Tag: festival

  • Foreigners thrill audience at World Sango Festival

    An interesting dimension was added to the ongoing World Sango Festival in Oyo town when a delegation of blacks and foreign nationals performed traditional rites to the delight of invited guests.

    The foreign nationals who came from Cuba, Brazil, Puerto Rico, Berlin in Germany, Cameroun and South-Africa but based in Brazi were led by Chief Adeola Faleye and Dr.Olumide Omidire, both of the Department of Linguistics and African Studies, Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-ife, Osun State.

    Members of the delegation, who said they had earlier attended a programme in Osogbo, said that they decided to visit Oyo, because of its unique place in Yorubaland in particular and the black race in general.

    Specifically, they expressed their delight meeting in person the Alaafin of Oyo,Oba Lamidi Olayiwola Adeyemi.

    For about an hour, they thrilled guests to traditional dances and incantation of Sango praise poetry.

    The delegation later presented the Alaafin with a traditional drum that has sixteen different tones, the first-ever said to have been presented to any traditional ruler in Africa.

    They also presented video tapes of their songs titled ‘Canticles’ to the Alaafin.

    Responding, Oba Adeyemi thanked the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and the World Bank for showcasing the attributes of Sango when he was alive.

    The paramount ruler used the occasion to warn against the extinction of Yoruba language, which he asserted is “the most comprehensive and meaningful language in the universe.”

     

  • First deaf sports festival kicks off in style

    The first, ever Deaf Sports Festival kicked off yesterday in Chuba Ikpeazu Mini Stadium, Onitsha, Anambra, with four sporting activities namely: football, track and field, badminton and table tennis.

    The four-day event will take place in the same venue.

    Mrs. Prisca Nathaniel, a teacher in School of Vocational Education, Onitsha, who facilitated communication for the deaf sports men and women, said the athletes were full of praises for the state government for organising the games for them.

    Declaring the festival open, the Commissioner for Youths and Sports, Dr. Edozie Aroh said the festival was part of, Anambra government’s efforts to empower youths in all sections of the society.

    Aroh who spoke on behalf of Governor Peter Obi, through the aid of an interpreter, encouraged the deaf athletes to rise above their perceived incapability by excelling in whatever sports they could do well while assuring them of government support.

     

     

  • Joburg City festival holds maiden edition

    Joburg City festival holds maiden edition

    The Joburg City Tourism Association will host the very first Joburg City Festival scheduled for the week between Joy of Jazz and Arts Alive, meaning the inner city will come abuzz with activities for 3 weeks straight.

    The Joburg City Festival was launched on 17 – 19 May 2013, where the Joburg City Tourism Association, along with their members and partners JDA; Gautrain; Joburg Tourism Company and Gauteng Tourism, invited and hosted 76 journalists from stretches as far and wide as Botswana to Cape Town, to give them a taste of what the official festival in August will display.

    The festival will run over 9 days and the official programme will offer something for everyone! From art and cultural activaties; tours; music; dance parties; street sports; fashion and lots more.

    ”We are excited about the very first festival as it is ideally scheduled to link the two big cultural festivals, Joy of Jazz and Arts Alive, giving tourists, city dwellers and suburbanites an opportunity to explore their city. We hope that in future these 3 weeks of festivities will put Johannesburg on the map as a destination for winter breaks. The city has been undergoing a massive rejuvenation and the Joburg City Tourism Association endeavours to promote this and the city’s heritage through the festival,” said Margeaux Swartz, JCTA Director and spokesperson.

  • Allure of Okota Festival

    Allure of Okota Festival

    Over the years, the Olokun Festival Foundation has continued to explore the cultural heritage of the Yoruba race in Nigeria as a means to achieving excellence in the western part of the country and beyond.

    Buoyed by the need to sustain the culture and tradition of the Yoruba for the benefit and privilege of the people, the foundation has saddled itself with the hosting promotion of different cultural festivals in virtually every state of the south-west of the country. Among such festivals is the Okota Festival which it has successfully hosted for many years.

    Arigidi-Akoko, a rural community in Ondo State is ordinarily laid-back. Here, life is uncomplicated. Every day, an average native wakes up in the morning, prepare and head for the farm. Those not involving in farming engage in one kind of trading or the other. The houses are old, showing that, to a large extent, it is a community that has been in existence for long.

    At the Ayase area of the community, a little after Arigidi-Oja, the hills jut out. They are normally an interesting sight to behold, especially in the early morning when they are still wearing the snow-white crown of the early morning dews. Down at the foot of the hills that form a kind of valley is the Okota River said to possess mystic powers by the indigenes.

    Every July, indigenes of Arigidi gather to celebrate a festival in honour of the river. It is also an opportunity for the town to showcase its tourist attractions to the world.

    During this year’s celebration, venues of the two-day event were packed full with many people climbing whatever available platforms and buildings to catch a glimpse of the happenings. Commercial activities were also at a climax, as the enlarged population also led to an increase of patronage of virtually every product and service on offer within the community.

    Sellers of items, like food, drinks and souvenirs smiled to the banks, while service providers and owners of hospitality outfits like hotels and transporters were not left out.

    On the first day of the festival, organizers put on a show at the Ayase Town Hall where pretty damsels from many higher institutions within the south-west region of the country contested in the now famous Okota Beauty Pageant to see who wears the celebrated crown and drives away with the brand new car, including the cash prizes on offer.

    The competition and night saw the ladies also taking part in exciting choreographic displays, cultural dances, beach wear and evening gown displays, all to the admiration of the audience which filled every available space of the hall, with some watching from outside through the windows. Activities of the pageant night were directed by Amstrong Ihua, a legal practitioner who seems to have found a love in the arts of fashion, beauty and entertainment.

    At the end of the contest which involved 15 finalists, 24-year old Stephnora Boniface, a graduate of the Bircharm International University came out the winner. She was trailed by Labaeka Abiola, a student of the Olabisi Onabanjo University and Zainab Okesola from the Babcock University who came second and third respectively.

    The night also featured many performances by upcoming acts and cultural displays by the Royal Ambassadors Cultural Troupe, while the disc jockey ensured there was not a dull moment until the show ended in the small hours of the morning. Not even the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) or a faltering generator was able to douse the fun for the audience.

    Despite the lateness of the evening’s excitement, participants were up early again the next morning as they thronged the Okota River to scoop water after it was blessed by the custodians of the divinity. People came in their hundreds with containers of different sizes to scoop some of the water which is said to heal sicknesses, make barren pregnant and bring about material and financial blessings, among others.

    From the river, everyone proceeded to the grand finale of the festival at the Palace Square, Arigidi-Akoko for more fun, entertainment and an enlightenment lecture.

    In his welcome address, chief promoter of the Olokun Festival Foundation, Otunba Gani Adams, stated that many years ago when they started the festival, many people felt they were just paying lip service to the issue of cultural promotion. He, however, expressed gladness that the foundation had served as a valid compass to the cultural and traditional journeys of the Yoruba people.

    While calling on the people of Arigidi-Akoko to continue supporting the Okota Festival, Otunba Adams, who is also the national coordinator of the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC), stated that the vision of the foundation was to see Okota River earning a world heritage status which would no doubt encourage tourism activities in the community.

    Also speaking at the event, monarch of the town, Zaki of Arigidi Akoko Land, HRM Oba Yisa Olanipekun, commended Adams for his consistency, love and patriotism over the years. He noted with joy how the approach of festival usually heralds good tidings for the community and its environs.

    The royal father also took time out to speak with newsmen on the recent Appeal Court ruling which upheld the ruling of an Akure High Court which nullified his installation and declared the Zaki stool vacant.

    He stated that he had filed a stay of injunction, a copy of which he presented to newsmen.Oba Olanipekun said the town and serving monarch did not have a palace because it was burnt down during the preceding crisis.

    It was another successful year for the Okota Festival, and most of the tourists that thronged the community for the festival went back with happiness.

  • Heineken shines at Cannes

    HEINEKEN has reinforced its strong creative credentials, with a total of 17 prestigious awards won at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

    The wins for the company included Heineken®’s first ever Grand Prix in Creative Effectiveness(¹) for its ‘Open Your World’ global integrated campaign and a Gold Lion PR for ‘The Candidate’, which was also selected for a Titanium and Integrated Bronze(²) award.

    The ‘Legendary Journey’, part of the ‘Open Your World’ campaign(³), encapsulates Heineken®’s approach to asking its drinkers to live beyond their boundaries, inspiring men across the world to seek new experiences. The campaign was developed in partnership with Wieden + Kennedy, Amsterdam.

    ‘The Candidate’, created with Publicis Italy and activated by Edelman London, outlined the brand’s creative and unconventional approach to recruitment. It was released earlier this year and rapidly became a global viral and PR sensation, amassing 2.8 million views within seven days and unprecedented global media buzz.

    The Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity is the world’s biggest celebration of creativity in communications. At this year’s event, more than 35,000 entries from 92 countries were showcased and judged.

    Heineken®’s investment in design and innovation was also recognised and celebrated. Its futuristic igNITE bottle picked up Silver for its use of Exhibitions or Live Events and Bronze each for its Your Future Bottle and The Wall of Opportunities activations.

    Global Chief Marketing Officer and President Western Europe at Heineken, Alexis Nasard said: “We are delighted by this recognition. Creativity is a decision which entails risks. These awards, and more importantly, consumers’ choice at every consumption opportunity vindicate these decisions. Clients get the creativity they deserve from their agency partners, and we are thus thankful to both our agency partners and our employees for keeping the bar high, and keeping us and our brands part of the conversation.”

    Creative Effectiveness Lions will honour creativity, which has shown a measurable and proven impact on a client’s business – creativity that affects consumer behaviour, brand equity, sales, and where identifiable, profit. It will aim to establish a direct correlation between creativity and effectiveness.

    Titanium and Integrated Lions, the idea is central to the award and everything, whether it is for a car or toothpaste, telecommunications or charity, big budget or low budget is considered. Campaigns cannot be directly entered into the Titanium category, but the jury decide which campaigns should be considered for the award, hence the prestige.

     

  • Ife people celebrate Oranmiyan Festival

    Oranmiyan was one of the seven sons of Okanbi, the only child of Oduduwa, the progenitor of the Yoruba.

    The legend, Oranmiyan, despite being the grandson of Oduduwa was the pioneer Alaafin of Oyo. He was famed as a strong enigmatic leader who led his people into a path of greatness that lasted several centuries, leaving a heritage that lasts till today.

    After establishing Oyo, he left and conquered the Benin people and again founded the Benin Kingdom. After several wars and conquests, Oranmiyan returned to Ife, the cradle of the Yoruba and was the sixth Ooni of Ife.

    He later joined his ancestors. The place where the staff of Oranmiyan lies in Ile-Ife, Osun State is now a centre of tourist attraction. This great legend that has continued to shape the destiny of a race deserves to be celebrated as a unifying force for the Yoruba people. Oranmiyan is a unique name that has occupied a column of Yoruba history as a warrior, conqueror and legend.

    An organization committed to the development of Tourism in Nigeria, FLABSY Travels & Tours has received the approval of the Ooni of Ife, Alaiyeluwa Oba Okunade Sijuwade, to organize a festival which would bring all Ife indigenes and the entire Yoruba at home and in diaspora like Brazil, Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, Cuba, United States of America etc. together and use the platform of the festival to identify and bring to the fore a unique and binding tradition for the Yoruba people, utilise the platform to propagate Oranmiyan as a central figure in Yorubaland and explore all creative means to ensure that through the festival celebrations, Oranmiyan staff becomes a tourist haven, ensure that the festival is enlisted in the calendar of the Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation and the World Tourism Calendar, achieve a top-of-the-mind festival event for Odun Oranmiyan and create awareness for Ife indigenes at home and abroad use the platform to drive investment opportunity to Ile-Ife.

    The festival event would be devoid of Political affiliations or leanings such that every Yoruba man would be eager to attend yearly and attract corporate organizations that may use the festival opportunity to showcase their brands as well as compete for sponshorship of the festival to achieve optimum mileage and revenue generation.

    The significance of Odun Oranmiyan cannot be over-emphasized, as it is the festival that will unites the people together. It is also a celebration of a deity and warrior of the Yoruba. Therefore, FLABSY Travels & Tours is determined to celebrate Odun Oranmiyan 2013 in August 2013 so well that people will want to be associated with the annual festival not just as Ife people but as citizens of Osun and Yoruba in general. Oranmiyan is arguably the most deified of the whole Yoruba deities. He was only the Yoruba King that was confirmed to have established other towns, like Oyo and Benin, became their King and later returned to his abode and also became a King before his eventual transformation as denoted in the Oranmiyan Cenotaph.

    The Oranmiyan Cenotaph is a renowned tourist centre that has drawn million of visitors to Ile-Ife and has continued to do same. The name has appeared in many cultural and historical books. Oranmiyan is a religion to many in Yoruba land as it is being worshiped while they visit the Cenotaph to pay homage and reverence to the deity.

  • Ezaa Marks Oke Aku Festival

    The New Yam Festival of the Igbo ( Iwa ji in Igbo language) is an annual harvest festival by the Igbo people held at the end of the rainy season in early August.

    The Iwa ji Festival (literally “new-yam eating”) is practised throughout West Africa (especially in Nigeria and Ghana) and other African countries and beyond, symbolizing the conclusion of a harvest and the beginning of the next work cycle.

    The celebration is a very culturally based occasion, tying individual Igbo communities together as essentially agrarian and dependent on yam.

    Yams are the first crop to be harvested and are the most important crop of the region. The evening prior to the day of the festival, all old yams (from the previous year’s crop) are consumed or discarded. The next day, only dishes of yam are served, as the festival is symbolic of the abundance of the produce.

    Traditionally, the role of eating the first yam is performed by the oldest man in the community or the king (igwe). This man also offers the yams to God, deities and ancestors. It is believed that the position bestows the privilege of being intermediaries between their communities and the gods of the land. The rituals are meant to express the gratitude of the communities to the gods for making the harvest possible, and they are widely followed despite more modern changes due to the influence of Christianity in the area.

    The day is symbolic of enjoyment after the cultivation season, and the plenty is shared with friends and well-wishers. A variety of festivities mark the eating of new yam. Folk dances, masquerades, parades and parties create an experience that some participants characterize as “art”; the colourful festival is a spectacle of exhibited joy, thanks and community display.

    Palm oil (mmanu nri) is used to eat the yam. Iwa ji also shares some similarities with the Asian Mid-Autumn Festival, as both are based on the cycles of the moon and are essentially community harvest festivals.

    In recent times, the celebration, which used to be the greatest festival of the year in most communities in Igboland, has become endangered. In fact, some communities have stopped celebrating it except by a handful of the people who do so quietly.

    Two major reasons have been blamed for this. The coming of western education and Christianity, especially as the celebration was seen as a pagan or traditional religion celebration.

    However, in the land of Ezaa Ezekuna in Ebonyi State, the new yam festival known as Oke Aku Festival is still revered and celebrated with pomp and grandeur. The festival marks the commencement of a new calendar year for the Ezaa.

    Ezaa are a north eastern Igbo sub-group in south eastern Nigeria. The Ezaa are direct descendants of Ezekuna and his wife, Anyigo. They are, therefore, often referred to as Ezaa Ezekuna.

    Ezaa people live in virtually all three senatorial zones of Ebonyi State and beyond, but are concentrated in Ezaa North, Ezaa South, Onicha, Ishielu and Ohaukwu local government areas and even in some parts of Enugu State.

    Onueke is the ancestral headquarters of the Ezaa, one of the most populous clans in Ebonyi State of Nigeria, hence the Oke Aku Festival takes place in the town.

    The traditional Ezaa in these areas still return to Onueke to offer sacrifices to the graves of their progenitors. Coincidentally, Sacred Heart Parish, Onueke serves as the headquarters of Christianity for Ezaa Catholics.

    Onueke has been quite important, politically speaking. It used to be the headquarters of the old Ezzikwo Division. It was also the headquarters of the old Ezaa Local Government Area. Right now, it doubles as the headquarters of the Ezaa South Local Government Area and Ebonyi Central Senatorial Zone, comprising Ezaa South, Ezaa North, Ishielu and Ikwo local government areas.

    Onueke derives its name from the famous Eke Imoha, one of the oldest and biggest markets in Ebonyi State. The Eke Imoha Market is central to the economic life of Ezaa people. This is where the people sell their rich agricultural produce. Mainly farmers, the Ezaa produse yams, cassava, rice, cocoyams, and many other crops in abundance.

    These food crops, along with many other modern wares, are bought and sold in the Eke Market which is held every four days. The other markets in the Ezaa area include Awho, Nkwo, and Oryie. Eke is considered the first and biggest of these markets.Hence during this year’s celebration, the traditional rulers asked the person responsible for the recent facelift given to the market. And when the Chairman of the Ezaa South Local Government Area, Laz Ogbee, indicated that he was the one responsible, the traditional rulers immediately gave him a chieftaincy title of Ochia Aha 1 of Ezaa Ezekuna.

    The seriousness and tenacity of purpose with which the people of the area have held on to the festival and their other traditions and customs is seen as a welcome development by Hon. Ogbee, himself a proud Ezaa man.

    “It is good that we the Ezaa have continued to celebrate the Oke Aku Festival, especially in this era when serious efforts are being made to ensure that the Igbo language does not go into extinction”, said Hon Ogbee.

    For the Ezaa, it signifies an end of a planting season, especially the planting of yam and the beginning of the consumption of new yam. Yam is so celebrated in the Ezaa land and the Igbo culture because yam is regarded as the king of crops.

    The 2013 celebration was no different to that of previous editions. It was indeed a gathering of who is who in the Ezaa nation as well as invited friends across the nation during the grand finale at Ezaa Cultural Centre, Amana, Ezza South Local Government Area.

    In attendance where the Governor, the Deputy Governor, the Speaker of the State Assembly, members of the National Assembly and State Assembly from the state and captains of industry.

    According to Hon Ikeuwa Omebe, “the celebration for ages has never failed since it was instituted by Ezekuna, the ancestral father of Ezaa people centuries ago. The 2013 was very significant in the sense that it was happening at a time when Governor Martin Elechi wants to re-enact those cultural practices and virtues that could make Ebonyians greater than they can imagine through his attitudinal change policy which emphasises achieving a purpose in life through good character”.

    On the significance of the festival, Omebe noted that no one dares harvest or sell new yams unless the festival takes place or else there will be fatal repercussions.

    “If there is no Oke Aku, we can’t sell or eat new yam anywhere in the Ezaa land. If you do, then you are to experience deaths in your family. People will start dying gradually, so many unusual things will start happening in that person’s family”,Ombe said.

    Historically, Ezaa have to celebrate it first before any other clan in the old Abakaliki block. This is because Ezekuna, their progenitor is believed to be the eldest of the four sons of Anakewhaliki among the four major clans in the bloc, the other three being Izzi Nodo, Ikwo Noyo and Ezekoma, otherwise known as Agba.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Izzi can be found in Izzi, Ebonyi and Abakaliki local government areas of the state while Ikwo Noyo clan are found in Ikwo local government area. Ezekoma people are otherwise known as Agba and can be found in the present day Ishielu Local government area of the state.

    This is what Omebe meant when he said, “Ezzas have to do it first before any other clan in Abakaliki. After Ezza, Ikwo and then Izzi before other clans will then celebrate theirs. Every Ezza man must come over to partake in this Oke Aku festival irrespective of political affiliations or differences”.

    “Naturally we used to do it at Orinte. As time went on it was shifted to the stadium, later the governor came and built a cultural centre for the people here in 2009. This place is called Ngamgbo Ezzekuna, it is where Ezekuna, the progenitor of the Ezzas lived, died and was buried. That small hall there is his house”.

    At the Ngamgbo Ezekuna, one could see the mud hot where the progenitor of the Ezza nation lived and died. Behind it is the new cultural centre built by Governor Martin Elechi to promote and sustain the culture of the people. The two structures present a vivid juxtaposing picture of the history of the people- the past and the present.

    “Oke Aku is a period when we sit together and reflect on the past and make projections for the future advancement and progress of the people. This is a time used to unite us. It gives us the opportunity to iron out differences and make peace with one another”.

    Thus, in a goodwill message, Governor Martin Elechi sued for peace in the land arguing that no meaningful development can be achieved in an atmosphere devoid of peace and tranquillity.

    Elechi represented by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG) Chief Fidelis Mbam thanked the people of the area for their contributions to the development of the state and promised more democracy dividends to the people provided they continued to remain law abiding.

    For Chairman of Ezza South Local government, Mr Lazarus Ogbe, who was the motivating force behind the 2013 Oke Agu Festival, the 5 days event was a time of reconciliation that brought peace.

    “It reminds the good people of Ezzas that the Oke Aku Festival was the main culture still remaining that draws both the families in Diaspora and those within together for collective progress”, Ogbee said.

    The Chairman who was visibly surprised at the Chieftaincy title of Ochi Agha 1 which literarily means the war general conferred on him by all the traditional rulers in the area, said such titles will not only encourage him to do more for the Ezza nation but will also encourage others to contribute their own quota to the overall development of the people, the state and country in general.

    It is hoped that the colourful celebration with its message of peace will impact into the people the need for peaceful co-existence with themselves and there neighbours especially during the forthcoming local government area elections. ENDS

     

     

  • AFRIFF: three connoisseurs join festival train

    A Zimbabwean and two Nigerians, noted for their rich knowledge of the African cinema have been listed among the impressive line-up of the African International Film Festival (AFRIFF) team. The new additions include: Keith Shiri, world renowned international film curator and writer on African cinema; Andy Amenechi, President of Directors Guild of Nigeria (DGN) and Norbert Ajaegbu, President of the Film and Video Producers and Marketers Association of Nigeria (FVPMAN).

    Founder of AFRIFF, Chioma Ude is optimistic that the build-up towards a successful third edition could only be achieved if the right people are put in the right places and at the right time. With four months to the festival, her group, she noted is poised to put relevant human and material resources together to ensure a competitive outing. AFRIFF holds in Calabar, the Cross River State capital from November 10 to 17, 2013.

    “As part of our vision to constantly improve standards in the industry and provide the best services at all times, we are delighted to have several illustrious and acclaimed personalities join the AFRIFF team for the 2013 edition of the Festival. Messrs Keith Shiri, Andy Amenechi and Norbert Ajaegbu have agreed to lend their expertise and commitment to the aspirations and values of the Africa International Film Festival.” Ude said in a statement.

    Shiri, will be joining the AFRIFF platform as Festival Programmer and Jury Coordinator. Founder and director of “Africa at the Pictures” and the “London African Film Festival” and Visiting Research Fellow for “Centre for Research and Education in Arts and Media (CREAM), University of Westminster, London, Shiri has served as jury member on a number of festivals including the Berlin International Film Festival, the Dubai International Film Festival, Pan African Film Festival of Ouagadougou (FESPACO), Tampere Film Festival and many others.

    Amenechi on the other hand, has been listed as Technical Director of AFRIFF. A pioneer member of Nollywood, Amenechi has over 25 years cognate field experience in TV, Film and Radio production, with over 180 directorial credits. Amenechi, it would be recalled was Chairman, International Jury at the inaugural edition of AFRIFF which held in Port Harcourt City, Rivers State in 2010.

    Coming in as Strategist for AFRIFF is Ajaegbu, a dynamic personality, he holds degrees in accountancy and law and a master’s degree in business administration. Ajaegbu who is also a certified script writer and producer from Deustche Welle Training Institute, Germany, is the CEO, Ocean Movies and Music Studios which has produced over forty movies including titles like Dog of War, Fatal Mistake, Hear my Cry, Broken Dreams and Secret Mission among others.

     

  • All set for Akata Cultural Festival

    Beginning from Tuesday, June 25, cultural enthusiasts are expected to converge in Benue for the 2013 edition of the Akata Fishing and Cultural Festival. Known as a forum for the Tiv people, both at home and in the Diaspora, to express solidarity in their collective quest for economic empowerment, organisers say that this year’s event promises to be unique because it is coming against the backdrop of a heightened cultural consciousness among the Tiv people.

    According to Rosemary Duamlong, principal consultant of Gren Business Dimensions, organisers of the three- day festival, Benue has a long history of fishing and cultural festival. She stressed that they have expanded the festival to include Business Conference, Made in Benue Expo, Cultural and Award Night, Wrestling, Power bike racing, Traditional dances, Boat racing, Beauty pageant and Arrow shooting.

    “The government and people of Benue State are leaving no stone unturned to ensure that this year’s festival will be a memorable one. Steps have been taken to ensure that visitors from within and outside the country have a secure and conducive atmosphere within which to assess the economic opportunities of the state,” Rosemary promised.

    Already, she said, there are feelers that top business men in Nigeria, members of the diplomatic corps and key actors in government across the country are looking forward to converging on Benue. “They are excited by the prospect of experiencing the hospitality for which the government and good people of Benue are known,” she said.

     

  • Lagos backs LagosPhoto festival

    The Lagos State Ministry of Tourism and Inter-Governmental Relations has endorsed the 2013 LagosPhoto Festival organised yearly by the LagosPhoto Foundation.

    According to a statement by the foundation, the Director, LagosPhoto, Azu Nwagbogu, met with the Permanent Secretary of Lagos State Ministry of Tourism and Inter-Governmental Relations, Fadipe Ashamu Sewanu, on May 8 to finalise the endorsement deal between the Lagos State government and LagosPhoto Foundation.

    “This is in line with the ministry’s set vision of encouraging private sector initiatives on tourism that drive in showcasing artistic excellence in Lagos State. This milestone will enable LagosPhoto Foundation to achieve the objectives of contributing to the education of youths in Lagos and beyond and creating a distinct approach to photography and art exhibitions that reflect and pay homage to African culture,” the statement added.

    LagosPhoto Festival with the theme The Megacity and the Non-City ,will hold for a month commencing  with a grand opening ceremony/exhibition on October 26, showcasing  images depicting this year’s theme. Indoor and outdoor spaces around Lagos will be used this year, making the festival accessible to the public.