Tag: essay

  • Winners emerge in NCDMB essay contest

    Winners emerge in NCDMB essay contest

    Winners of the Seventh Nigerian Content Annual National Undergraduate Essay Competition were unveiled in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State at a well-attended ceremony. It was the Grand Finale of the competition, with the top 10 finalists awarded prizes.

    Overall best was Miss Iruoma Favour Lazarus, a 200-level student of the Faculty of Law, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka. She received a cheque of N1 million and an HP laptop.

    The second prize went to Miss Lucy Agbalu, a 100-level student of Microbiology at the University of Calabar, who got a cheque of N700,000 and an HP laptop, while the third prize was won by Akinduyite O. Samuel, who received N500,000 and a similar laptop.

    In an address at the ceremony, the Executive Secretary, Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), Simbi Kesiye Wabote, an engineer, said the board sought to “inculcate local content consciousness among students of our higher institutions,” thereby creating champions of such an endeavour.

    He described local content as “an existential necessity for every nation, particularly for developing nations like Nigeria.” That much was evident from the resilience of Nigeria’s oil and gas industry in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020/2021.

    The NCDMB boss noted that the topic of the essay competition, which was “Nigerian Content and the Lessons from COVID-19,” was well-conceived “considering how the COVID-19 pandemic devastated our world.” He said at the height of the pandemic, “the movement of persons and goods was disrupted for several months, forcing every nation to rely on their local resources for survival.

    Read Also: UBA Foundation commences 2023 National Essay Competition

    Wabote, who was represented by the Manager, Corporate Corporations, Esueme Dan Kikile, called on policy-makers at different levels of government and in the private sector to take deliberate steps to develop resilient and sufficient human and infrastructural capacities in key sectors of our national fabric, which can withstand any external shocks in future.

    Commending winners of the essay contest and the consultants, Mahogany Century Concepts Limited, he said the board has sustained the competition for seven years because of the huge importance it attaches to it, and that the intention is to challenge students in tertiary institutions to sharpen their writing skills and engage youths in productive activities.

    The chairman of the occasion, Prof. Allen A. Agih, who was represented by Mr. Fibainonine G. Paulley lauded the NCDMB for its remarkable contributions to capacity building in the country. He agreed that the resiliency of the oil and gas industry withstood the pandemic, adding: “Nigerians did not run to foreign countries when COVID-19 struck.”

  • Short essay on ‘the other room’

    In politics, if you want anything said, ask a man. If you want anything done, ask a woman-Margaret Hilda Thatcher (late British Prime Minister)

    It’s fast turning out that ‘the other room’ in the cosmos of President Muhammadu Buhari is where we have to look for answers to some of the bewildering national questions of the day. When he was grabbed on camera as he faced the world to disclose the existence of an enclosure exclusive to his wife, the president hardly perceived the location as a world beyond his own vision. His remarks were a gratuitous riposte to a loving spouse’s customary admonition. He ignored her and sought to cage the woman, as it were. But the genie was out of the bottle.

    For, after we had been told of the room, its occupant has since hugged the headlines, taken over the narrative and compelled a huge flow of media commentary. Periodically, she looks through the window and, noticing scenes toxic to the polity and her husband, drops words of caution. Sometimes she would venture out, to air views that her husband’s fawning hangers-on wished were never allowed a space beyond her soul.

    But we must give audience to Mrs Aisha Buhari. We must be interested in what she cooks in ‘the other room’ the same way we must admit that she is inseparable from the inner working of the Buhari Presidency.

    It’s close to the eventful days of the JFK Presidency in the United States of America in the 1960s. The administration wanted to set up an agenda for the media that played down the activities of Jacqueline, President Kennedy’s wife. Leave out JFK’s wife in your political reporting, the White House would seem to tell the newsmen. The authorities missed the point that it was the woman who provided irresistible cannon fodder which the journalists pounced on. Jacqueline’s own body language and fashion statement wouldn’t leave the reporters out of her life!

    Now consider our own Aisha. Although not a flea-hop near Nana Rawlings of Ghana, a Grace ‘Gucci’ Mugabe (Zimbabwe) or an Eva Peron (Argentina), she has, in a way, acquired their magnetic and forceful temper: subtle power to shake off shadowy existence.

    Aisha’s ruthless interrogation of the state of Aso Villa Clinic led her into fundamental submissions on the challenges of leadership in Nigeria and why we are in this sorry pass threatening to consume us. She impliedly threw darts at her husband and all others claiming to be our leaders.

    In particular, she shot down the federal government’s sing-song of change as a movement or revolution that begins with the citizens. It is sedentary rulers who pursue and embrace this creed. When my leader is ill and he flies out for medicare, he little inspires me to trust in the domestic health infrastructure. He isn’t moving me to change my stand on the system. It is hypocrisy to ask me to change my attitude to national issues when he hasn’t initiated a change through a thorough-going transformation of his own lifestyle which must include endogenous consumption. I want to see my leader and his family patronize the local schools, markets and hospitals my kids make use of.

    The homilies on corruption, patriotism, honesty, indiscipline, self-denial, sacrificial national service, humility, good neighbourliness etc. are hollow and “full of sound and fury, signifying nothing” as long as the leaders themselves don’t first reflect these virtues while in public office and in private. If the citizen doesn’t first sight these attributes in the leader, there can’t be change.

    That was the lesson the First Lady kept in ‘the other room’ imparted last year when she took ill. “A few weeks ago,” she said, “I was sick…they advised me to take the first flight out to London. I refused to go. I insisted I must be treated in Nigeria…”

    You wonder: what has a singular act of self-abnegation by a leader got to do with good governance? But the point is that the citizens of a given society meet themselves in the leader, elected or selected. If the leader is obsessed with the notion of self-preservation, and an opulent lifestyle that mocks his people’s poverty with the perpetuation of a retarding system he promotes, he throws back all these vices into the people. Members of this society won’t approximate the change the leader drums in their ears unless the leader himself first renounces those vices in principle and in practice. We have wasted precious time and resources in Nigeria for decades as an independent country wishfully thinking change lies with the led.

    The isolated occupant of ‘the other room’ knows better…you assess a society by its abstemious or wasteful and extravagant leadership, even if she herself appears to have failed that test with her gaudy and luscious dressing.

    The other day as most Nigerians hailed ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo for advising Buhari not to opt for an encore in 2019, they did not give honour to whom it is due: the First Lady had first arrived at that conclusion. OBJ got that insight in January 2018; Aisha, operating from ‘the other room’ had settled upon that counsel nearly two years ago on October 14, 2016.

    We should also recall that ‘the other room’ brewed the scary imagery of such predatory beasts as jackass, hyenas, wolves and the king of them all, the lion who have all been feasting on Nigeria. In our dog-eat-dog country, it is the Eighth Wonder of the world that we have not all been consumed, that Nigeria has not altogether disappeared at the table of the salivating animals. The world has long waited for the Eighth Wonder; the ancient world having produced seven.

    Banishment or isolation in prison or under house arrest isn’t evil after all. It brings forth sublime productivity as it did for our own Wole Soyinka. His famous book The man died was jail-born. Alexander Solzhenitsyn was incarcerated, but his writing skills flourished while in chains. John the Beloved, the great apostle of Jesus Christ our Saviour came up with the eschatological Book of Revelation in exile on the desolate island of Patmos.

    Our own Hajia Aisha Buhari must perpetuate this tradition of literary fecundity. We look forward to seminal books emerging from ‘the other room’. The volumes should among other objectives help to deliver our politicians and public office holders from the unhelpful notion that leadership is leisure, that leading is living in luxury. No  ! Leadership is losing yourself in service for the led.

     

    • Ojewale is a writer in Ota, Ogun State.
  • Nigerian Film Corporation announces essay competition

    Nigerian Film Corporation announces essay competition

    The Nigerian Film Corporation (NFC) has announced call for entry from qualified participants for its 2017 Annual Film Essay Competition under the upcoming Zuma Film Festival holding in Abuja between December 1 and December 5. The topic of the competition is, “Film as an Alternative to Oil in Wealth Creation and Employment”.

    In a statement signed by Brian Etuk, the Corporation’s Head of Public Affairs, interested participants are to forward their entries in the following format; Arial Font, 14 point size, typewritten in double line space and should not be more than 15 pages on A4 size paper.

    Entries opens on September 11, 2017 and closes on October 31, 2017 and participants must be Nigerian nationals between 18 years and below 25 years old.  Entries are to be submitted either in hardcopy, addressed to the Managing Director/Chief Executive, Nigerian Film Corporation, 218T Liberty Dam Road, Jos, Plateau State and clearly marked 2017 NFC ANNUAL FILM ESSAY COMPETITION and or through the e-mail essay comp2017@nigerianfilms.gov.ng.

    The first, second and third best entries will win N250,000, N100,000 and N70,000 respectively. This is an addition to rights of publishing the winning essays in journals as may be deemed necessary.

    The Annual Film Essay Competition had its debut in 2005. Several of its topic include “Motion Picture and the Nigerian Image”, – (2006)“The Nigerian Movie: Global Socio-Cultural Impact” – (2007), “The Role of Film as a tool for International Diplomacy” – (2008), “Building a Positive Global Board: The Place of Film” – (2009), “Film: A Tool for Socio-Cultural Integration and Tourism Promotion” – (2010), “Re-emergence of the Cinema, Impact on Local and National Economy” – (2012) and “Film, Family Values and the Society” – (2013).

  • ESSAY FOR UNDERGRADUATES

    African Liberty Organisation for Development (ALOD) is calling for entries into its 2017 Adam Smith Essay Contest. The contest is being held in honour of Adam Smith, the late English economist and foremost free market advocate.

    The essay is organised with the objective to give young people opportunity to study the position of Adam Smith on the market process and dynamics.

     

    Question

    Drawing from Adam Smith’s propositions, explain how free market promotes equal opportunities.

     

    • All entries must be submitted to: essay@alodpolicy.org
    • Submission deadline is July 31, 2017 and winners will be announced on August 11, 2017.

     

    Essay Guideline

    Participant must be a student in any tertiary institutions (university, polytechnic, college of education and technical schools) in Nigeria. The format of the text should be in Microsoft Word document and not more than 500 words.

     

    For useful background materials on the theme of this contest, interested student can visit alodpolicy.org/resources to read ebook.

     

    No participant is allowed to lift materials directly from the works of any author and claim to be his/her own. Plagiarism automatically disqualifies any entry, which contains works of another author .If any text or sentence is copied from another author’s work, it must be shown in quotation marks and writer must credit the original author at the bottom of the paper.

     

    On the first page of the completed essay, every participant must write his/her full names, department, and year of study, name and country of institution, gender and age. Also include your email address and functional mobile phone number.

     

    Top five entries will be awarded cash prizes and full scholarship to attend ALOD Summer Camp in Abuja in September.

     

    Prizes

    1st – N30,000 and scholarship to two-day Liberty Camp in Abuja

    2nd – N20,000 and scholarship to two-day Liberty Camp in Abuja

    3rd  – N10,000 and scholarship to two-day Liberty Camp in Abuja

    4th to 10th – N5,000 each and scholarship to two-day Liberty Camp in Abuja

     

    All qualified entries will receive a compact disc on Ideas For A Free Society.

     

    The essay contest is supported by Network for Free Society, Language of Liberty Institute, Kids4Biz, and

    Institute for Economic Affairs.

     

    For questions, email: ibrahim.anoba@alodpolicy.org

  • Firm rewards winners in malaria essay competition

    Firm rewards winners in malaria essay competition

    RAVIMAL Essay competition organised by Miral Pharm Ltd has come to a successful close.

    According to the project coordinator, Ravimal End Malaria for Good essay competition, Mrs. Ifeyinwa Ugo-Amadi, the essays were assessed based on their ingenuity, structure, insightfulness, content and language style and creativity by Dr Jane Ifechelobi of the Department of English and Dr Obinna Ifechelobi of the Dept of Clinical Pharmacy, both of Nnamdi Azikiwe University (NAU), Awka.

    The award ceremony which took place at NAU, Awka had in attendance the National President of Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria who doubles as the Consul- General of Pakistan to Nigeria, Ahmed Yakasai, the National Secretary, Pharm. Gbolagade Iyiola, Deputy Vice Chancellor, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Prof Charles Esimone and several other dignitaries.

    Three star prizes and over  20 consolation prizes were presented. The star prizes include: First position, one year scholarship (N100,000) plus a factory visit to India; second, one year scholarship (N100,000) plus a laptop computer; and the third position, one year scholarship (N100,000).

    The first prize went to Victor Aniagu of the Department of Applied Biochemistry. The second prize went to Asomba Chinonso of the Department of Electronics and Computer Engineering and Friday Chizurum of the Faculty of Medicine

    Chairman of the occasion, GMD, Krisoral Group of Companies, Chief Chris Oranu Chidume said Miral Pharm is taking a road less traveled by calling for essays. He also praised Miral for the new approach taken at uncovering executable ideas that will move the country closer to victory in the war against malaria. He called Ravimal a best in class product well positioned for treatment of malaria.

    Managing Director, Miral Pharm Ltd, Mr. Onyeka Onyeibor said  Ravimal ‘End Malaria for good’ Essay is a deliberate search for ideas, “ending malaria is an achievable and a worthwhile pursuit – saving 1000 lives daily.”

    Yakasai, who presented the award to the star prize winner, Victor Aniagu,praised the efforts of Miral Pharm in the war against malaria and the drive to continue to support the development of youths and education in Nigeria.

    He said that National Universities Commission has approved to work with Miral Pharm and Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria at making this competition an annual National Event with the aim of bringing out the best in Nigerian students.

  • Winners celebrated at MFM essay competition

    Winners celebrated at MFM essay competition

    The 2016 winners of the annual essay competition of Pastor Lawrence Olasehinde Youths Development Foundation (PLOYDEF) have emerged.

    The competition had over five hundred students across the twelve regions of MFM in north central Nigeria.

    In the secondary category of the essay competition with the topic “The danger of joining a cult group in the school”, Olawumi Michael from North central region 1 Utako took the first position.

    Three of the contestants Akoji Joel Victor MFM North central region 6, Karu, Tamunoko Stephen from Lugbe region and Goodluck Olajumoke from Utako region won the second position.

    Deborah Oparinde from Kuje region came third.

    Four of the contestants Esther Bolaji, Usiena Meseh, Usman Godwin and Adeda Deborah came fourth.

    In the junior secondary category, Ayomide Lambe from MFM North central region 33 Byazhin was the overall winner.

    The second position went to Efedayo Emmanuel from Bwari region and the third position was shared by Qkolo Joshua from MFM Dakwo region and Idera Abasi from MFM Utako.

    First prize winners in the categories got HP Laptops while all second prize winners got iPads.

    The third prize winners went home with DVD players.

    54 consolation prizes were also given out.

    Chairman of the board of PLOYDEF, Dr. Etim Amba, stated the competition is in honour of Pastor Lawrence Olasehinde, one of the pioneer pastors that started MFM Abuja branch in 1995.

    He added that the recognition accorded pastor Lawrence Olasehinde is meant to awaken the spirit of sacrifice and commitment in young pastors in the church and drive them to maintain focus remain in the work of God.

  • Essay contest opens

    AN indigenous pharmaceutial firm, MIRAL Pharm Ltd is  organising an essay competition. The topic is: “End malaria for good”. It is for pharmacy students of the Nnamdi Azikwe University (NAU), Awka, the Anambra State capital. The topic is the theme of the 2016 World Malaria Day.

    To be part of the competition, participants are required to register and submit the 1,000-word essay on the company’s website – www.miralpharm.com by March 1.

    Prizes to be won include a one-year scholarship and a trip to selected facilities in India (first prize); one-year scholarship and a laptop (second prize), and one-year scholarship (third prize). There will also be consolation prizes.

    At a press conference to announce the competition, Managing Director of the firm, Mr Onyeka Onyeibor, expressed hopes that the essays will uncover actionable research interests, which they can support.

    “Through the “End malaria for good project’, Miral intends to encourage thinking and improve expressions amongst students as well as contribute knowledge to the nation’s research base,” Onyeibor said at a briefing to announce the competition.

    He said in 2015 about 31 million Nigerians were diagnosed with malaria a far cry from the expectation of the World Health Organisation (WHO) in the eradication of malaria. To eliminate malaria, the incidence should reduce to less than 1 case per 1,000 persons.

    Project Coordinator, Ifeyinwa  Ugo-Amadi, said the essays will be evaluated  based on ingenuity, structure, insightfulness, content and language style by three independent examiners.

    She also said that plagiarism will not be tolerated and counseled students to reference the source of any information used.

    The NAU has been chosen as a pilot school while subsequent editions are expected to include other universities in the country.

    Speaking on the project, the NAU Vice Chancellor, Prof Joseph Ahaneku, represented by Prof Carol Arinze-Umeobi, Deputy Vice Chancellor (Administration), thanked Miral Pharm for promoting health literacy and research among Nigerian students.

  • Desigo initiates essay competition

    The Youth Tourism Connect , a culture and tourism initiative for the Nigerian youth, put together by the Desigo Tourism Development and Facility Management Company  is organizing a tourism essay competition.

    According to Mrs. Abigail Olagbaye of Desigo Limited, the competition is borne out of the desire to engage, inform, sensitize youths on the non-oil export- culture and tourism and to create awareness in their minds, enlisting them in the exploration of Nigeria’s culture and tourism which would provide exposure, learning, employment and business opportunities, sense of ownership, cross cultural interactions and exchanges. This would result into raising a generation of youth tourism ambassadors and advocates with robust national pride.

    Olagbaye, a former Miss Tourism, said, “The Youth Tourism Connect aims to contribute to efforts on curtailing brain drain as our young people will begin to see and appreciate the value, beauty and potential of the culture and tourism sector. They will also appreciate the essence of their contribution towards its growth and the inherent opportunities they can maximize for self- reliance, self- fulfillment, self-empowerment, cultural identity and national development. This will curtail youth restiveness and unemployment.

    “As tourism will be focalized, approaches in actualization of this project would involve conferences, tours, documentaries, camp meetings, tourism competition, creative talent events, prices and awards for ability to project aspects of Nigeria’s culture and tourism through arts, crafts, dance, poems, essay writings, cultural plays etc. or other expressions of creativity.”

    The essay competition is divided into different categories. The Junior Category is opened youths from the age of 11 – 19 years: “Citing major tourists attractions and products in your state and use one major  attraction and product in your state and use one major attraction to discuss the role of internet/ICT in developing tourism in Nigeria.”

  • Corps member wins essay contest

    Corps member wins essay contest

    A YOUTH Corps member serving in Gombe State, Stephen Angulu,  has won this year’s National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) essay competition, organised by the Bible Society of Nigeria (BSN) penultimate Thursday in Lagos.

    He beat five others to pick the prize which included a laptop. The others were Joshua Tamunosiki, who came second; Ogagaoghene Eruteya, third; Jonathan Achile, fourth; andApeiker Iorsoo, fifth. Toyin Moyosore came sixth.

    Ironically, Angulu spoke first on the contest’s theme: Recycling leadership: an antithetical approach to your development and Nigeria’s future.

    He set the tone for the day, which other contestants either followed or harped on.

    He said youths, who constituted a greater percentage of the nation’s population, were vital to national development, claiming that the elders had failed.

    Angulu said what the nation had experienced was the recycling of leaders, saying that this was an abuse of a normal process that should have boosted growth. He listed the disadvantages of recycling as non-continuity, indispensability and inability to hand over to a successor.

    He said: “We recycle leaders and bring a gap between youths and leaders, adding that as a result, youths are not given a chance to contribute to nation building.”

    Angulu, who cited various Biblical verses to buttress his point, said youths who fear God, should be given a chance to participate in governance as they would do better than those who do not.

    Other contestants, who harped on the usefulness of youths to national growth, also did justice to the theme. But Angulu took the shine off them, especially as they kept referring to his submission. The panelists might have noted this.

    The Chairman, Pastor Charles Iko-Abasi, advised the youth to sharpen their skills and prepare themselves for leadership positions that they clamoured for.

  • Essay winner gets cash prize

    The overall winner of the 2016 essay competition organised by the Rising Tide Foundation in collaboration with The Nation, Network for a Free Society and African Liberty Organisation for Development (ALOD) has received his cash prize of $1,000.

    Linus Unah, a 400-Level Mass Communication student of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) got the prize from the Head of Mass Communication Department, Dr Greg Ezeah, at a ceremony attended by the ALOD Executive Director, Adedayo Thomas.

    As part of the first prize, Linus got scholarship to attend Liberty and Entrepreneurship Camp held at St. Paul University in Limuru, Kenya, last month. He joined other prize winners at the four-day event.

    Presenting the naira equivalent of the cash prize to Linus, Thomas said the first prize winner’s essay was adjudged the best of the 634 entries received from over 22 countries in Africa. He urged students to hone their entrepreneurial skills by joining the ALOD network to propagate the ideals of liberty and free market.

    Thomas said: “Students should think outside the box. The university system is a place where young people can be empowered to generate ideas. Look into the policies that help and those that encourage free market economy, property rights and principle of individualism. These are the idea that can move thousands of jobless youths out of poverty.”

    Dr Ezeah said Linus’ feat showed students of the department could compete with their peers anywhere in the world. He enjoined students to be hardworking and committed to their studies.

    Linus praised the essay’s organisers for taking him to Kenya, noting that the trip improved his knowledge and exposure.

    His words: “I appreciate the essay organisers for the opportunity. In terms of exposure, the trip to Kenya was not something I can measure in money. The experience is a treasure I will cherish forever. That is more like a pathway to the entire world. I cannot thank them enough.”