Circuses are noted for featuring outrageous stunts. But this one involving an elephant and a performer entertaining audiences at the Award Gala of the 38th International Circus Festival of Monte Carlo recently, certainly pushes the envelope. There’s no room for error or the man underneath the hoof would be squashed. But then men would go to any length just to earn a living. Photo: Getty Images
Tag: festival
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Osun Farmers’ Festival reflecting govt’s success in agric
Rounding off the year 2013, in a grand style in Osogbo, farmers in Osun State have held their annual festival and food fair tagged farmers’ show.
The ceremony held at the sprawling football field of the Technical College in Osogbo, the state capital last week was huge success. Farmers across the state came with their farm produce, raw and in processed form.
The governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, his deputy, Otunba Grace Titi Laoye-Tomori, the Chief of Staff to the governor, Alhaji Gboyega Oyetola and the Head of Service, Mr. Sunday Olayinka Owoeye, and the chief host, the Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Security, Mr. Wale Adedoyin among others were in attendance.
According to the Coordinator, Quick Intervention Programme (QIIP), Mr. Dele Ogundipe, the farmers’ show was a reflection of the Aregbesola administration’s success in agriculture.
He said: “Governor Rauf Aregbesola has assisted farmers a lot. His administration had used many platforms like Osun Rural Enterprise and Agriculture Programme (OREAP), Quick Impact Intervention Programme (QIIP), Osun State Agricultural Development Corporation (OSSADEP) and many others to make farming attractive and lucrative. If we look at the number of participants at this year farmers’ show we can say without a contradiction that things have significantly improved in agriculture in the state. People were not forced or dragged to participate; they came of their own volition. For instance, rice would be grown twice a year unlike when it was once a year.”
Enjoining more people, particularly youths to participate in farming, he said the state government’s resources are more focused than ever before on ensuring that farmers and the state are better off. By 2014 I can confidently say that there will be increase in agricultural production.”
To achieve optimum result in supporting farmers, the state government has encouraged framers to form cooperative groups. Under QIIP, no fewer than 77 of such cooperative groups known as cluster farmers are in existence. In Ife Odan, 28 of such groups plant yam which are later processed into elubo (yam flour.)
In Onilapa/Songbe, Egbedore Local Government Area, 22 cooperative groups of farmers plant rice. In Kuta, Ayedire Local Government, farmers in 20 cooperative groups plant vegetable and in Oyan, Odo-Otin Local Government, 20 cooperative groups of farmers plant sweet potatoes.
When the governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola with his entourage was going round the pavilions to inspect product on exhibition, farmers interacted with him and some of them, apart from hailing him brought their challenges before him. Farmers in Iwo Local Government, who speacilaise in planting and exporting foreign vegetables like cucumber, water mellon, marrow, tonquer, candle, golden melon, sweet pepper and so on demanded marketing and financial support from the governor. Their leader, Mr. Kehinde Amuda, told Ogbeni Aregbesola to empower them because their products bring quick returns that youths are attracted to.
In Ife East Local Government, farmers, who mainly specialise on cocoa production, told the governor that there was increase in their yield in the last two years, attributing the development to government’s favourable policies, availability of farm inputs like fertilisers and herbicide.
However, an agricultural extension worker, who preferred not to be mentioned complained that there are lots of “political farmers,” who deprived the real farmers access to inputs and consequently reduce the farmers’ productivity. He advised that when the government is giving out loans and other inputs the agricultural extension workers should always be involved because they are the ones who could identify the real farmers.
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NTDC to support Mare,other festivals
The Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation, NTDC, has promised to support and facilitate cultural festivals and programmes which emphasise unity and stability and promote peaceful co-existence of the nation to grow domestic tourism.
The Director-General , Mrs. Sally Mbanefo, made the assurance in Ondo State, while delivering her speech at Idanre during the celebration of Mare Mountain Climbing Festival held in honour of the late Deji Falae, the erstwhile Ondo State Commissioner of Culture and Tourism.
The Director- General, who was thrilled by the cultural wealth in Ondo State which was put on display right from the Akure airport where she was given a rousing welcome with an exciting display of cultural dances and songs by a cultural group, could not hide her feeling as she joined the group in dancing.
The Ondo State Commissioner for Information, Mr. kayode Akinmade, led a strong delegation which included Dr A Omoloja, Ondo State Commissioner for Housing; and Mrs. Akinroye Modupe, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Culture and Tourism who ushered in Mrs. Mbanefo into Ondo State.
Speaking at the Akure Airport, Mr. Akinmade expressed the gratitude of the people of Ondo State to Mrs. Mbanefo for honouring the invitation to be the special guest of honour at the are festival being hosted in the memory of Deji Falae.
“ The government and the people of Ondo State are happy to welcome you to the state in Nigeria where the sun shines for all. We are grateful for honouring our invitation for Mare Festival. We are also happy because you are the first Director-General of NTDC not only to visit the state, but who deemed it fit to honour our invitation to Mare. We assure you of an evergreen memory of your visit to Ondo State, “ Mr. Akinmade said.
The Ondo State Deputy Governor , Mr. Ali Olanusi, who received Mrs. Mbanefo in his office as the governor was out of the state, described her as “a light in the dark corridor of the tourism sector.”
Alhaji Olanusi said: “You are a light planted by the President Goodluck Jonathan to light up the dark corridor of the tourism sector, and you have commenced this vision in earnest . Your coming to Ondo State at this point in time is a sign of good things to come to the tourism sector in the state and in Nigeria. We welcome you with all our hearts and we assure you of a splendid time with us. “
The Director-General, who was the special guest of honour impressed the people of Ondo State with her attitude and participatory spirit with which she delivered her speech which extolled the virtues of Deji Falae and identification of Mare as one of the vibrant pillar of domestic tourism.
She described Idanre as a uniquely blessed city of rocks. “When I went to Abeokuta, I thought it was the best of a city on a hill until I entered Idanre . This is the real city which should be called Abeokuta,” she said.
The Director-General, who also presented a fridge won by one of the indigenes who partook of the Mare raffle draw, used the opportunity to visit the fabulous Idanre Hills which she described as “an exciting arrangement of rocks which beat to the back those in Switzerland “and the 18 holes golf course being planted in Idanre by the state government in fulfilment of her mission to visit and authenticate the state of tourism sites in the zones.
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Wrestling festival unites Ikwerre, Emohua communities
The yearly traditional inter-wrestling contest between the people of Obele and Omuawa communities in Emohua and Ikwerre local government areas of Rivers State has been an age-long practice. The traditional inter-community wrestling contest was a showcase for their rich culture and tradition. It also serves as a source of peace-building among the youth of both clans.
The yearly wrestling contest, according to the elders of the Obele community, is one of the traditions of their ancestors through which the two communities are united. They said inter-wrestling festival is the only means of sustaining peace among the youth of both communities.
The three-day festival starts on each day with exchange of pleasantries and presentation of gifts between both sides before the wrestling matches were held in the evening. The brave wresters from each community would step out onto the wresting ground with their supporters chanting traditional wrestling songs in praise of their wrestlers’ strength and prowess.
As the wrestling matches were going on, women of both communities also entertain and sing different wrestling songs to support the men. After sometime, they would go back to the kitchen to prepare meal for the evening wrestling contest.
Speaking during the festival, one of the elders, Chief Nnadieze Bartholomew, said Obele community remained grateful to their ancestors who initiated the wrestling competition which, he said, has transformed into festival as the only peace agent between them and Omuawa community.
He said they called it “peace agent” because “the yearly traditional inter-community wrestling contest has brought positive changes and re-orientation to the people about the tradition of the community.
“I want to advise the youth to always remain peaceful with one another. This year, we hosted Omuawa community; by next year, they will be hosting us.”
President of Obele youths, Comrade Chukwuemeka Woka, said: “This year’s wrestling festival was crucial more than any other festivals because it afforded youths of both communities the opportunity to sustain the existing peace among them in spite of the political crisis rocking the state.”
Continuing, he said: “We thank God that the wrestling contest has, once again, brought us together to amend our differences. This is so because if you look at what is happening in Rivers State, you will know that it is only in festival of this nature that youths can strongly unite. I am using this opportunity to thank those who contributed to the success of the festival.”
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Lagos boosts fish sales with Festival
Fish farmers from across waterside communities in Lagos State converged on the Lagos Bar Beach front, Victoria Island on December 7 for the 2013 Seafood Festival
As early as 9am, the fishermen and women arrived the festival ground and immediately set about arranging their catch on the various stands provided for them as they sat patiently waiting for fun seekers to catch a glimpse of what they had to offer.
Not even the heavy downpour could dampen their hope and expectation of a rich harvest of sales at the Festival.
The event put together by the Lagos Ministry of Agriculture was the second in the series geared towards projecting the state rich culture, tourism potentials and boost market sales for fish farmers.
Scores of fun seekers that witnessed the day had enough to eat and drink and also enjoyed live performance from some A-list artistes including 9ice, Black Magic, Seyi Shay amongst others.
There was also fish pepper soup competitions where Mr. Akinmosi Oluwatobi Samuel came first and won the star prize of N500, 000, while Muyiwa Boluwatife and Apagume Kaleb finished in second and third positions and went home with N300, 000 and 200,000 respectively.
Margareth Awoyenu, a fish farmer from Ebute-Ero community told The Nation that the festival presented a golden opportunity for her to sell her produce to willing consumers.
“I have benefited from the festival because people have been coming to my stand to buy fresh tilapia and catfish, I thank the state government for this programme”, she enthused.
State Governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola in his remarks said Seafood Festival organized by the State Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives was symbolic because it has created opportunity for grassroots fishermen and people in the waterside communities to showcase their talents and open their businesses to the outside world, which he noted would not only help their individual development but also promote the economic growth of the State.
Fashola who was represented by his Deputy, Princess Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire, said the with the theme: “Harnessing the Seafood Potentials of Lagos State”, his administration would continue to support the growth of business opportunities in the waterside areas just like in every other sector so as to make them self reliant and contribute meaningfully to the growth of the economy of the state.
State Commissioner for Agriculture and Co-operatives, Prince Gbolahan Lawal in his welcome address said the Festival was staged not only to celebrate the fish farmers and stakeholders in the value chain but also to boost their productivity.
According to him, “Market is one of the major challenges of fish farmers, but this festival has provided an array of opportunities for them to build capacity, bring them closer to the markets so as to boost their economy and eradicate poverty”.
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Eyo Festival for UNESCO’s list
After a heated debate, the Lagos State’s Eyo Masquerade Festival has been referred at the 8th session of the Intergovernmental Committee for Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage held in Baku Azerbaijan. It was nominated by Nigeria to be inscribed on the Representative List of UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. According to a report by the subsidiary body on its work in 2013 and
examination of nominations for inscription on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, the nomination satisfied four, but did not satisfy one, out of the five criteria for inscription, adding that it described no concrete safeguarding measures at the community or State level to ensure the viability of the element, particularly in the wake of inscription.
However, the body was convinced that the Eyo nomination satisfied criteria one and two, for its inscription on the Representative List, because rooted in the social and cultural fabric of Lagos and passed on from generation to generation, the masquerade festival is an event expressing profound spiritual beliefs that integrates all members of the community; and that the inscription of the Eyo masquerade on the Representative List could promote dialogue between Eyo communities and others, as well as foster cultural appreciation and mutual respect.
According to the report, the nomination satisfied criteria 4 and 5, in that, Eyo groups and custodians of the festival participated in the nomination process, represented by the traditional Prime Minister of Lagos, Head of the Adamu Orisha in Council, as well as the Lagos State Council for Arts and Culture and the Oba of Lagos, who gave their free, prior and informed consent; and that Eyo masquerade festival is included in the National Inventory of Oral and Intangible Cultural Heritage, maintained and regularly updated by the National Committee on Oral and Intangible Cultural Heritage for Nigeria.
Reacting to the decision of the Committee, Mr. Augustus Ajibola, Deputy Director, Federal Ministry of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation, who is in charge of the UNESCO Desk in the Ministry, said though the referral was devastating, it was a learning process, and that the nomination will be repackaged by Nigeria for further necessary action.
He noted that, on the other hand, it was good the decision did not come the previous day, when the nomination was to have been discussed, being that it was his birth day and such an unfavourable decision on his birth day would have been a very bitter birth day gift.
The Eyo masquerade festival of Lagos is celebrated in honour of the deity Adamu Orisha, regarded as the conduit through which departed souls may enter the spirit world and it is considered an important rite of passage and is usually held to mark the burial rites of a prominent chief.
It is opened by a notable public figure carrying a white pigeon in the hand, just as Eyo costumed dancers then parade through the city, attired in flowing white gowns that symbolize purity and represent the spirits of the dead; and all the dancers carry a staff for magic prayers and wear a large, decorated, fully veiled straw hat whose colour and design indicate the extended family compound to which they belong.
The festival brings the community together, integrates all strata of society and pays obeisance to the ruling Oba (king) of Lagos; and all adults belonging to Eyo households can be bearers of the masquerade and each compound or group is duty-bound to transfer and improve the intricate designs of staff, straw hat and clothing.
The poetry recited during the festival is also particular to each compound or group and is handed down through the generations (both orally and in written form), with modifications and improvisations.
By this referral, which was at the instance of the Committee, Nigeria has an opportunity to represent the nomination file in 2014, after providing the necessary information to meet criteria No. 3; an outright decision not to inscribe would have meant waiting for four years before a representation of such nomination.
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Abia community praises God at yam festival
The traditional ruler of Umuadiawa Kingdom in Umuahia Abia state, His Royal Majesty Eze Nnamdi Ofoegbu, recently led his subjects in praising God at the annual thanksgiving and yam festival.
His palace ground was filled with fanfare with council members, political leaders and indigenes of the kingdom from all walks of life in attendance.
Ofoegbu appreciated God for the gift of life and bountiful harvest.
He said: “God has been merciful so we’re giving back to Him glory for the bountiful harvest of this year and to implore him for a more prosperous next year.”
The highlight of the colourful ceremony was the sharing of roasted yam to all present.
Ofoegbu led the way by formally eating the yam while others followed suit amidst wild jubilation.
There was a mountain of yam at the palace and everyone who attended the ceremony went home with at least a tuber.
Ofoegbu, who is also the national chairman of Association of Christian Traditional Rulers of Nigeria, used the occasion to pray for peace in the country.
He urged politicians to shun anything that can jeopardise the peace and tranquility of the country.
Fight for your birthrights, the cleric tells Christians.
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Motherland Beckons takes Africa to the world
AFRICAN arts takes centre stage as, come 2014, the world will be treated to the best of musical and performance theatrics from the continent in what has been termed its greatest exportation of cultural product.
The African International Music (AIM) Festival, otherwise known as ‘taking Africa to the world,’ makes its debut in the United Arab Emirate, Dubai. This latest effort from the stable of Motherland Beckons is designed to boost the tourism industry and economy of the continent, its management states.
The cultural musical fiesta, which is to be promoted as an iconic festival of the continent, will feature some of the best and scintillating musical performances ranging from music, dance, percussion, instrumentation to theatre by the 55 countries of the continent, including South Sudan, which is the newest addition to the list of growing African countries.
Speaking on this new project, the president of Motherland Beckons and Tourism Ambassador of the World Conference of Mayors, Otunba Wanle Akinboboye, said that AIM festival is not only to rekindle the world’s interest in the continent’s greatest export product – culture – which over the years has been threatened by colonial and imperialists tendencies.
”We believe that when we expose creative individuals and groups in Africa to the world that it would bring about economic empowerment and development to the people of Africa,” said Akinboboye.
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Festival without festivities
Were it possible for the dead to wake at will, Prophet Yusuf (Joseph), the great son of Prophet Ya‘qub (Jacob), would have resurrected in Nigeria at the request of wretched Nigerians. And his mission would have been the interpretation of a dream like that of a Pharaoh of centuries ago which saved Egypt of yore from the scourge of a looming hunger.
But alas! The absence of a dreaming Yusuf has rendered the situation in this country hopeless. Despite unlimited human and material resources available in this so called ‘Giant of Africa’ Nigeria continues to wallow helplessly under a jaundiced economy like a centipede drowning in a poisoned brook.
Last Tuesday, October 15th, 2013, Muslims all over the world celebrated ‘Idul Adha subsequent to Arafah day which came up the day before. But unlike their brothers and sisters in other parts of the world, overwhelming majority of Nigerian Muslims celebrated that festival without any festivity. At the instance of injustice based on avarice and aggrandisement on the part of the ruling class, the ingredients of festivityhad long been banished in this country. Thus, many worshippers spent the festival season in hunger.
This iron period in which the government is at once promising to emancipate the masses from the scourge of hunger, starvation and abject poverty, while at the same time threatening to guillotine the same masses through the instrumentality of oil, is an indicator of indefinite despair.
Nostalgia
Generally, there is nostalgia in the land, not only for the days of oil boom when life was relatively comfortable for all and sundry but also for the era of abundant farm crops when the thought of feeding was not much of a concern to most citizens. Nigerian Muslims and non-Muslims alike are today yearning for the return of those days when wives could confidently ask their husbands for festival gifts and children could demand for new dresses, shoes and wrist watches from their parents. Those were the days when festival seasons were really festive and the graph of marriage carried some indices of value. Those were the days of friendliness among neighbours, good wishes among colleagues, mutual confidence among spouses as well as general peace and tranquillity in the society.
Now, those days are gone. And they seem to have gone forever. Today, we have found ourselves in a situation against which we had long been warned in a couplet rendered by an Arab poet quoting two disciples of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) i. e. Ubayyi Bn Ka’b and Abdullah Bn Mas’ud. It goes thus:
”This is the period in which truth is rejected in its totality while falsehood, corruption and betrayal of trust are held aloft; should this period linger with its woes and tribulations, the world, may soon assume a situation where no one will rejoice over the birth of a new baby or grieve over the demise of a dear relative”.
Sensible Queestions
Nigeria is fast becoming a dramatic entity mysteriously coded in parables. It will take an unprecedented revolution to decode it and dislodge the insensitive actors who are monopolising the stage with boredom. In ordinary circumstances, a forward-looking country should encourage her citizenry to ask some probing questions such as: Who are we? Where are we coming from? And where are we going from here? Those are some of the questions which all rational human beings should ask themselves constantly.
But such questions have been rendered irrelevant in Nigeria because the circumstances of life here have changed the priorities of ordinary citizens. The only question now in vogue, which everybody in government seems to be answering tacitly, is this: ‘what am I getting from being in this office?
That very question is the real drama that permanently engages the attention of Nigerian civil servants. It is the question that robes Nigerian Police in a garment of shamelessness with a banished conscience. It is the question that crowns money as a demigod which forbids human feeling. It is the question that fosters greed andfetters Nigeria to the stake of endemic corruption. It is the question that presents mirage to Nigerians as the only substance worthy of pursuit.
What can we say of a man who fixes his eyes on the sun but does not see it? Instead, he sees a chorus of flaming seraphim announcing a paroxysm of despair. That is the parable of the country called Nigeria. Like the Israelis of Moses’ time, Nigerians have become gypsies wandering aimlessly and wallowing in abject poverty in the midst of abundance. What else do we expect from Allah beyond the invaluable bounties with which He has blessed us?
Nigeria is not lacking in forest and arable savannah. She is rich in rivers and mountains all of which are great resources for people who are seeking reasonable comfort and are not self-deceptive. What she lacks is a responsible and patriotic government that can sincerely highlight its priorities according to the yearnings of the ordinary people. That food is becoming a threat to Nigerians today is an irony emanating from naivety and massive corruption in our government quarters especially since 1999 when the current democracy first beamed a ray of hope to the people.
Cost of governance
In Nigeria today, the cost of running the government alone is enough to render the country bankrupt. The retinue of federal ministers and a galaxy of Presidential Advisers are major causes of poverty in ghe coungry today. Even America with her huge economic resources, large population and financial wherewithal has only ten ministers? Why must we have separate ministers for agriculture and water resources? Where is the federal government’s farm to justify this? Why must we retain an obnoxious immunity clause in our constitution which facilitates monumental corruption for the serving Governors who are hypocritically chased around but never caught for trial on the allegation of embezzlement after they might have left office?
Besides, what informs the idea of the so-called constituency allowances for legislators, which run into billions of naira without anything to show for it at a time when innocent women and children are crying for food? No one would have thought in 1999 that artificial hunger could be added to the abysmal level of poverty in Nigeria despite the unprecedented rise in price of oil in the international market. The ubiquity of beggars and lunatics in our cities and towns is a confirmation of this assertion.
Governance in Nigeria has become an artful trick adopted by a cabal to bamboozle the populace into blind submission. The propaganda in the 1980s was almost hypnotizing: ‘food and shelter for all in year 2000!’ That slogan was changed in the 1990s to: ‘Vision 2010!’ And when year 2010 began to approach, the slogan again changed to: ‘Vision 202020!’
Self-deception
Now, without roads, without electricity, without functional rail transportation system, without jobs for majority of the able-bodied citizens and even without food on our tables, we are still being cajoled into believing that Nigeria, a country without coins, would become one of the 20 biggest economies in the world in year 2020. Isn’t that a deliberate and audacious deception? No country in history has ever been known to have achieved economic vibrancy by magic. Nigeria cannot be an exception.
In an FAO report in 2008, about 300 Nigerians were said to be dying of hunger daily in their own country.
The government needs to be told that no miracle can yield any success based on the ramshackle foundation laid down by one man (from the prison) who, as President, could hardly reason beyond the siege mentality of a prisoner. A fire brigade approach to food crisis in a country like Nigeria is a shameful reaction to an avoidable melancholy.
Egyptian Experience
Yusuf (Joseph), the son of Ya’qub (Jacob), did not know that he could have any solution to a fundamental problem of a country other than his own. Neither did his brothers who sold him into slavery know that he could be a solution to a major problem in another land. But the accident of history never ceases to play itself out. Without Yusuf, only Allah knows what the history of Egypt would have been today. And without a Pharaoh’s dream of drought, the story of Yusuf would have been totally different from what we now know it to be.
If Egypt had any major plight when Yusuf was in prison in that country, it was Pharaoh’s dream. It turned out that Yusuf’s imprisonment in Egypt was a blessing, not only for Egypt but also for Yusuf and his family. What could have been a repeat of that episode here in Nigeria, turned out to be a regrettable bizarre. The rest is left to history.
I was a student in Egypt in the 1970s when the hostility between that country and Israel was fierce. Egypt was then an ally of the (now defunct) Soviet Union while Israel was virtually a satellite of the United States. Not only did Egypt suffer isolation from NATO member countries of Europe and America but the Soviet Union which was supposed to be her main ally was also not forthcoming with any meaningful assistance beyond the supply of scanty weapons. Thus, the Egyptian government had to take its destiny in its own hand by buckling up firmly in other to fend for its people at that critical time.
Realizing the importance of food supply especially in a war situation, Egypt mobilized all her agricultural resources around River Nile and forgot about any food importation. The result was tremendous and thus, the fear of food insecurity was averted.
In the mid 1990s, Uganda, a sub-Sahara African country, found herself in the position of ancient Egypt. A colossal drought broke out in that country killing thousands of people and virtually wiping out the entire cattle in the country. No Pharaoh had any dreamed premonition and no Yusuf was in a prison to translate any dream into a solution.
Ugandan Experience
What the Ugandans did to find a solution was to reset the country’s agricultural focus. Rather than concentrating on tilling the land and rearing the cattle, which drought had eroded, a new focus was brought to bear. Uganda took to ‘bee farming’ as a relieving alternative. The seriousness which the government of that country paid to the new focus was such that Uganda today is a country to reckon with in the production and supply of honey and other bee products to the European communities. A substantial amount of honey consumed in Europe is currently supplied by Uganda as well as Kenya and Tanzania. And those products have become the second biggest foreign exchange earner for Uganda after coffee.
Today, Nigeria is not afflicted by drought or famine. Neither is she engaged in a war. Yet, the Nigerian government has learnt no lesson from any of the above named countries simply because there is oil in large deposit. Now, the general fear in the land is that of hunger even in times of festivals.
How Nigeria arrived at such a deadly scourge is irrelevant for now. What is relevant is how to get out of it. Like Egypt of yore, Nigeria will need a Yusuf to unravel the mystery surrounding the dream that brought this scourge about.
Irony
It is ironic that people who live by the river bank can’t get water to drink when those living in the desert can find a reliable oasis to combat any drought. Given all the resources with which we are endowed, Nigerians should have no business with poverty let alone food crisis.
Capitalism, which was once an economic ideology propelling mercantilism, has moved a step ahead, especially in Nigeria where official theft has become a profession. Capitalism is now a religion through which its adherents worship money. To such adherents, accountability is a mere riddle which only the poor may wish to unravel.
It is only in the interest of those in government, especially those in the executive and legislative arms who are most active in sharing public funds, to let the national wealth spread across board legitimately if only to avoid the current Nigerian elite situation where every house has become a prison in which the occupants are voluntarily jailed. To ignore the rule of law and shun justice in a land blessed with milk and honey is to cultivate trouble with insecurity in all its ramifications.
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Port Harcourt Book Festival
When the Port Harcourt Book Festival (former Garden City Literary Festival) was initiated in 2008, under the leadership of Rivers State Governor Chibuike Amaechi, the primary aim was to develop a love for reading among Port Harcourt residents. Since then, the festival has drawn participants from the city, across Nigeria and abroad and has evolved to a one-stop event for writers, booksellers, literary connoisseurs, and all major players in the book industry.
For this year, the festival will opene between October 21 and – October 26 with the theme Literature and the Creative Economy. Running alongside the festival is a book fair where visitors get the best picks of their desired books. The fair also serves as a premium location for exhibitors seeking to reach a broader range of clients in one setting. To exhibit at the fair, participants are to register through the following website: www.po-rtharcourtbookfestival.com.
The Port Harcourt Book Fair will take place daily from 8am to 6pm for the duration of the festival. Since inception, it has hosted notable publishers like Heinemann, Learn Africa Plc., EEP Books Services and Africana First Publishers. Besides visiting the book fair, festival attendees will be able to participate in a variety of activities such as symposia, children events, drama performances, interactive sessions with existing authors, to name a few.
•Uche is of Rainbow Book Club, Port Harcourt.
