two of the claimants. He said his transactions were with The First Group, an international property development company, who he accused of insincerity. He wondered why The First Group was not made a party in the suit.

    The claimants stated in their statement of claims that Umweni subscribed in December, lasrt year to one of its projects – TFG Marina, a proposed luxury hotel to be built in Dubai, and was allocated Unit 2212 at about N48.4million (AED1,099,500).

    They averred that parties duly executed Property Reservation Agreement (PRA) and Sales Purchase Agreement (SPA), which regulate the contract between them. The claimants added that the SPA made provision for installmental payments, which Umweni allegedly agreed to.

    The claimants averred that Umweni, in compliance with the agreement between parties, made installment payments totaling about N9.8million, but stopped payment sometime later and demanded for a refund on the ground that he had lost interest. They stated that by the plan, Umweni was to make full payment by November 30, 2014 after which the project, which at the time of his subscription was at its elementary stage, was to be completed and handed to him.

    In two letters written by lawyer to the claimants, Ismail Muftau of the firm of Jackson, Etti & Edu, in response to Umweni’s letter demanding a refund, the claimants initially denied any wrong doing, insisting that a refund was not an option under the agreement. After threats by Umweni, through letters by his lawyer, Abioje to deploy all legal means to recover his trapped funds, including exposing the claimants’ alleged fraudulent dealings by reporting to relevant agencies, the claimants agreed to make a refund of Umweni’s N9.771,876 investment, but less 40 per cent. They later conceded to 30 per cent, a proposal which Umweni refused and insisted on reporting the case to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC), the police and other relevant agencies, in his effort to retrieve his funds. Dissatisfied with Umweni’s insistence on the refund of his full deposit, the claimants accused his (Umweni’s) lawyer of interfering in the agreement between parties.

    They want the court to among others, compel Umweni to continue with the transaction, in accordance with the alleged SPA

    In their joint statement of defence, Umweni said the project was introduced to him by The Furst Group’s representatives – Jennifer Anaba and Armanda-Roy Onwualu, who later invited him to a meeting with other The First Group officials, who he later met at the company’s office at seventh floor, Bank of Industry (BoI) building, Abuja last year. He said the officials convinced him to buy into the TFG Marina project, even when he had expressed his intention to invest in a completed project.

    He identified the company’s officials with which he had meetings to include Ms Izuchukwu, Ms Mouna Kamassi and Harry Smith. He added that they never told him they were acting for another company but TFG. He said he believed they were TFG officials because the officials’ complimentary cards and the Property Reservation Agreement, containing payment schedule and details of the Skye Bank account into which he made all his payments showed that he was dealing with TFG. Umweni stated that he never had any transaction with the first claimant (Stigma III) or its officials in respect of the TFG Marina project. He added that he only dealt with TFG Real Estate Ltd, when on his refusal to make payment into an account in Dubai in the name of First Homes Worldwide LLC, as directed by TFG, an alternate account was provided by TFG Real Estate in Skye Bank, 3 Akin Adesola Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    He also denied knowing or ever dealing with Miss Igbokidi and Isemede (5th and 6th claimants) in respect of the TFG Marina project.

    Umweni stated that the first time he saw the Sigma III name was when a draft copy of the SPA was brought to him. He said he drew the TFG official who brought it, Elena Kovalkina to the Sigma III Ltd written on the draft agreement, but that Kovalkina said being a draft, the agreement was not yet binding and that when the fair (actual) copy was ready, the name would be corrected to read The First Group.

    He denied signing any of the agreements referred to by the claimants, but said what he signed was a payment schedule, indicating his mode of payment.

    He stated that the company’s officials failed to provide him with the fair or actual copy of the agreements up until he decided to discontinue with the payment.

    Umweni stated that he agreed to the transaction after he was taken to Dubai and shown the purported site of the proposed hotel, where he saw construction equipment that had been taken there. He said works were at piling stage.

    He said he was surprised, when six months after he started payment, he visited Dubai and on reaching the site of the project, works still remained at the piling stage, while all the construction equipment he saw on his first visit had disappeared.

    Umweni said he also noted the sign post erected close to the project, which earlier bore – TFG Marina Project – had been changed to WYNDHAM Dubai Marina, without the company either informing him or explaining the reason behind the change.

    He said on his return to the country, he complained to TFG officials about his discovery in Dubai, but that none of the officials could address the issues he raised. He stated that while still expecting the company to provide response to his queries, he was surprised to receive a letter from Sigma III Ltd, informing him that he was in default of his installment payment to the project.

    Umweni averred that he ignored the letter from Sigma III because he had always dealt with TFG and was still expecting The First Group to provide reasons for its decision to unilaterally change the name of the project, without informing him as a subscriber, and the lack of progress in its execution.

    He stated that having waited endlessly without any meaningful response from TFG, he instructed his lawyer to write the company and demand for full refund of his contribution, having refused to explain the suspicious developments he had noticed.

    Umweni admitted writing the company to demand for a refund and informing it of his resolve to explore all legal and legitimate means to retrieve his contribution. He accused the TFG of breaching whatever understanding they had and argued that the suit was a diversionary measure aimed at frustrating his resolve to ensure that his contribution was refunded in full.

    He noted that TFG, who had argued that he was in breach of a purported SPA, which it claimed made no provision for refund, had made proposals to refund part of his contribution upon his threat to report the company and its officials to relevant government agencies.

    Umweni cited TFG’s proposal of April 15, 2013 seeking to refund N4,847,940; another of April 24,2013 proposing N6,771,380 and the third proposal in which it offered to refund N7,255,042.50.

    The defendants urged the court to enter final judgment on the N6,771,380 which TFG had admitted as they were ready to prove, at trial, the company’s indebtedness on the remnant of his N9.8m investment.

    Although parties have filed and served their initial processes, no date is fixed yet for hearing in the case.

     

  • No ‘free lunch’ in dubai

    No ‘free lunch’ in dubai

    Dubai, the paradise in the gulf desert, has become a kind of a second home to many Nigerians. Thanks to the liberal visa regime by the United Arab Emirates (UAE), thousands of Nigerians troop there daily for business, leisure and conferences. Like any other country that Nigerians found themselves in, the normal character trait of Nigerians: loudness in everything they do.

    Outside the Nigerian tourist visitors, thousands of Nigerians permanently live in Dubai, most especially the Deira area. One would see them in every corner doing one form of business or the other.

    Because of these, many business organizations in Dubai have come to see Nigerians as an easy source of making money and as such ambush Nigerians arriving Dubai with juicy mouth- watering proposals all in a bid to rob the naive of their money.

    Early last month, on arrival at the Dubai International Airport, I was ambushed by one of these groups. As early as about 3:00am, Dubai time, when we arrived, these groups were at their stands at the airport. One of them, Emirates Vacation Club, approached me, offering a desert safari, a dhow cruise and a city tour of Dubai, all for free.

    But I was expected to do a simple thing in return-come  for a tour of their hotel facility and that then I will be entitled to any of these gifts. I had had an experience of desert safari, even though I’ve not gone on a city tour of Dubai.

    I had salivated at the idea of going on a dhow cruise. The dhows are traditional boats that ply the Dubai water that separates the Bur Dubai area from the Deira. In my other trips to Dubai, I had often seen them at night in their shining lights, cruising on the water and one could hear the oriental music playing as those on board dined. I wanted to experience it. So, I filled the form given to me and promised to call them after securing a mobile phone line to fix an appointment. I did that, but the story changed.

    After my initial contact with the person that introduced me to the programme, I was handed over to a lady who told me she was from Mauritius, and kept on calling my her brother. It was no longer a tour of the hotel, but I was supposed to sit down for a one-and-half-hour presentation at their headquarters located at Sheik Zayed Road.

    Even though that was not the initial agreement as I was only told of a tour of a hotel, I decided to play along instead of losing the chance to go on a dhow cruise.

    I arrived at their office, I think, on the 21st floor of the skyscraper and my ‘lecturer’ was a Nigerian who decided to migrate from London to Dubia after his schooling. I was made very comfortable, offered good refreshment and so on.

    Then, down to business. The person making the presentation asked me some questions on my vacation habit, where I had travelled to for vacation and the average cost of my family vacation annually. He told me that Emirates Vacation Club had an offer me whereby I would be part owner of their hotel, Emirates Hotels, for 97 years.

    Breaking it down further, he said the Emirates Vacation Club would be selling to people part ownership of their hotel. With the payment of S35,000 dollars, one would be a part owner of the hotel and free to spend a one-week vacation annually at the hotel. The deal would be for 97 years.

    To reinforce what they were selling, I was taken to the balcony and shown the tall Emirates Hotel that they were selling out. I was supposed to go and inspect the hotel. But it was not the S35,000 dollars deal that they were offering me, the club was even ready to given a discount if I could pay cash there and then. In other words, if I could cough up the cash there and then, I would be given a discount which would reduce the total amount I was to pay to about 25,000 dollars.

    Around me were many other individuals and couples being sold the same idea and being urged to make a commitment.

    Unfortunately for my ‘lecturer’, I was not having up to 700 dollars, and I did not intend to part with it. So, I came up with an idea. I told the vacation club staff that I was interested in the deal, and I was ready to invest in the hotel property.

    But I told him I wanted to go back to my hotel and think through the offer. The amount involved was huge, and, as a policy, I didn’t make on the spot commitment without going to think over it. He was not satisfied.

    He started re-explaining the whole concept to me, asking if there was anything he was supposed to explain or any area that I didn’t understand. I told him no, that it was my personal policy not to make on the spot commitment without having time to think it over.

    When he discovered I was not bringing out a cheque book to make a commitment,he went in and called his chain-smoking immediate supervisor who said he was from Lebanon. He came and started all over again, all in a bid to get a firm commitment from me. He told me he was familiar with Lagos, and when I asked him where he stayed in Lagos, he replied Banana Island. I stuck to my gun.

    He then threw the last dice. He told me that he would want to help me and that what would happen was that even if I was not having up to the amount that they were demanding, I should just deposit whatever I had and he would talk to his management to give me a weaver. That did not move me.

    That was when they knew that I was what, in the Nigerian parlance, we would call bad market. Reluctantly, they gave up on me and told me to go to the reception to wait so that my gift voucher would be prepared. That was what I was after. The Emirates Vacation Club was so disappointed with my no-show. I later collected my gift voucher and left.

    Of course, I went for the dhow cruise, but that is a story for another day.

    Emirates Vacation Club and others like them that many Nigerians see at the Dubai International Airport are legitimate travel organizations, operating in Dubai doing legitimate business, but Nigerian travellers should be weary of their aggressive marketing drive in their effort to sell.

    Nobody would be arrested or penalised for not entering into a deal he is not comfortable with in Dubai, but breaching a validly entered agreement may attract sanctions, hence the need not to allow these marketers to force one to make commitments one is not pleasantly disposed to.

    For visitors to Dubai, there are many mouth-watering offers, but one should always bear it in mind that these are shrewd business- men who want to make profits.

    In my own case, all sides kept to the agreement. I was to attend a presentation for my prize. I did and I was given the prize. There was no clause that I must make a commitment. When going for that deal or freebie that looks harmless in Dubai, one must have it at the back of one’s mind that there is no free launch in Dubai.

  • Jide Omokore plans jaw-dropping  wedding for son in Dubai

    Jide Omokore plans jaw-dropping wedding for son in Dubai

    Even without access to his assets and bank accounts, there are tell-tale signs that signpost how financially endowed a man is. One of them is the way he celebrates birth, marriage or death. The preparations for the forthcoming wedding of Omokore Jnr, son of Kogi-born PDP stalwart, Chief Jide Omokore, are re-echoing the fact that the Chairman of Spog Oil and Gas is one of the richest men in Nigeria.

    The businessman is set to stage a wedding across the seas for his son; a new fad among the super rich in Nigeria. In the next few weeks, Dubai will host many of Nigeria’s rich and famous as Omokore’s son gets married to his fiancee. Celeb Watch gathered that top celebrities in the country are warming up for the A-list wedding.

    Chief Jide Omokore, who recently formalised his union with Angela Jones, his lover of many years, is surely enjoying life to the fullest.

  • Why we chose Dubai – Tuface Idibia

    Why we chose Dubai – Tuface Idibia

    All over the cyber space, the question has been rife as to why hip hop artiste, Tuface Idibia chose to seal his love with long time sweetheart, Annie Macaulay in faraway Dubai in the United Arab Emirates as against Nigeria where the bulk of his fans are and where he makes more sales. Well, Mr. idibia has explained the reason

    why they chose UAE in a recent interview.

    “I think there is this spiritual connection. We thought of a perfect place for the white wedding and the idea of Dubai came up. I don’t know about crowd control. We

    just want to have the best of the moment and make sure things go rightly. There is nothing more to it. It does not have to do with controlling the people or anything.

    The fact is that you can’t run away from the people. Anywhere you go, you will meet people and these people have come to celebrate with us… Let’s just say that we love

    Dubai and we also discovered that it was a perfect venue for us,” he stated.

  • Cities in transition at Art Dubai

    Cities in transition at Art Dubai

    Curator and Founder of Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos, Bisi Silva will lead six other Nigerian artists to Marker 2013, a curated section of the yearly Art Dubai Fair, in United Arab Emirate (UAE) opening today. The art show, which will be curated by Bisi Silva will run till March 23. The six artists from Nigeria, which is the largest number of the four countries featuring in the show are mixed media artists Ndidi Dike and Taye Idahor, sound artist Emeka Ogboh, photographers Ade Adekola and Charles Okereke as well as designer Carol Akpokien.

    According to the organisers, the theme of Marker 2013 focuses on emerging big cities and the effect of urbanisation on the people’s tradition. It would be interesting to know how the artists interpret the issue of growing cities and preservation of heritage. But, Silva noted that every culture practitioner should be concerned about how heritage was being preserved.

    For Marker 2013 however, each artist, may not exactly be focusing on how or not a government’s policy affects preservation of heritage, but how engaging the contents of their work are. “This is an art exhibition, not a conference or seminar. The artists are therefore expressing their day-to-day experience, not exactly focusing on the policy of government,” Silva said.

    She explained that there exists a commonality among the artists, she added, which will be on “a common interest in how the cities affect the social and economic lives of the people. For example, one of the artists looks at architecture and how the new are submerging the old; sky- scrappers with no ventilation, whereas African community setting is largely communal. It’s interesting to probe how this, for example, impacts on us in the next 100 years.”

    Future editions of Marker may not have African spaces, but this year’s event offers a window for Nigerians and other African artists in general to look beyond their immediate environment. The idea is to go into new market, new experience, Silva said, adding, “I think most of them, if not all are showing in the Middle East for the first time. Having six artists working in different ways shows the diversity of practice in Nigeria.”

    Silva said in a report that Idahor and another young artist, Ekanem Konu would be at Marker 2013 to represent CCA at the curatorial level. “We want to develop art infrastructure, so that when artists come out of schools, they can be curators if they so choose to. I hope that in the next five to 10 years, there would be more curators, not just in Nigeria, but across Africa,” she added.