Tag: fortune

  • My music is God’s calling – Fortune Ebel

    My music is God’s calling – Fortune Ebel

    Ovie Fortune Ebel is a gospel artist. In this interview, he speaks on his experience at Gospel Music Academy where he become a vocalist and Lyricist. Excerpts: 

    Q: Was being a musician a childhood dream?

     No! God called me into the music ministry and that calling He validated by giving me the ability to write songs; then I got trained in one vocal academy and one Gospel Music Academy to become both a vocalist and Lyricist. Although I’ve always been a Church boy but singing was never my forte until the eleventh hour of my SS3 days back in secondary school.

    Q: What inspired you to make music?

    A: What inspired me is God’s calling and deployment to it. After my secondary school phase of academic education, I was praying [for weeks] for clarity of what purpose to pursue aside academics; during one of such prayer sessions, God said to me, “I created you to make unto me, music that my creations shall use as tools of worship and praise unto me { God }_”. Till today, that instruction is my inspiration for making music.

    Q: What challenges did you face on your way to stardom?

    A: Well, since it’s not my pursuit, I don’t consider myself as one in stardom; although that doesn’t deny the concrete truth that even getting here so far has been through challenges. We can’t reel out all the challenges in this interview, but first of my challenges was in the beginning! My dad was against me doing music and that was a big challenge; but thanks to my Mum who through submission [to my Dad] and wisdom convinced my Dad. I was actively playing football, but my mum said She vowed during my labour which took her three days that if she successfully gives birth to me, she will ensure I serve God all my life. As a Nigerian, another challenge for me would be the fact that we currently don’t have a music industry; at best we have a music scene and that doesn’t help with the galvanization of the fruits of your intellectual property. Then, like we all know, sufficient resources to do quality, impactful and timeless music is another challenge. Money is one of such resources and good music is expensing to create as well as promote; but if music is really what you have been created to do, then you will always find a positive solution in your persistence. Personally, the mindset is that for every level God helps me attain in music, I simply do what I can do at that level in creating my music. Yesterday was good, today is better and surely tomorrow holds the best and it is only when I do all that I can today that tomorrow is guaranteed. So with a progressive mindset, self-belief, faith and smart work consistently, I keep surging forward.

    Q: How would you describe the music that you typically create?

    A: Oh great question! My music can be best described as Cosmopolitan { it has an intentional global appeal }, it is compulsorily Soul-enriching and intentionally created to be timeless!

    Q: How do you juggle being a singer and a producer?

    A: Both are like salt and your food; giving balanced attention to each makes your meal sumptuous, enjoyable and always in demand. So I try to create time for music production because no matter how busy I am ministering/singing on stage, if I don’t return to the studio to produce more music, one might go obsolete. Also, being an active Singer helps you get better as a creative and that instinctively sends you back to the studio to refine and transport from abstract fantasies into concrete realities, the new music ideas that flows into your cerebral hemisphere for people to further enjoy and keep consuming even as they appreciate the Creative behind the music.

    Q: Has stardom deprived you of anything?

    A: Oh my GOD! I’m sincerely not used to this word “stardom” Oh! But if I get what you mean, than YES YES YES! It has deprived me of MY PRIVACY!!! Goosh, that’s painful, trust me; but aye! I am HUMBLED by it all; and I stay grateful- both to God and to everyone supporting me.

    Q: Are you still friends with those with you before stardom?

    A: You this word called “stardom”, leave me alone now, abeeeeg! { laughs}. Well, naturally, I am a keeper of relationships and sincerely, I try to not only keep in touch with my friends, but carry along the ones that my current capacity affords me to carry; especially if such persons are gifted and are ready to work smart and hard! Without the people I used to know, I probably wouldn’t have gotten to where I am currently by the grace of God; and because there’s a tomorrow better than today, both my early friends and the new ones remain the important angels that GOD is using to catalize my next and higher level in music; so daily, I’ll keep trying to remain same Fortune to them all. God help me!

    Q: How do you handle advances from female fans?*

    I may be wrong and I stand to be corrected; but I personally don’t believe that narrative that suggests that simply because God is helping you rise in Stewardship to Him and the society, then ladies will just start making like you put it: “advances” towards you. Some may do that, but even if there is, that’s only a handful of the majority of our amazing queens out there; and overall, I think that narrative about our amazing female fans, like you out it is not an absolute truth. Their appreciation and probably celebration of my little efforts is highly appreciated by me and will never get into my head. On a serious note, shout out to every lady out there! I appreciate y’all!

    Q: You were away from the music scene for a while, was this intentional?

    Read Also: Invest when fame brings fortune  – BBNaija’s Tega

    A: Yes, I made the decision to go for more practical knowledge by serving on stage in my home Church – House on the Rock Lagos. You see, for a Singer, engaging in practical music; you can call it “stage and live music” is a credible institution of learning that shapes, equips, prepares and enable you to almost invisibly excel out there – even in the global music sphere. So I took a break to learn more; because if you rush in, you might soon rush out. I didn’t want to be a microwaved Minstrel but a well cooked and backed one and that painful decision I once took yesterday is paying off today. I don’t know it all Oh; so I keep learning daily.

    Q: What project are you currently working on?

    A: To God’s glory, I just held my very first music expression; you people call it “concerte, abi?. I call mine Music Expression; it was called “DIVINE”, a live recording in Lekki held on the 29th of October, 2023 and my God, it was a successful debut that I stay grateful for! From that project, i released my first EP titled “DIVINE” and I currently have the video of the first track “Hallow You” – a glorious and beautiful worship anthem unto God is out now!

    Q: What favourite song do you love to perform?

    A: Okay, let’s first say I don’t perform. I minister. laugh! Back to the very vital question, I believ I am musically ambidextrous, so I honestly don’t have a favourite. I learn and practice a lot to stay flexible and still effective; so whatever the occasion demands, I simply calibrate and sing to meet same.

    Q: What is your advice to up-and-coming musicians?

    Ovie Fortune Ebel is a gospel artist. In this interview, he speaks on his experience at Gospel Music Academy where he become a vocalist and Lyricist. Excerpts:

  • Lagos’ fifth top destination of Fortune 500 companies

    Lagos is the fifth leading destination of Fortune 500 companies within the Middle East and Africa (MEA), a new report  by Infomineo, a global business research company specialising in the region, has said.

    Nigeria’s   commercial   nerve   centre   was   ahead   of   Cairo,   but   queues   behind   Dubai,     Johannesburg, Casablanca and Nairobi. Casablanca and Nairobi rank as leading destinations for Fortune 500 companies establishing international headquarters, the report said.

    The report said overall, there was a 17 per cent increase in the number of Fortune 500 companies   in   MEA  in   2016   compared   to   2015,   with   Johannesburg   being   the   leading destination for Africa Egypt remains behind the leaders due to political instability. However, it has seen a 250 percent increase in Fortune 500 investment since 2015, the report said. Germany and France are leading in terms of coverage rate while China has the lowest presence in the region.

    The MEA region has become increasingly important for the majority of global Fortune 500 companies. The report focuses on multinationals looking at entering, or already present, in the MEA region.

    The Infomineo analysis includes the regional footprint of multinationals in the MEA region, the most commonly chosen cities, and the factors which influence the selection of a region, country and city – each element revealing the dynamic growth patterns within the region and a clear trend of Fortune 500 companies establishing presence in MEA.

    Last year, 196 Fortune 500 companies had established a dedicated regional headquarters in the MEA  region. In the Middle-East, Dubai is the most  popular choice with  138 companies   establishing a dedicated entity in the city.

    There has also been a marked uptick in companies deciding to cover MEA from outside of the region – 38 companies up from 22 have established a regional headquarters in areas such as London, Brussels and Paris.

    Industry type plays a pivotal role in the selection of city and country. Financial services are  more likely to base  MEA coverage from London, while technology companies are  more inclined towards Casablanca or Lagos.

    The   latter   city   is   also   the   premier   location   for   organisations   looking   to   manage   their operations across Western Africa with 12 Fortune 500 companies already established in the city.

  • Moses: fortune, forgiveness and faith helped me to the top

    Moses: fortune, forgiveness and faith helped me to the top

    Victor Moses has a tattoo on his neck. It shows two pairs of dice, with angel wings. It has been a whirlwind few months for Chelsea’s 25-year-old Nigerian, who would have returned to the club for pre-season this summer, bracing himself for another loan spell after his time with Liverpool, Stoke and West Ham.

    Instead, he’s become a key member of Antonio Conte’s table-topping side, and is one of the Premier League’s most improved players.

    It’s a development that has surprised many, but not Moses himself. He knows better than most how quickly everything can change.

    “I’ve been a little bit frustrated, I’m not going to lie,” he admits when he meets us at a hotel near Chelsea’s training ground in Cobham, speaking in a low, quiet voice that still carries a trace of West Africa. Moses signed for the Blues in 2012, but despite helping them win the Europa League in that first season, he found it difficult to get into the team in the years that followed.

    The loan spells have taken their toll. “You spend about a month-plus in the hotel before you find your own place to stay – stuff there kind of plays in your head, and obviously the kids have to go to another place, go to school,” he says. “I’ve not actually had time to relax. When the season finishes, you have to move back to London again, and those kind of things play in a footballer’s head.”

    But everything changed with the arrival of Conte as manager.

    “Every manager is different,” says Moses. “He came in and he saw something, he knew he could work with me. During pre-season he came up to me and told me I was going to stay this season, that he didn’t want me to go anywhere on loan. That he believes in me. That gave me a boost, that gave me confidence to actually go out there and express myself more and work hard for it – to help him as well.”

    There’s a palpable contrast with Jose Mourinho, who gave Moses just eight minutes of action – a cameo appearance as a substitute in the Community Shield – before sending him out on loan. “I’m not here to criticise any manager,” he insists.

    “But I will say as a manager, if you have a player you feel is talented, it is important to give them a chance. Obviously, we have a new manager that came in, saw what I’ve got and he gave me the opportunity to go out there and express myself.”

    Moses has rewarded Conte’s faith in style. He has been a standout performer in Chelsea’s new 3-4-3 system, playing in an unfamiliar role as a right wing-back, but chipping in with goals – including the winner against Tottenham last month. “I’m definitely relishing it – the position that I’m playing at the moment – I’m really enjoying it,” says Moses.

    That is, of course, what every footballer in his position would say – but perhaps the real proof comes from his time playing FIFA. Moses is a regular participant in online clashes between the Chelsea squad on the game. Michy Batshuayi is the best, apparently. Moses plays as Chelsea. Not only does he switch the formation to Conte’s favoured set-up, but he puts himself in at wing-back, too.

    Moses won the PFA Fans’ Premier League Player of the Month award for November, a career first. There have even been rumours about a potential move to Barcelona as a long-term replacement for Dani Alves (who moved to Juventus this summer after eight seasons with the Catalan side) at right-back. But he has his sights firmly set on winning trophies with Chelsea.

    “I just want to keep on working hard,” he says. “There’s still a long way to go – we’ve still got a long season. I know we have a lot of quality players and I know we can play. We’re working hard together as a team – we just want to keep improving.”

    Moses missed out on the league title celebrations in 2014/15. He was out on loan at Stoke. However he is ready to give his all for the team.

    “I’m enjoying my football,” he says. “I’m at one of the best clubs in Europe, so hopefully there are still more games and trophies for me to win for the club in the future. It’s just about being given the opportunity.”

    He’s had help from all sides as he has adjusted to his new role. To his left, there’s Cesar Azpilicueta, who was unveiled on the same day as Moses in 2012, but has played almost four times as many games for Chelsea.

    “He understands it more than I do, so he’s constantly talking to me, making sure that I’m in the right place and that really helps me,” explains Moses. On the other side, there’s the always-vocal Conte – who made an impression right from the off.

    “I’m pleased to have him,” says Moses. “He is very passionate about the game. Obviously everyone’s seen him on the touchline. The way he reacts and stuff, we as players like it. It motivated us to actually do well and work hard for him.”

    For those on the wings, there’s a significant risk of permanent hearing damage. “He is constantly in my ears just to make sure I’m doing the right thing and in the right position,” says Moses, smiling.

    It was around this time of year, 14 years ago, when Moses first arrived in England. When he was 11, his parents – a Christian pastor and his wife – were murdered in religious rioting in the northern Nigerian city of Kaduna, their hometown. More than 200 people died across three days of violence known as the ‘Miss World riots’.

    They were targeted because they had a church, and that meant their son was also a target. He went into hiding at a friend’s house, while relatives scraped together enough money to get him to England as an asylum seeker. Despite what happened, Moses still carries his parents’ faith.

    “That’s something that no one can take from me,” he says. “I’m still religious. I’m a Christian.”

    It’s tempting to join the dots, to link the childhood tragedy with the drive and determination required to make it as a footballer. But it’s not like that.

    “To be honest, what happened in the past happened is in the past,” says Moses, low and quiet. “So the way I look at things… I leave things. Whatever happened in the past, I leave it behind and just move on. What happens in the present is what counts. The past doesn’t count no more. You’ve just got to move on with life.”

    Moses could have easily ended up an England player, having represented them at every age-group level. In 2007, he even won the Golden Boot as the Three Lions made it to the final of the European Under-17 Championships.

    Instead, in 2013, he helped Nigeria win their first Africa Cup of Nations in 20 years, scoring twice along the way. Is it hard, we ask, representing Nigeria – pulling on the shirt of a country whose divisions cost him his family.

    “Whatever happens, happens,” he repeats. “There is nothing that I can do about it any more. And, as I’ve said, I’m a religious person. If God can forgive someone, so can I.”

    The orphan was placed with a foster family in Croydon – a Caribbean couple with whom he lived until the age of 17, and with whom he’s still in touch. “They’ve really played a big part in my career,” says Moses. “They’re the people who are always there for me, encouraging me to make sure I’m heading in the right direction. Sometimes when you go out on loan, you don’t feel quite right – but they’re always there, ringing on the phone, encouraging you.”

    Football also played an important role in helping him settle into his new home. He was capable of doing things with a ball that no one in the parks of south London had seen before. Moses was 13 when he got his first proper taste of organised football.

    “I was in the park, playing football with a couple of mates,” he remembers. “There was a team that was training, and the manager saw me from a distance and called me over.”

    The team was a Sunday league youth outfit called Cosmos 90 FC. Moses scored eight goals for them on his debut, from centre-half. He was quick, strong and flamboyant on the pitch. On one occasion, the mother of a goalkeeper who he had humiliated with a nutmeg and a chip in quick succession ran on to the pitch and started hitting him with her handbag.

    Word spread quickly, and soon a couple of hundred people would be turning up to watch him. “Crystal Palace must have heard about me,” says Moses. “They sent a scout to come and watch me; the scout came and said: ‘I want you to come to Palace for a trial.’ I went there, and the rest is history.”

    Palace pulled the strings for Moses to attend the prestigious Whitgift School in Croydon, and his exploits for their team made national news when he scored all five goals in the FA Youth Cup final against a school from Grimsby, whose red kit inspired the headline: ‘Holy Moses – Wonder Player Parts Red Sea’.

    Football was easy for him back then, an exhibition. Off the pitch he was insular, traumatised – at Palace they say he barely spoke for the first two years he was there. But on it, he was one of the best players they had ever seen, destined for bigger things, and a natural showman.

    He remembers trying to score from the byline in one game, “to try and do something different”.

    “The ball actually went in,” he explains. “Everyone else was thinking: ‘How did he do that? How did he do that?’”

    Finally, after years of frustration on the Chelsea fringes, or out on loan – that talent is being realised at the top level. His life has been shaped by tragedy, but not controlled by it. Instead, Moses is driven by fortune, forgiveness and faith.

    He has kept on rolling the dice.

  • Adeboye predicts better fortune for Nigeria

    Adeboye predicts better fortune for Nigeria

    General Overseer of the Redemmed Christian Church of God (RCCG) Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye, has predicted that the downward trend of Nigeria’s economy will be halted this year, adding that a reversal will begin.

    Giving his prediction during the night service before thousands of worshippers at the Redeemed Camp on the Lagos–Ibadan Expressway, he said on Nigeria: “2017 will be a year of surprises both for the oppressed and the oppressor. Surprise is a two edged sword

    “Those deliberately making life difficult for the common man will be relocated. The downward plunge will slow down, stop and reversal will begin.”

    For individuals, he predicted that. ”It will be a year of surprises. For prophets both true and false it will be a year of surprises. There will be quite a large number of weddings.  Soul winners will see their prophecies fulfilled almost as soon as they are uttered.”

    His prediction on what will happen in the world this year is that “There will be surprises for many world governments. They are coming in twos: monster earthquakes, monster floods, hurricanes and typhoons, monster tornadoes and monster fire outbreaks.”

     

  • Odu’a’s dwindling fortune worries its owners

    Governors of the six Yoruba states comprising Oyo, Ogun, Ondo, Osun, Ekiti and Lagos yesterday in Ibadan bemoaned the dwindling fortune of Odu’a Investment Company Limited and resolved to, turn the business empire into a global conglomerate.

    It was on the occasion of the 40th anniversary commemorative lecture and awards presentation to the three founding Military Governors of Odu’a Conglomerate namely Major-General David Medaiyese Jemibewon (rtd), Group Captain Ita David Ikpeme (rtd) and Major-General Saidu Ayodele Balogun (rtd), under whose tenure in 1976 the idea was conceptualised.

    Speaking one after the other at the event held at Premier Hotel, Ibadan, the Yoruba governors lamented that some of the hitherto prosperous subsidiaries of Odu’a Investment including Nigeria Wire and Cable Plc, Lafia Canning Industry, Epe Plywood Limited, Sungas Limited and Odu’a Telecoms Limited (O’Net), among others, are presently in comatose.

    The state governor, Senator Abiola Ajimobi was on ground while the Secretary to the State Government (SSG) of the five other states stood in for their respective governors as they all expressed grave concern over the future of the conglomerate

    In his address, Governor Ajimobi lamented the deteriorating state of Odu’a Conglomerate which he blamed partly on the loss of the value system by the stakeholders.

    Ajimobi said: “The problems we are having now is that we have left many things we ought to do undone and leave for God to do. We are only celebrating survival today as this is not the level the Conglomerate ought to be. Our value system is gone. Our value system must be rejuvenated. Odu’a Investment must be re-invigorated.”

    He urged the management of the company to sit tight in its operation by investing more in agriculture especially in the area of cassava production in which the state (Oyo) and its counterparts in the Southwest geo-political zone has comparative advantage.

    The governor said the company should in its bid to generate more profit partner with other corporate organisations to manage some of its infrastructure and avoid bottlenecks.

    Representatives of the other state governments spoke in the same vein and called for massive investment in other sectors of the economy particularly hi-tech agriculture in which the jobless youth from the geo-political zone could be gainfully absorbed.

  • Change in community’s fortune

    Change in community’s fortune

    A picture of life in Unguwan Mai Kanti village, west of Rigasa in Igabi Local Government Area of Kaduna State was painted in the May 3 North Report. The story highlighted the plight of the 3000-inhabitant community.
    Since then, the community has been witnessing life-changing attention. The Nation had reported that in Unguwan Kanti women deliver their babies at home unaided. There is no medical personnel in sight. Only a lorry that probably comes to get firewood from there plies the road into the community. There is no potable water, nor hospital, nor electricity. The only school there has never received any form of government attention since the residents built it in 1997.
    The community, which is surrounded by Ungwan Daudu, Kwati and Rigar Fulani, is always cut off from other communities and the state capital for about two months during the rainy season because the only road to Kaduna is always flooded.
    Investigations revealed that the residents were drinking water from a pond which is far from them. Women and children wake up early to get water which is not drinkable from the pond. Women trek a distance to fetch water from the pond.
    A resident, Talatu Iliya, said the water from the pond smells and is sometimes covered by dry leaves, “but that is what we use to cook because we have no choice”, adding that their children complain frequently stomach ache and also suffer from cholera.
    She said, “You can see the kind of water we drink. Even dogs wouldn’t drink from the pond. The water smells and that is what we use to cook our food”.
    There is only one water well in the village said to have been dug by a white woman who visited the community years ago. But the people hardly get water from it. Women in the community complain that they can only get water from the well very early in the morning, adding that in most cases, they can hardly fetch more than a bucket of water from it. They have decided to reserve the water in the well for the children who attend the community primary school. They appeal to government to construct a borehole for them.
    Following the report, the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 1 Division Nigerian Army, Maj-General Adeniyi Oyebade, sunk and donated a borehole to the community. And interestingly, a group of Kaduna Polytechnic Students, under the auspices of Kadpoly Enactus is about to complete the first in West Africa, Sand Dam in the village.
    The Nation investigation revealed that, sand dams have successfully provided potable drinking water all year round for villages in East African countries like Kenya and Ethiopia. And it has equally provided water for irrigation farming throughout the year.
    The Kadpoly Enactus Dam Project which is equally a multi-facet project, to provide drinking water and irrigation for farming in the community is scheduled for completion by the end of June, with 98% of purity level.
    It was gathered from the students that, suitability of the project made them to choose the dam and not borehole, as their feasibility study revealed that water table of the community is very deep.
    As at the time of visit to the community last week, members of the the community rallied the team of Investigative Journalists who they said brought the challenges of their community to limelight.
    Speaking with the team of Investigative Journalists, Kadpoly Enactus Team Leader, Adikpe Odeh said, Enactus is a non-governmental organisation. A community of student academic and business world who come together to solve societal problems through the positive powers of business.
    “The dam project we are carrying out right now, we looked for the entrepreneur problem solving skills in the community to empower the people. Because we believe that in sustainability, the people have to see the value from the project in an economically inclusive way as that would make the project very sustainable.
    “Our three thematic areas are environmental factors, social factor and economic factor in solving any problems. Now we came across that community week after you visited the area. The spirit is one actually, so you were reporting and the spirit was telling us.
    “The water drive project started last year. We were in Ligari village last year where they had water access problem. They encounter the same problem with Kanti. We carried out the need assessment to understand their source of water and we discovered that it was nothing to write home about. Although they have wells but water was not forth coming. We now look at the environment for what will be suitable. Because if there is a well and the water is not forth coming, you may dig a borehole and have similar problem in the nearest future.
    “So, we now look at the terrain of the environment and we saw that it’s good for sand dam. So, what we are constructing in that community is a sand dam and the first of its kind in West Africa. The only places that have sand dam are Ethiopia and Kenya built by USAID.
    “The reason why we chose sand dam is this, that place you saw with the gully stuff whether you like it or not will keep expanding and during the raining season you will see water there while in the dry season, it is off.
    “Again, from the need assessment we discover that the water table of the community is low. And that is why you are unable to see water in the well. If the water table were to be high you would have seen water in the well. So the essence of sand dam is to raise the water table. And then you will get a very clean water which according to the United Nations, it is 98% clean.
    “And the fantastic thing is that even there is no rainfall in that community for one whole year, they will still have enough water to drink because it has large storage capacity. In fact, Kenya and Ethiopia sometimes have drought problem and that is the reason it was built there.

    “We are also carrying out a survey to see how they will be able to pump the water and also use for their irrigation farm land. That we are using a windmill to be able to pump the water because there is no electricity in the community. And that is the sustainability, because if you take generator set and petrol there, it means the community has to buy fuel which comes with more expenses and that they can’t afford because they are poor. But with the windmill which is natural, all they need is pump the water and get clean portable water to drink all year round.” He explained.
    On their source of finance, Odeh said, “The concept is a head for business and a heart for the world. We believe that it is just an empty head and an empty heart that can stop a man from solving a societal problems and not an empty pocket. But however, you need money in some cases through the power of business, so we engage in entrepreneur activities as an organization. We also go out to see individuals that are willing to partner in some certain areas and not necessarily begging for funds. For instance, you are an engineering firm, we approach you that can you help us bring out the architectural design of this place because we want to help this community. And ordinarily if you are to pay for that, it will be to the tune of N100,000. So these are the creative means we use in solving societal problems. We go about to identify individuals that want to invest in communities. So these are how we get our funds here and there and then we move to solve societal problems.
    “And our school also helps us with funds. We have been able to gain a level of reputation for the school. In fact, all ENACTUS students right now are on scholarship because of the level of sacrifices we are putting in to work, recognition. We were in South Africa, Spain, Germany and Paris to represent Nigeria. Now, all of the journey don’t come with money but because of what we are doing, its local content is wow come and showcase these. So the school are happy that some students are bringing some level of recognition to the institution.”
    He commended the team of Investigative Journalists, saying, “I wish we have more journalists that do investigative and developmental journalism, because to us, that is journalism.
    However, the GOC while commissioning the borehole at the village last week, the said, he was touched by the newspaper report and sent down his men to access the village with a view to assisting them.
    General Oyebade who addressed the Gbagyi dominated community with the help of an interpreter assured them that, President Muhammadu Buhari led administration and the respective state governments were working tirelessly to ensure welfare of all Nigerians, but the Army having recognised that government cannot do it alone with always reach out to the needy populace.
    According to him, “I read recently on The Nation Newspaper, while I going through the dailies to know what is happening within my AOR and the nation at large, about your community. According to the report, your major problem is lack of portable drinking water. So, I told myself that my heart will not be at peace until I give you water. So, I asked one of my officers to locate this place, so that I can give you borehole.
    “I want to assure you that President Muhammadu Buhari led administration and the respective state governments are working tirelessly to ensure welfare of all Nigerians, but government cannot do everything for everybody, so we can always support the government.
    “Also, the Army is not just about fighting war, we also assist the civil populace, because the Army under the Chief of Army Staff, Lt-General Tukur Buratai is very friendly with the civil populace.” He said.
    Responding on behalf of the community, The Village Head, Aliyu Bala expressed appreciation to the GOC for giving the community life. He also used the platform to call on government to come to their aid by providing them with a primary healthcare centre, standard primary school and good road.

  • Prince cremated as sister inherits fortune

    Prince cremated as sister inherits fortune

    Legendary music star, Prince Rogers Nelson, aka the artist formerly known as prince, who died on Thursday April 21, 2016 has been cremated in a small, private service for family, friends and musicians, as confirmed by his publicist.

    “A few hours ago, Prince was celebrated by a small group of his most beloved: family, friends and musicians, in a private, beautiful ceremony to say a loving goodbye,” she said. Among the people who attended the ceremony were percussionist Sheila E, bassist Larry Graham, and Prince’s sister Tyka Nelson.

    Prince had no surviving offspring, and in the event that he died intestate (without a will), his entire eight hundred million dollar estate comprising his 300 million dollar fortune, and half a billion dollar music catalogue could go to his sister, Tyka Nelson;  a self confessed former prostitute, and rehabilitated  junkie. As she put it, “I was a single mother and my boys were babies, I sold my body for food, money and pampers. I pawned the car Prince had given me and sold the kids’ TV for drugs.”

    His passing signals the end of an era. A contemporary, if not competitor, of the late King of pop; Michael Jackson, he was among the first black Americans to have songs played heavily on MTV; Michael Jackson’s Billy Jean, and his Little Red Corvette. The duo was known to play tennis and basketball together.

    Although the cause of his death is still unknown, the results of Friday’s autopsy could take at least four weeks before being released.

    Prince, 57, was found dead in a lift on his Paisley Park estate, near Minneapolis on Thursday, and fans are still paying tribute. Officials said there were no signs of injuries to his body, and no indication that he had killed himself. Publicist Anna Meacham said the singer’s “final storage” would be kept private.

    Born Prince Rogers Nelson in 1958 to African American musician; John Nelson and Italian American singer; Mattie who divorced when he was eight years old. The child prodigy would go on to be raised by his father in Minneapolis.

    Rumour has it that he could play as many as twenty seven instruments, and played all the instruments in his first album For You, released in 1978. Prince’s innovative music spanned rock, funk and jazz. He was at his peak in the 1980s with albums like Purple Rain, Dirty Mind, 1999 and Sign O’ the Times. He sold more than 100m records. He was also an arranger and multi-instrumentalist, and recorded more than 30 albums. Hits included Let’s Go Crazy and When Doves Cry. In 1984, he won an Oscar for the score to Purple Rain, a film in which he also starred.

    His ex-wife, Mayte Garcia in a statement following the singer’s death through her manager; Gladys Gonzalez said: “I can’t even think of the words of what I’m feeling. This man was my everything, we had a family. I am beyond deeply saddened and devastated.”

  • Kukah to Buhari: Turn challenges to fortune

    Kukah to Buhari: Turn challenges to fortune

    The Catholic Bishop of Sokoto, Most Rev Mathew Kukah, has advised President Mohammadu Buhari to see the present economic situation in the country as a challenge for him to move the country forward to the next level.

    The Bishop urged the president to emulate great leaders of the world who, when faced with similar challenges, used them as spring boards to turn around the fortunes of their countries for the benefit of the people.

    Speaking in Umuahia, during the valedictory lecture in honor of the out-going Vice Chancellor of the Michael Okpara University of

    Agriculture Umudike, Professor Hilary Edeoga , Kukah challenged Buhari to learn from great world leaders who saw opportunities in challenges.

    Kukah said that great leaders elsewhere had faced similar situations and resolved them for good, pointing out that this is one of the finest moments for the leaders of Nigeria to transform the country.

    “One of our problems in Nigeria is that we lack the imagination, we lack the charisma, and we lack the capacity to rouse a crowd. From 1960 till date, have you seen any Nigeria’s President’s speech that you feel like going back to read?

    “What President Buhari requires is the kind of speech writers that can actually create a vision. And what he requires is to fire the imagination of the society, just like late President John Kennedy did when he became the President of US in the 60s.

    “His speech when he was the president of America propelled a young black woman to study science and became the first black woman to land in space. When Kennedy said we are going to land somebody in the moon, the woman was only 12 years old, and she was motivated to land in the moon thereafter.

    These are difficult times in our country, but they are also times in which we must stand together. If we are talking of change, what must change? Who should change? How will this change happen? And how do we recognize a Nigeria that has changed?”

    The cleric also called on the Federal Government to be proactive and prepare for a post-Boko Haram era by planning on how to re-orientate soldiers returning from the war to be fully reintegrated with the larger society and be productive.

    He said that creating conducive environment for returning soldiers from war has become necessary, as the war against Boko Haram was gradually coming to an end.

  • How Enahoro changed my fortune with golf –Popular golfer Jamiu Oyebajo

    How Enahoro changed my fortune with golf –Popular golfer Jamiu Oyebajo

    The resident golf professional of the Ikeja Club, Lagos, Jamiu Oyebajo, is a household name in the game of golf in Nigeria. The big names he has taught to play golf include former military governor of Lagos State, Gen. Mobolaji Johnson (rtd). A well travelled professional, his 40th year as Resident Professional Golfer was recently celebrated by a group of elders at the Ikeja Golf Club known as the Golf Mafia. Oyebajo is one of the founding members of the Professional Golfers Association of Nigeria (PGAN). He served in different offices of the association before becoming the director of PGAN. In this interview with GBENGA ADERANTI, Oyebajo explains that contrary to the belief in many quarters, golf is not an elite game. He speaks about his life as a golf player, his encounter with the late Chief Anthony Enahoro and life in England,`among other issues

    Many people believe that golf is an elite game. How true is this?

    Golf is a game like any other. People say the game of gulf is expensive because it is not a game that many are used to. This game was brought by the colonial masters and before now, it was only white people that were playing golf in the country. That is why people think it is only rich people that can play this game.

    How did you get introduced to golf?

    I started as a caddy. Caddies are the boys who carry bags all over the place on the golf course. I started that way around 1957 or so. We were caddying for white people.

    I understand that you don’t just come into a club and become a caddy. How did you become one?

    I had a sister who was selling food to workers at the Ikoyi Club back then. I followed her there to see what they were doing. From there, I developed interest in golf. As you rightly observed, there you could not just come in and start carrying bags; you must be registered. There must be an identity. That was how you could get in there to caddy for those who were playing.

    Caddying was fun in those days. People were receiving three pence, which was big money when we were still going to school. Today, when you carry a bag round the field, you receive N1,000 or N2,000. It also depends on how good you are to the person you are carrying the bag for. But the rule is N1,000. Whether a caddy is good to you or not, you must pay him N1,000. Some of them today can carry two to three times and they make N3,000 per day. That was how I started.

    In those days, you could count the number of Nigerians that were playing golf. They were not more than six or eight, because the game is not like football which everybody plays.

    You eventually became a player…

    Yes. At a point while I was growing up, the golf club members organised a competition for the caddies to play as well. It is like doing a job, and if you don’t have a feel of what you are doing, you cannot know the feeling of the people you are working for. That is why they organise caddy competitions.

    But as God would have it, in 1968, they organised a caddy competition at Ikoyi Club. Luckily for me, I was the winner. This attracted Chief Anthony Enahoro, because I can even say he was the first Nigerian that played golf. He said he was going to encourage me to play the game.

    At that time, I had already left school. My parents were not rich to send me to school and I was working, learning how to become a clearing agent.  Fortunately for me, after winning the competition, Chief Enahoro decided to see my parents and he said he wanted to handle me in the game of golf where my talent was. My parents consented.

    He gave me a full set of kits to play at Ikoyi Club. That year, 1968, he spoke to the chairman of the Nigeria Tobacco Company (NTC) and that one decided that he would sponsor me to the UK. Pa Enahoro objected, saying that if the NTC man wanted to sponsor, he should sponsor about four caddies. So he sponsored four of us. Today, out of the four of us that were sponsored to England, only three of us remain. That was how we started.

    We were sent to UK to train for one year. Because of my performance over there, mine was increased to one and a half years, because my boss made a recommendation back home and I was given six months extra. I was the one that came back last.

    Everything you see here at Ikeja Golf Club started from Ikoyi Club in 1938. We had a white man there who was in charge of sending us to the UK. He remained here and when we returned from the UK, we remained under him. He was John Nosworthy. From there, we started moving. I stayed in Lagos with the white man until he left and Matthew Jacob took over. I was a professional and Jacob was our boss, like a shop manager. I was assisting him before I came here in 1975. That was 40 years ago, and that is what they are celebrating.

    I am glad today that a lot of Nigerians are playing the game. If I take you round here, all those people sitting down there are members. They are not super rich; they only have interest in playing the game.

    I’m happy that thousands are playing golf through those of us that were sent to the UK to train and we came and started training Nigerians. As at today, we have almost 120 professionals. Those were the people we trained when we came back.

    Is it right to regard you as the second generation of Nigerian golfers?

    Anthony Enahoro is like the pioneering father of golf in Nigeria, with about six other Nigerians. The game became popular when we became pro (professionals) and we started teaching Nigerians.

    Why then do people say it is very expensive?

    There is no sport that is not expensive. If you wanted to buy a tennis racket before, it was the cheapest. Today, it has become very expensive. One tennis racket can buy a set of clubs we use in playing golf. And if you don’t want to change your club, you can use it to play for 10 years, nothing stops you. But like every other sport, we have some people who don’t even know how to play well, but they use the most expensive equipment. The only difference between golf and other sports is that you have to be a member of a club. We have not got to a stage where we have public course. The public course is built by council. You pay and you play. But as it is right now, you have to be a member of a club before you play or you are a caddy and you have the opportunity of playing. To say it is expensive, there is no game that is not expensive, it depends on the person.

    There is the belief too that whenever people come together to play golf, they seal business deals…

    That is club affair. In any club, you have to do business. You make contacts and do business. It is not peculiar to golf club. Even in beer parlours where you drink, you get contacts. For every club you join, you are either looking for contracts or relaxation.

    When you told your parents that you were going to play golf, what was their reaction?

    There was no negative reaction. My school was in Falomo and my father was a fisherman. Any time we wanted to go and fish, we would pass through the golf course. We had been seeing them playing and some people were carrying their bags. That was what made me to follow my sister. I didn’t know that was what I was going to do for a living.

    Your name sounds Lagos. Are you a Lagosian?

    I am an Ijebu boy. I come from Ikorodu. I am  not a Lagosian. I’m qualified to be a Lagosian because I grew up here. I was born in Ikorodu, but I lived in Lagos and I’m now back to Ikorodu.  Lagosians are the people that come from far distances. If you say Lagosian, the Aworis will claim to be Lagosians. They are the owners of Lagos because it is closer to Badagry. The Ijebu man will also say he is a Lagosian because he comes from Ijebu and settled in Lagos. Even the Benin men, they say they are the owners of Lagos. But I’m an Ijebuman.

    Are you saying Lagos is ‘no man’s land’ or it is owned by settlers?

    I don’t agree. Why I don’t agree is that the Awori people are closer to Lagos. Like the Oto area; they are Awori people. Ijora are Awori people. Awori is everywhere. But I come from Ikorodu. My mother was from Ijede. So, those fishermen were the ones coming to this area.

    I remember when we were very small, we could pass through Oko Alagbon to Ajah and say this time of the day, this species of fish would be there, and we would go by boat. As I told you, my father was a fisherman. Just as you calculate in the office, they also calculate where the tide would go and the type of fish that would be there. Just like the way every other game has its own strategy, if you are playing golf now, you are on your own, I’m playing one ball and you are playing one ball, and we are playing together. That is the difference between golf and other games. You cannot determine the man that is going to win in golf game until you finish. Once your decision is wrong, the other man takes the opportunity. The experience I gained as a fisherman helped me when I started playing golf. Everything we do in this world must have its own particular tactics.

    As a resident professional who has been playing golf for the past 48 years, are you fulfilled?

    I’m okay.

    Is any of your children taking after you as a golfer?

    They don’t follow me at all. I introduced two of them to it; one started playing before he abandoned it, saying that he would return after a while. That is why the profession is so delicate that you cannot have your son to take after your footsteps. I have used that to train them; let them too train their children. That is my prayer.

    You started as a caddy and made a success out of it. How would you advise those who are battling despondency?

    I never knew I was going to grow this big when I started. I only started. We were the first set of professionals. We trained boys and other boys became pros as well. A lot of them are on their own. I can tell you how many pros have passed through me. We have about seven here that are okay material wise. They have their own cars. They live in their own houses, and they are contented with what they have.

    Would you say that being a caddy gave you an edge over others?

    It depends on the individual. Whatever you are doing, you keep your head there. If you are not arrogant and you are cool and humble, you will get to where you are going. If someone had told me that through being a caddy I was going to do this or that in life, I would not have believed it. But I stayed there, I was trained, I trained a lot of people, I have everything I need in life. What else could I have asked for? I was telling you about the boys I trained here. Some of them just finished teaching and they get lots of money.

    You grew up in Lagos. I want you to compare the Lagos of the old and Lagos of today.

    Civilization brought a lot of corruption. Civilization brought a lot of things that were alien to Lagos. I told you that I lived at Oko Alagbon where you call Alagbon today. I would trek from there to watch film at Idera Cinema in Mushin and we would still trek back. There was nothing to be afraid of. If it was not 12 am, we would not think about going to parties. There was discipline. You dared not misbehave. But now, nobody bothers; even your neigbbour does not know the name of the next street. You can’t compare the two.

    What was your relationship with the late Enahoro?

    Chief Anthony Enahoro was like a father to me. He encouraged the younger ones to grow. He made golf popular among Nigerians. If he had not sent people like me and others abroad and we came back and started teaching Nigerians, golf would not have grown. We would still have been depending on expatriates to come and teach us. One thing I will never forget about Enahoro is that whatever I am today, he made it possible. And all the professional golfers in Nigeria today, it was Chief Enahoro who made us. If he did not sponsor us, there would not have been professional golf association in Nigeria today.

    You had the privilege of being sent to the UK at an early age. Tell me your most memorable experience in the UK.

    First of all, I enjoyed my stay. My boss, David Lewis, was very good to me. Initially, the weather was too cold. After about a month or so, I got used to the weather. My boss came to Nigeria and left me in his shop. Before he returned, I sold an item he had not sold for one year. When he returned, I was still staying in the shop. But there was a day I made a mistake. I locked the shop and I was supposed to turn off the alarm but I didn’t. When I came back in the morning, I just opened the shop and entered. Within five minutes, the alarm started ringing and I came out to put it off.

    The police surrounded me and said, ‘Wait, where do you think you are going?’ I explained myself, then the cook from the club came down and said: ‘Jimmy, Jimmy’.  He explained to them that I forgot to put off the alarm before opening the shop. They just warned me not to do that again. If you don’t put off the alarm, police will come and surround you. When I phoned my boss in Nigeria and explained to him my encounter with the police, he laughed and said he had always warned me to always put off the alarm,

    When he returned from Nigeria, he was impressed with what I did. I made good sales for him. That alone made my boss to ask for six more months for me to stay. I enjoyed my stay there and played a lot of tournaments. The boys were friendly. Occasionally, you could not do with the ones that were snobbish.

  • Finding fortune in managing medical waste

    Finding fortune in managing medical waste

    Talents abound in the nation’s entrepreneurial landscape. Entrepreneurs who  are clever, innovative and in the look out for new  opportunities are hitting it big. One of them is Chief  Executive, Medical Waste Disposal Services, Cletus Emeka Olebunne,who  has  found fortune in managing  medical waste. DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    A United States (US)-based Nigerian, Mr.  Cletus Emeka Olebunne, is on his way to building a multi-million dollar business around America’s medical waste management industry. Olebunne   has taken advantage of America’s health sector, which generates  tonnes  of medical waste daily. Apart from constituting a challenge to reducing  landfill waste, it has been  a daunting  task  for the medical authorities to recycle wastes from medical  devices .

    But  Olebunne saw an opportunity in the challenge and decided to fill that niche. Today, he is saving hospitals the burden of such waste by cleaning, recycling and reusing medical equipment instead of opting for disposable equipment.

    Olebunne said: “I came up with the idea of running a medical waste disposal company after years of working in pharmaceutical, hospital and research laboratories. He explained that he noticed that every laboratory has contracted a medical/biohazard disposal company to collect and dispose all the waste generated.

    Continuing, he said“I researched the medical waste management industry and realised that there are avenues and opportunities for small and medium sized hauling companies. I jumped right in, incorporated Medical Waste Disposal Services, LLC in 2006; got the required licenses, permits, and registrations before seeking for customers.”

    With an investment of a little over $15,000,  Olebunne has since connered a niche market, with small and medium size waste generators not served by the big waste management companies as target customers. These include physician offices, dentist offices, manufacturing laboratories, and small medical labs. While focused on medical waste, he has been getting calls from companies and contractors that wanted removal of non-medical waste. Taking  advantage of this, he  launched  into full  municipal waste disposal business. Unlike the medical waste, he said municipal waste is less regulated.  Today, Impact Waste Management Services, which he set up, is involved in the collection and disposal of medical waste and municipal waste.  The company   serves customers in New Jersey and New York. He, however, said there are no plans to expand beyond these states. This, according to him, is because municipal solid waste business is localised there. But  he  still  operates  nationally  through  a courier arm. Following  changes in medical waste disposal regulations that allow for medical waste to be shipped via the United States Postal Service and other carriers, such as UPS and Fedex, his  company  has incorporated a medical waste disposal by mail service into its operational plan that allows them  to serve the entire United States. Small to medium size medical waste generators anywhere in the United States can create account with them at www.medicalwastebymail.com. In the next 10 year, he sees himself running a very successful waste management business, and hopefully  activities in Nigeria when a system that allows for capitalistic competitiveness in the waste management business, as well as a regulatory system that actually works.    As a business owner in the United States and Nigeria, he said it is much easier running a small business in the US  because  it  supports entrepreneurship.

    Olebunne believes the greatest economic challenge facing Nigeria  is the lack of training and resources that can  groom better entrepreneurs. To address this, he  has started  Huritt Global Business School for Entrepreneurship in Nigeria.

    It is a business school where people will be equipped with skills and knowledge in entrepreneurship.  This creates a stream of people who are not only passionate but are equipped with skills to become real change-makers.

    Olebunne is qualified for this. After  graduating  with a bachelor’s degree in Biochemistry from University of Ilorin, Kwara State , he  immigrated to the United States for further studies . This was after two years in London.

    He also earned a graduate certificate in International Business and Finance from New York University, and a graduate business degree (MBA) in Entrepreneurship and General Management from the Whitman School of Management at Syracuse University, Syracuse New York.  It is two years now since he started  Huritt Global Business School in Nigeria. He still considers HGBSE a startup.

    Despite his success so far, he  has  faced some problems young entrepreneurs all face when starting. Hear him: “I have failed in two previous startups because I lacked the necessary patience and the network to grow the business.  I have learned that short cuts and the mindset of instant gratification do not grow businesses.”

    He said entreprenures must  stick with the business for the long haul, admitting that he actually does not stick with an idea for a long time before trying it out. “I believe in starting and testing the concept. That way, I am able to get a good feedback. If I am doing the right things, and avoiding the mindset of instant gratifications, I stay with it. I might let it lie low and revisit the concept when appropriate, he stated.

    Olebunne said the waste management company he has in the U.S. was incorporated in 2006, but in 2009 when the economy is in deep recession, he shelved it and went to work for a biotech company for four years.

    “Before the waste management company, I used to run a pharmaceutical company that imported raw materials and active pharmaceutical ingredients from China into the United States. I had buyers; the major problem was that 95 per cent of our sales was to one buyer, and when the buyer got sued for patent infringement, my business was affected,” he recalled.

    According to him, his company never recovered from that, but the concept is still in the back burner, and still has its licenses and registered with the FDA.

    His   advice for young entrepreneurs: “Nothing worthwhile really ever comes easily. Work, continuous work and hard work is the only way you’ll accomplish the results that last. Dream, plan, do, finish, repeat. Always be positive, love whatever you do, and never stop learning. Know your product/service, be focused, persistent, and have patience. It’s a journey, not a race or marathon. Also, know that luck only comes to visit and not to stay.”