Tag: high

  • Bank unveils ‘high networth’ services

    Ecobank Nigeria has unveiled its dedicated banking service delivery christened Premier Banking Service targeted at high net worth customers. The Ecobank Premier Banking personalises banking services that suit individual life style of customers in a collaborative way that provides additional value beyond everyday banking.

    In a statement, it said the initiative signifies the beginning of a redefinition of banking in Nigeria characterised with  the appointment of dedicated Relationship Manager as primary point of contact providing a 24-hour, seven days a week (24/7) financial advisory service to Premier Banking customers and their family.

    Unveiling the service in Lagos, Ecobank Nigeria Managing Director Jibril Aku said it gives customers the privilege to have exclusive lifestyle benefits, including preferential airline and hotel rates and unparalleled rewards from luxury brand retailers across the world.

  • ‘Why Nigeria has high inflation rate LCCI’

    Nigeria’s   level of inflation remains significantly higher than its peers rising to over 8 per cent in the month of May says president, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Alhaji Remi Bello.

    He revealed that the nation’s annual average inflation rate of 8.5 per cent is higher than that of Africa, emerging markets and advanced economies at 5.8 per cent, 6.3 per cent and 1.4 per cent respectively.  On the reason for the high inflation rate, he said it is as a result of cost push that includes cost of operation, energy, cost of fund and fiscal regime of government.

    Other cost variables according to him includes high tariffs and government spending especially this era of election where there is high movement of funds from one point to the other.

    Bello spoke on Wednesday in Lagos at the unveiling of 2014 Second Quarter report on the economy. According to it is worrisome that the nation’s annual average of 7.85 per cent year to date is above the IMF’s projection of 7.3 per cent and those of its peers.

    He said though the foreign exchange market has been relatively stable with slight appreciation of the Naira witnessed only at the interbak and Buraeu De Change segments of the markets, the stability notwithstanding, he stressed concerns that increased yields and interest rate in the United States could have negative impact on capital flow into the country.

    In his words: ” Again, there is the risk of high domestic  liquidity which could exert sustained pressure on both the exchange rate and consumer prices, as well as accentuate the already high demand for foreign exchange, further depleting the country’s external reserves. At this time there is need  to acknowledge key risks such as increasing security threats in some parts of the country, expected fiscal spending towards 2015 general elections and associated demand pressure on exchange rate. The implication is that the interest rate would continue to remain high and continue to put pressure on operating costs in the economy.”

    The LCCI boss frowned at the depletion of the excess crude account from $38.72 billion in May to $ 37.2 in June, noting that value of a robust reserves lies in the confidence it inspires among investors especially foreign investors and international trading partners.

    Further depletion of reserves and the excess crude account could undermine investor’s confidence and could trigger capital with adverse consequences for the economy he added.

    He criticised  the face of between the CBN and the Bureau De change operators on the recent increase from $20,000 to N35 million deposit with the apex bank. He said: “Of what use is the new policy that intends to lock up N35 million operating capital without bearing interest.

  • Scot Tommey’s high taste comes to fore again

    Scot Tommey’s high taste comes to fore again

    Abuja big boy and Chairman of Osmoserve, Scott Tommey, is in the news again. That the influential socialite is doing well for himself is stating the obvious. And his success has no doubt rubbed off on a good number of people, including his immediate family. A few days ago, his wife, Sefiya, opened a multi-million naira spa in Abuja. Named Suenno, the beauty centre is fast redefining beauty and relaxation business in the capital city. The classy spot has since become the convergence spot for the rich and the famous in the nation’s capital city. The outlook of the spa, some say, is a reflection of Scott’s high taste. It will be recalled that a few years ago, he bought himself a private jet as his birthday gift.

  • The high, the low sides of UTME 2013

    The high, the low sides of UTME 2013

    No fewer than 1,629,102 registered for the Paper and Pencil Test (PPT) option of the 2013 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) held nationwide last Saturday. The examination was not without drama. The candidates, their parents and guardians, invigilators, security operatives and other examination officials were the cast in the drama.

    At many centres, there were issues with centre changes, invigilation, lateness and examination malpractices. Despite the efforts of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) to check examination fraud, many candidates, in some cases with the help of officials, circumvented the measures. They entered the exam halls with what is referred to as “contraband”.

     

    Strictness

    The examination was either good or bad, depending on the candidate’s centre. Officials in some centres The Nation visited played strictly by the rules. They did not allow lateness; they dispossessed candidates of foreign materials before being allowed into the hall, and issued malpractice forms to those caught. At other centres, the officials looked the other way, or even ‘helped’ the candidates for a fee. Their malpractice forms were returned intact to JAMB.

    JAMB officials at SMA College, Jakande Estate, Oke-Afa, Isolo, a Lagos suburb, were strict. They frisked the candidates and before the examination started they caught many with prepared answers scribbled on small pieces of paper hidden under shirt sleeves, in shoes, and other parts of the body.

    A JAMB supervisor told The Nation that those apprehended would be handed over to the police.

    “They (written answers) were collected from them before allowing them to enter the hall. We also warned them to drop whatever they had on them because if caught they would be made to fill the malpractice form. We have written the names of those we caught with answers in the hall, they have filled forms and we are going to hand them over to the police when they come,” he said.

    He praised the teachers, saying they did a good job by cooperating with JAMB officials to fish out fraudsters.

    Another invigilator said: “This school is very standard. I am impressed with the school and I recommend the school. Other private schools collect money but this one doesn’t. I have worked in a private school before and I know what I am saying.”

    Candidates who wrote the examination at Pavillions 2 and 3 of the University of Calabar (UNICAL) saw invigilators as enemies or friends depending on the level of ‘understanding’. Many complained about strictness, sternness and harshness of some invigilators. They were said to have resisted cooperation, and the use of mobile phones which can be deployed in receiving answers via SMS.

    A female candidate, who wrote in Pavilion 3, described the invigilators’ strictness as wickedness.

    “The invigilators and the supervisors were so wicked and strict. They didn’t allow us to chat with friends, even the person staying beside you. The strictness of my invigilator compelled me to use my brain. I pray I pass this Jamb,” she said.

    Ekande Johnson, who wrote at the Definitive Library, UNICAL, also, according to him, used his brains because there was nothing like ‘cooperation’ at his centre.

    “All our invigilators squeezed their faces, starting from the beginning of the exam to the end. The security officers took our mobile phones from us but later returned them after the examination. In Physics and Mathematics, I just had to shade any alphabet that I felt will be the answer because I didn’t know them,” he fumed.

    One girl was heard discussing with her friends afterwards that effective security meant she could not use her phone to receive answers she had paid an exorbitant amount for.

    “I arranged with my mercenary to send me answers in Physics and Chemistry but the security was too tight that I had to drop my phone in my bag. What is hurting me now is that I paid the runs guy for three subjects but did not benefit from it. I pleaded with my invigilator to allow me enter with my mobile phone that this is the fourth time I’m writing Jamb but he refused,” she said.

    An invigilator at UNICAL, Kingsley Eneje, said the strictness was to ensure that no malpractices were recorded. He thanked JAMB for the maximum security measures taken to check malpractices, especially the biometric thumbprinting capture system which, since introduced in 2011, has helped reduce impersonation.

     

    Compromised officials

    At centres where the invigilators and supervisors did not think collecting money to help candidates cheat was a bad idea, the rules were dumped. Candidates who did not prepare were happy, describing the invigilators as angels and thanking God for sending them their way.

    At many centres in Kano and Jigawa states, candidates had a field day, using cell phones and other devices to get expo.

    “Oga, by the grace of God, this is my last attempt for JAMB. I tried this examination for more than four times. But with what happened in the hall today, I am rest assured of a better score when the chips are down,” one of the candidates told our reporter.

    According to him, in collaboration with the invigilators and security agencies who allegedly collected some money from candidates, “we were given the freedom to do whatever we liked. It was like a jamboree and I thank God for everything.”

    A candidate who wrote at Pavilion 2 UNICAL said his invigilator was God-sent because he “cooperated.”

    “The exam was okay and our invigilator cooperated well as he allowed us to cooperate. In fact, he was God-sent to help us,” he said.

    It was not only invigilators helping candidates. Security operatives were also indicted. At the Faculty of Arts centre, one of the three within the Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo, an official of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), one of the paramilitary bodies deployed by JAMB to provide security, was caught attempting to send answers to some candidates through two cell phones.

    A microchip with solutions to Mathematics (Type A) was also found on him. The officer who identified himself as Kazeem Adewale was caught by LASU security guards. Sandwiched between two security officials inside one of the university’s vans, he started pleading, claiming the phones and microchips were given to him by his boss, another female officer who he simply identified as Adesanu.

    He said in Yoruba: Egbon, ee de bami bewon; sebi Yoruba bii temi leyin naa nso (please big brother, kindly help me appeal to them) he said to our reporter.

    His boss, Adesanu, denied giving the phones and microchips to the suspect. Adewale was handed over to men from Ojo Police Station.

    Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic) Prof Sena Bakre, who coordinated the three centres within LASU, said she had suspected Adewale was up to no good.

    “He (Adewale) was moving around with suspicion,” said Prof Bakre. “He never stayed at his duty post. As soon as I realised this, I alerted LASU security to secretly place surveillance on him until he was eventually caught.”

    Prof Bakre also said she suspected Adewale’s atrocities had the backing of his superiors, adding that following the suspect’s arrest, other NSCDC officials became nervous. She urged JAMB to beam its searchlight more on NSCDC officials, fingering them as one of the abettors of examination practices during the UTME.

    “For me, I no longer find this civil defence people dependable again. They are usually the ones that help many of these students get the answers either via cell phones or any other means. I think the authority should do something about this. These people have outlived their usefulness,” she said.

    To cut corners during the examination, many candidates registered in states or centres far from their homes. The Nation observed that thousands of candidates moved from one state to the other, especially from the Southeast to the Southsouth, Southwest and Northern states to write the examination, not because of inadequate centres as claimed during the registration, but because of fraud. They were helped by teachers and principals who charged them huge sums to organise special centres where they could write the examination and be assured of high grades.

    According to Christian Ndu, a parent, in Nnewi, Anambra State, there was massive examination malpractice across board. Many who claimed to be principals of private schools and even government schools, and some cyber café operators, took their candidates outside Anambra to Cross River, Delta and Benue states to write the examination.

    He said: “This generation of students could not write examinations in their schools but in arranged schools outside their states with the connivance of school heads. They are destroying the future of our children. They would grow to be disasters in the various offices they would be working.

    “I witnessed a situation where a school took over 300 students on Friday aboard Rivers line Transport to schools in remote areas in Rivers and Cross River state and each student was forced to pay extra N3,500 for the exams excluding the normal JAMB fees.”

    While officials collected money for examination malpractice, at the Community High school, Obioma in Udi local government area of Enugu State, close to Anambra, the teachers charged candidates N500 each to make use of the schools chairs for the examination.

    Some of the candidates told The Nation that the teachers made it compulsory for over 400 candidates in the school and anybody that failed to pay was not given the question papers or OMR sheets. Candidates that did not have enough were forced to borrow from their friends.

    A female candidate told The Nation that the teachers must have made over N300,000 from the forced levy.

     

    Lateness

    In the course of monitoring the UTME, The Nation discovered some candidates deliberately came late to enable them import answers into the hall.

    In some centres in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State Capital, some came late, when the invigilators would not be strict in their supervision. Their alibi was mainly distance and transport hassles and in many cases they won the sympathy of the invigilators who allowed them to take the exams.

    In some centres in Agege, Lagos, The Nation observed that a few candidates arrived more than one hour after the examination started and were not allowed into the halls. Many of them broke down in tears. They went on their knees or prostrated for the supervisors to allow them in.

    Asked the reason for their lateness, some said they had to reprint their photo card (a one-page document detailing their names, registration number, centre name and number, institutions and programmes information, as well as their photographs) that morning because they learnt they needed a reference number which was only uploaded online recently.

    But a supervisor at the Dairy Farm Senior Secondary School, Agege centre, Mr Oladayo Ibrahim, said the reprint was unnecessary as the candidates only needed to provide their registration and centre numbers for verification.

    “I don’t know why you troubled yourself to reprint this slip when nobody will collect it from you. What we need for the verification is only your name and centre number. You people just talked to yourselves and decided to do what JAMB did not ask you to do,” he said to two candidates who came one hour late but were allowed into the examination halls.

    But one young man who came after them was not that lucky though he laid prostrate on the sandy ground begging invigilators to beg the supervisor on his behalf. He pleaded in Yoruba: “When I got to the gate, they said I should reprint my slip so I picked a bike immediately; that was why I came late.”

    At Sanngo Senior Secondary School, another centre nearby, three girls came 90 minutes late and wept as they waited for the supervisor, Mr Ahmed Ojodu, to attend to them. They claimed to have gone to another centre located in Pen Cinema, which they could not name, where their names did not turn up when they thumbprinted. They had no answer when asked why it took them more than one hour to get to Sanngo which is less than 10 minutes from Pen Cinema by foot.

    Reminding the girls that the exam started at 9a.m., he asked them to return home. “It is 10.30a.m. and you are just coming when some people are concluding their exam. Please don’t harass me. Go home and come and write next year,” he said.

    At Saint John of God Secondary School in Awka, Anambra State, more than 30 candidates were denied access to their centre because they were more than three hours late.

    The Nation gathered that security men denied them access to the venue despite their pleas. The reason, according to one of the teachers, was because they came to the centre at 1pm, when the examination started at 10a.m.

    “If we allow the students to enter the hall, they would not have done any thing tangible when the examination had almost ended, so the best option was to stop them from disturbing those who are serious,” the teacher said.

    An the affected candidate, who gave her name as Chinenye, told The Nation that the teachers were just wicked, adding that some of them arrived at the gate at 11.30am but “they failed to open the gate for us, claiming that we were late.”

    Some candidates in the north were late because of transportation problem. A candidate said she found it difficult getting a tricycle to the venue.

    “As you are aware, the state government banned the movement of commercial motorcycles and this greatly affected some of us that very day. For instance I paid through my nose to charter a tricycle to my centre; and apart from that, I arrived very late because it took me quite some time to get a tricycle that agreed to convey me to such a long distance.

    “Again, for the fact that the exam day was the last Saturday of the Month which is observed as sanitation day in Kano, transporters did not come out on time, unknown to them that the government cancelled the exercise,” Faith Emmanuel told The Nation.

     

    Cellphones

    Candidates were scanned by men of the NSCDC with metal body scanners to detect mobile phones or any metal object. However, some of them soon devised a means to avoid detection of the phones by removing the batteries.

    At the UNICAL centre, some candidates came with two mobile phones – one of which was submitted at the point of entry while the other was smuggled inside by removing its battery. A candidate said once the battery is removed, there is no way the scanner will detect the phone.

    After the exam, candidates from different centres in Lagos had a lot to say about how it went. Some spoke about how they were able to deceive the NSCDC officers. A female candidate said: “Upon all the security I still carry my own enter.” When asked by another how she did it, she said: “I carry am enter na.” Pointing to another female candidate, she added: “See this girl ehn, she carry plenty paper enter and they no catch her.”

    A female candidate who wrote at the Agidingbi Senior Secondary School, Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos said in a phone conversation while on a bus after the examination that she was able to use the mathematics answers sent to her mobile phone.

    “I got Mathematics. That was the only one we used,” she said.

    In Ogun State, the NSCDC arrested 82 persons for examination malpractices.

    The suspects who were arrested at different centres were caught using phones, books, palm tops, scientific calculators, among others to answer questions.

    The Nation gathered that some of the suspects were texting question types to agents planted outside the centres and were getting responses from which they shaded the supposedly correct options on the answer sheet.

    The NSCDC Commandant for the state, Mr Aboluwoye Akinwande, said the suspects were arrested in 118 centres across Ogun Central, Ogun East and West. He said 30 candidates were arrested in Abeokuta; 17 in Lisabi; nine, Ewekoro; and one each at the Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, and the Molusi College centres.

    Akinwande said: “The first thing is that they have been made to fill relevant form. Investigation will be conducted,that will determine their culpability and then we can decide on trial as necessary information about them have been collected.”

     

  • Mutual Benefits aims high

    Mutual Benefits Assurance Plc said it has positioned itself to take over as the leading insurance firm in the country in the next three years.

    To realise its plans, the underwriting company disclosed that it has undertaken strategic investments in various sectors of the economy.

    The Group Managing Director (GMD), Akin Ogunbiyi, in an interview with The Nation, said:“With a lot of successes already recorded in the retail space of the insurance market, Mutual Benefits Assurance Plc is expanding beyond insurance into property, housing development; mass transportation and investment in other subsidiaries within and outside the shores of Nigeria.

    “We want to be number one in the industry by 2015 in all fundamentals,” he said.

    On the company’s performance in 2012, the helmsman said though the result has not been released, he is sure the company would record about 35 per cent growth in premium volume, adding that the company achieved premium income of N10.7 billion in 2011, and made a profit before tax of N916.9 million, as against N892.2 million in 2010.

    Its profit after tax rose from N758.4 million in 2010 to N763.8 million in 2011, while claims settlement increased from N731.5 million in 2010 to N1.02 billion in the 2011 financial period.

    Ogunbiyi said the underwriting firm has invested N3 billion in the development of Mutual Alpha Courts at Costain, Lagos, adding that the work had reached about 75 per cent completion stage.

    He said the firm’s investment in marginal oil field was almost at its completion stage, while other investments were yielding returns in line with its projection.

    He said with a workforce in excess of 4,000, the firm is pulling long terms funds that leave room for more expansion in other sectors of the economy.

    He said the company’s success story is also hinged on the quality of its product offerings, adding that the firm has in its offerings, 45 different products, which allow the insured to make savings for the future.

    “What we have done is to design our products to reach the mass market. The premiums are as low as N50 daily and these have offered the lower class of the society, the market women and the artisans the opportunity to get insured”

    According to him, beyond its huge investment in the Lagos Bus Rapid Transport (BRT) project, it has invested in the Imo State Transport Company (ITC).

    “Before we came into ITC to provide vehicles for the company, it was almost moribund and, today, life has returned in that company and the state government is happy with us,” Ogunbiyi said.

    We are not stopping there; rather, we are determined to make insurance more relevant in the economy by providing long term funding for development of other sectors, he added.

  • Equities rally to 19.35% as index hits new high

    NSE signs MoU with Thomson Reuters

    Average year-to-date return at the Nigerian stock market rallied to 19.35 per cent yesterday as several equities jumped to new highest and the main index at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) set a new highest index level.

    The market opened bullishly with 56 advancers against 18 decliners. The All Share Index (ASI), the common index for all equities on NSE, gained 0.59 per cent to close at 33,511.63 points as against its opening index of 33,313.49 points.

    Aggregate market value of all equities rose correspondingly by N65 billion from N10.659 trillion to N10.722 trillion. The market performance was driven by widespread gains across the high, mid and small capitalisation levels.

    Mobil Oil Nigeria Plc led the advancers with a gain of N5.53 to close at N125.97. PZ Cussons Nigeria followed with a gain of N4.04 to close at N44.48. UAC of Nigeria added N3 to close at N53. Unilever Nigeria rose by N2.57 to close at N52. GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Nigeria chalked up N2.38 to close at N49.98. Total Nigeria gathered N2 to close at N143. Cadbury Nigeria gained N1.94 to close at N40.81. CAP rose by N1.68 to close at N35.42 while MRS Oil and Gas and Presco increased by N1.37 and 94 kobo to close at N28.79 and N27.90 respectively.

    The price rally underlined increased demand for equities as investors repositioned their portfolios ahead of the imminent start of the earnings season.

    Volume and value of activities improved by 8.63 per cent and 33.87 per cent respectively as investors staked N4.35 billion on 683.24 million shares through 7,299 deals.

    Investors appeared to be showing increasing preference for low-priced stocks. Banking stocks remained atop activity chart with a turnover of 363.69 million shares worth N2.42 billion in 3,015 deals. Insurance sector followed with a turnover of 147.93 million shares worth N108.19 million in 499 deals.

    Unity Bank was the most active stock with a turnover of 115.22 million shares worth N115.18 million in 340 deals.

    However, Flour Mills of Nigeria, which posted a disappointing third quarter report, led the losers with a drop of N3.99 to close at N76.01. Lafarge Wapco Cement Nigeria trailed with a loss of N2.20 to close at N72 while Guinness Nigeria lost N1.41 to close at N296.

    Meanwhile, the NSE has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Thomson Reuters to provide investor relations services to its listed companies as part of its value added services.

    With this initiative, investor relations’ solutions from Thomson Reuters will be available to the NSE’s listed companies.

    The NSE stated that Thomson ONEInvestor Relations will help companies manage their investors relations programme workflow, including monitoring market activity, understanding investor behaviour and managing investor outreach.

    Thomson Reuters’ investors relations websites will also ensure companies are delivering a high standard of disclosure, providing investors with quality and professional investment information.

    Managing Director, Africa, Thomson Reuters, Keith Nichols, said his company was delighted to partner with the NSE.

    “Thomson Reuters provides integrated solutions across the investor relations workflow and we look forward to help NSE’s companies comply with the regulatory requirements and effectively communicate with institutional and retail investors,” Nichols said.

    Executive Director, Business Development, Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), Mr Haruna Jalo-Waziri, urged listed companies to take advantage of this investor relations package to improve their visibility to the local and international investor community.

     

  • Aliyu: Riding high at 57

    Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu (CON) is 57 today.

    The Chief Servant, as he is fondly called, has shown his love for his people in the last five years he has been at the helms.

    When, in May 2007, Aliyu mounted the saddle, he promised in his inaugural address that he was going to be a courageous leader, more resolute than any other leader we have seen in the state. He said he would provide “courageous and quality leadership” since the destiny of any people is inextricably tied to the quality of its leadership.

    Five years on, no Nigerlite, I am sure, would dispute the fact that the Chief Servant has kept his word. As I said in my previous tributes to the man, there is hardly any leader of the state who has made as much efforts to change the face of the politics and socio-economy to the fullest like Aliyu. Indeed, like I have always maintained, his first term of four years represented a defining period of our state’s history.

    For those who know Aliyu, the successes recorded so far do not come as a surprise – the man came well-groomed for the job of transforming Niger State. Between November 12, 1955, when he was born in Minna, and today when he turns 57, Aliyu’s life can best be described as a lesson in resilience, hard work, diligence and steadfastness.

    The Talban Minna was born into a humble, even though culturally rich background and had to toil to survive from tending horses, packing the dung, going to Arabic/Islamic school and attending public schools from primary to his university education. Therefore, like William Shakespeare would say, Aliyu was not born great; rather, he achieved greatness on his own.

    As he celebrates his birthday, it is not just the interesting narrative of his 57-year sojourn on earth that should resonate. What should fascinate Nigerians is how wide exposure and educational sophistication has made Dr. Aliyu one of the most sophisticated statesmen in the country, especially with his good education in Nigeria and some of the best universities in the United States.

    The governor has in the last five years shown that he has knowledge, capacity, wisdom, experience and proven fair-minded to preside over a multi-ethnic and multi-religious national community.

    For his administration in Niger State, everybody resident here is a Nigerlite and enjoys every amenity or provision of the government without discrimination. The concept of state of origin does not exist.

    Every school child in the primary school and students in the secondary school in the state enjoys free education without discrimination; every child up to the age of five, as well as all pregnant women and the aged are entitled to free and quality medicare without discrimination.

    Also, in the last five years, the Chief Servant has stamped his seal of excellence in all the sectors of the state’s economy. His chosen areas of priority, namely Education, Health, Agriculture, infrastructural development and social security have seen progressive achievements. His accomplishments have been attributed largely to prudent and judicious application of funds, visionary planning and consistency in policy implementation.

    Aliyu has introduced initiatives that are novel in the history of political leadership in Nigeria. An instant revelation is the Ward Development Projects which ensure that development reaches the grassroots.

    The initiative, which ensures that each of the 274 wards in the state receives N1million monthly, is a huge success story. Under the initiative, each ward takes full responsibility for proposing to the state government development projects that the ward consultative forum feels deserves priority attention. The implementation of projects is carried out by the people, who participate fully at all levels.

    The Jama’a Forum, a meet-the-people-tour, initiated and embarked upon by the governor to meet and interact with the people one-on-one in their communities and villages, has not only gained significant support but has also served as an instrument through which he relates directly with the common man. The tour is aimed at getting to know the people, their areas of need and how to address their problems as well as giving the people an opportunity to interact freely with their governor on issues bothering them.

    Aliyu, who thinks right and acts right, is the man of the moment in Niger State but should be elevated to act right and think right for the entire country. Let his deeds of today be his judge for the future.

    Here’s a happy birthday message to the Chief Servant of the people.

     

    •Ndayebo is the Chief Press Secretary to Aliyu

  • AHEAD OF CHAMPIONS LEAGUE CLASH: Mikel: Chelsea spirit is high

    AHEAD OF CHAMPIONS LEAGUE CLASH: Mikel: Chelsea spirit is high

    Mikel Obi has said the great Chelsea spirit in the weekend’s derby win will lift them in Tuesday’s Champions League tie at Shakhtar Donetsk.

    Chelsea halted a poor run at White Hart Lane since August 2005 to beat London rivals Tottenham 4-2 on Saturday and consolidate their leadership of the English Premier League.

    Chelsea are now on 22 points from eight matches, four points clear of closest rivals Manchester United and Manchester City. Mikel told MTNFootball.com his club were driven to win.

    “It was a tough and interesting game as we expected and we deserved to win it,” Mikel said. “The team spirit was very high and that was why we were able to win the match. Even when we were down, we still kept fighting on until we secured victory. It was a great display and I believe we will keep it up.

    “This is a nice one ahead of our Champions League game against Shakhtar Donetsk.” Mikel posted a five-star display and even ventured forward in a more offensive role for the European champions. His compatriot Victor Moses was an unused substitute for Chelsea.