Tag: hold

  • Professionals to hold lecture on Wednesday

    J9C, a group of professionals formed as a result of last year’s protest against fuel price increase has instituted a yearly lecture series to stimulate healthy discourse on the nation’s socio-political developments.

    According to the group’s Publicity Secretary, Mr Wole Olagundoye, the inaugural lecture with its theme: “Elite, Leadership and National Transformation” is scheduled for Wednesday, in Lagos, with leading politicians, professionals and opinion leaders as panelists and speakers.

    The time is 11am.

    The keynote Speaker is Mr. Jimi Agbaje, a Pharmacist and Politician.

    Olagundoye said J9C aims to build a body of professionals who are passionate about Nigeria and have a clear cut direction through constructive engagements on burning national issues, pursuing transparency, probity and accountability at all levels.

    On the formation of the group, the image-maker said: “January 9th was an important date for our country Nigeria and a lot of Nigerians as it was the day a majority of Nigerians came out and spoke with one voice against fuel subsidy removal. The main focal point for the fuel subsidy strive was the rallies at the Gani Fawehinmi Park, at Ojota in Lagos. It was a place where thousands gathered in support of a cause they believed in and they did so passionately irrespective of gender and class.

  • Eagles hold Nasarawa in tune-up game

    Eagles hold Nasarawa in tune-up game

    The Super Eagles got a dose of what to expect at the SA 2013 Nations Cup next month when they were held to a 1-1 draw by gritty Nigeria Premier League side, Nasarawa United on Thursday morning in Abuja.

    The Nasarawa side managed by veteran coach Alphonsus Dike, played their hearts out in the encounter but it was the national team that showed more maturity and should have easily won the game but for the several begging chances that were wasted.

    The Eagles featured Femi Thomas, Solomon Kwambe, Benjamin Francis, Godfrey Oboabona, Azubuike Egwueke, Gabriel Reuben, Sunday Mba, Fegor Ogude, Tony Okputu, Ejike Uzoenyi and Gambo Mohammed in the first half and changed all the players for a new set of 11 players in the second.

    In the early part of the game, the Eagles dominated and should have been at least two goals up in the first ten minutes but the chances that came their way were wasted by Mba, Reuben and Gambo. In the 18th minute, a defensive mix-up by the national team allowed Nasarawa’s Ibrahim Ibrahim to steal in the opener of the game to the shock of the motley crowd that watched the game.

    The goal was to change the tempo of the game as the Eagles upped their game in search of an equalizer. Their pressure paid off, when a Nasarawa defender held a goal-bound shot and Referee Aniete Ukoh promptly pointed to the spot. Mba scored the equalizer in the 44th minute.

    The new set of Eagles in the second half like Gomo Onduko, Ubale Mannir, Papa Idris, Henry Uche, Chibuzor Okonkwo, Zango Umar and goalkeeper Daniel Akpeyi, seemed to have more fluidity in the second half but the Nasarawa side kept it tight at the back to run away with a 1-1 draw.

    After the game a not too happy Stephen Keshi sent the players back to the pitch for another 20 minutes of physical drilling.

    Nasarawa handler, Dike, said he was impressed with the quality of players that have been picked for the national assignment but admonished the team handlers to work on the concentration level of the players.

    “The players were quite good and among the best in the country but the need to improve in the area of concentration because that was what caused the goal my team scored against them.”

  • Caf Under 17 championship: Draws hold Dec. 9

    Caf Under 17 championship: Draws hold Dec. 9

    Golden Eaglets’ assistant coach, Nduka Ugbade has said his side have shifted attention towards qualifying Nigeria for next year’s FIFA Under17 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates.

    The Eaglets at the weekend defeated the Junior Eagles of Mali 4-0 on aggregate to book a passage to the African cadet showpiece billed for the North African state, Morocco from April 13 to 27.

    CAF is billed to hold the draws for the championship on December 9 in Morocco. The eight teams for the draws are hosts Morocco, Nigeria, Ghana, Tunisia, Cote d’Ivoire, Botswana, Congo and Gabon.

    Ugbade said they have decided to cut short the celebration trailing their qualification to pay undivided attention to doing well at the African championship in Morocco.

    “Our emphasis right now is to work hard towards qualifying for the World Cup in the UAE, that means we must finish among the top four at the African championship coming up in Morocco in the second week of April.

    “As much as we appreciate the encomium that greeted our qualification, we’re playing down the celebration to concentrate on the task ahead.

    “We’re not unmindful of the fact that the team still need some touch here and there; we have to move fast to cover the loopholes observed during the qualifiers to ensure we go to Morocco not only to qualify for the World Cup but to win the African title,” the former Nigerian player said to supersport.com.

    The former Eaglets’ captain said his wards are not afraid of any foe as the date for the draws gets closer.

    “We’re ready to face any opponent. We’re not losing sleep over the group we’ll fall into. Our priority is to prepare very well for the championship.

    “We want to be champions and should be ready to face any obstacle that may come our way.

    “We have an existing unbeaten record to maintain. CAF should feel free to draw us against any country; we’re battle-ready,” he enthused.

  • ‘NFF now free to hold AGM’

    ‘NFF now free to hold AGM’

    The Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) has given the Nigeria Premier League (NPL) the permission to hold its Annual General Meeting anywhere the NPL wishes or chosen.

    The NPL was given go ahead after a peaceful resolutions with its parent body, the NFF after a meeting held between the two at the Zone 7 Secretariat of the governing football body in the land.

    The Aminu Maigari led NFF had halted the NPL AGM originally scheduled for Kano but will now go ahead as being planned the Premier League body.

    “They (NPL) came and explained to us vividly their side of the story and the NFF body is happy with their (NPL) explanation. So all is well.

    “We (NFF) will now write officially to them (NPL) to permit them to go ahead with their programs (AGM). So all is well,” the NFF Media Committee boss Emeka Inyama who is also a Board member of the NFF told SportingLife.

  • Reps hold summit on Petroleum Industry Bill

    Reps hold summit on Petroleum Industry Bill

    The House of Representatives Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream) will on Monday hold a summit on the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB).

    The summit, with a theme: “The Downstream Regime in the Petroleum Industry Bill: Stakeholders Perspective” will hold at Transcorp Hilton, Abuja.

    It will examine the likely effect of Bill on the downstream sector of the oil and gas industry.

    The committee, in a statement, said the summit would be “a bolster to the Bill, which recently passed Second Reading in the House of Representatives.”

    The summit will examine: the Petroleum Industry Bill and its Implication for a Deregulated Downstream Sector; the Institutional Framework for the Downstream Sector under the Petroleum Industry Bill; the Implication of the Petroleum Industry Bill for Investments in the Downstream Sector of the Petroleum Industry.

    The committee said: “The findings and conclusions arising from these and other adjunct issues will hopefully assist the honourable members in fully understanding the implications of the provisions of the Petroleum Industry Bill.”

    The committee’s Chairman, Hon. Dakuku Peterside, said: “The importance of stakeholders in the PIB is an integral and necessary part of the law making process.”

    Peterside added that the undivided attention that trailed the PIB while debate lasted on the floor of the House, during which no single dissenting vote was heard against the Bill shows the law makers were unanimous in their quest for a new dawn in Nigeria’s oil sector.

    He said the PIB holds the key, not only for the industry and major players but also for oil bearing communities. “The PIB is a reform-focused document that will harmonise all the existing laws relating to the oil industry. It will guarantee the independence of efficient and effective, process-led regulatory agencies which will protect the interest of the all stakeholders, including consumers ,and promote transparency and openness in the administration of the petroleum resources of Nigeria.”

    According to him, proper regulation of the industry is one of the most serious challenges in the Niger Delta.

    The committee said the summit “is a fallout of the Nigerian Refining Capacity Summit otherwise known as Uyo 2012 which held earlier in March.”

    It added: “Uyo 2012 provided a veritable platform for addressing the challenges facing the downstream oil and gas sector, particularly as it affects refining. The Nigerian Refining Capacity Summit 2012 was a precursor to The Downstream Stakeholders Conference coming up on Monday, the 26th of November 2012 . The March gathering pointed the way forward and subsequent meetings will continue to draw substantially from it because of the serious questions posed and the solutions proffered. Uyo thoroughly examined through its speakers and panellists the vexed issue of deregulation and alternative refining models for Nigeria. National economic planners, policy makers and legislators will continue to benefit from the exhaustive key facts and solutions contained in the summit communiqué.

    “Among stakeholders, expectations are high. The secondleg in the series is already generating great interest both in the public and private sectors. The one-day meeting promises amongst other objectives to fully engage all interest groups in the sector in the drive towards the passage of a functional downstream regime in the Petroleum Industry Bill.

    “Since the assembly in Uyo in March, a lot has been done by the Committee to raise awareness around critical issues and challenges in areas such as security, infrastructure, legislation, the environment, capacity building and regulation.”

  • BlackBerry’s hold on Nigeria’s market

    BlackBerry’s hold on Nigeria’s market

    What’s your BB pin?”

    The question is the ultimate social status badge for many young, urban Nigerians. Standing in front of a row of gleaming BlackBerry handsets in a Lagos phone shop, sales assistant Remi Olajuwon explained: “The average Nigerian has a very healthy interest in status and luxury. So if somebody asks for your BlackBerry pin and you don’t have one …” she trailed off with a dismissive flick of her false eyelashes.

    Retailing at between $200 (£126) and $2,000 in a country where most live on less than $2 a day, the cost alone made it a status symbol, she added. “People come in to buy one just to show they’ve been promoted.”

    Amid sagging sales in Europe and North America, developing markets offer a ray of hope for Research in Motion (RIM), after the maker of BlackBerry posted a $235m loss for the latest quarter. In Nigeria, South Africa and Egypt, Africa’s three biggest economies, BlackBerrys outsold smartphone competitors this quarter. Kenya and Ghana also had buoyant sales, officials said.

    Around one sixth of Africa’s 620 million active phone subscribers come from Nigeria. Half of Nigeria’s 4 million smartphone owners use BlackBerrys, and use among the wealthiest segment of society is forecast to increase sixfold by 2016.

    “There’s a misconception Africans only want cheap phones [but] Nigeria is a key market for us. We’re seen as an aspirational product,” said RIM regional director Waldi Wepenerlast month, after the company opened its first Nigerian store in Lagos’s computer village, a sprawling haven for tech junkies.

    With its image increasingly outdated elsewhere, RIM hopes to capitalise on Nigeria’s twin obsessions with status and communication. BlackBerry-related dramas flood newspapers’ agony aunt pages. On social websites, debate rages as to whether a bride photographed using her phone during her wedding ceremony was reading an e-Bible, or was merely a BlackBerry addict. The Nollywood film industry, whose clunkily named movie titles are a good cultural barometer and include delights such as the “Fazebook Babes” series, has recently spawned the hit multisequel “BlackBerry Babes”. The comedy follows a group of scantily clad university girls obsessed with getting the latest phones.

    The popularity of BlackBerrys in Nigeria is partly born of necessity. Erratic internet services and a nonexistent landline network are plugged by unlimited data bundles, costing about £12 a month. Unpredictable phone networks force those who can afford it to own two handsets.

    “I already have another smartphone, but I need a BlackBerry pin number to socialise with friends and get babes. BlackBerry has an edge because of the pinging,” George Emeka, a university student said, using the colloquial term for its instant messaging service.

    Others are getting more bang for their buck. Yahya Balogun, who lives in a Lagos slum, used eight months of savings to buy a secondhand model. The taxi driver has caught on to the growing number of high-end businesses who advertise and communicate using BlackBerry pin numbers as well as traditional means. “All my clients in [upmarket district] Victoria Island own BlackBerrys. It is a good investment,” Balogun said.

    In his rundown district where extended families squeeze into single rooms, neighbours frequently browse on his phone. “My daughter can use the internet [for schoolwork],” said neighbour Tosin Alabi, his face lit by the screen’s blue glow during a recent powercut. “Personally myself I can never pay 1,000 naira [£4] every week for internet. And the battery is terrible when I can go for two days without charging my own phone,” he added, indicating a battered Nokia feature phone.

    Nokia’s low-cost phones remain the top overall sellers across Africa, though affordable mid-range mobiles could also erode RIM’s top-end dominance, analysts say. Last year, Chinese manufacturer Huawei gobbled up almost half of Kenya’s smartphone market with the launch of its $100 devices powered by Google’s Android software. RIM has felt the heat in South Africa, where, unlike Nigeria, mobile carriers offer packages with Apple iPhones. “You’re only with it if you have an iPhone, preferably the iPhone 5, or Samsung Galaxy SIII,” said Khayakazi Mgojo, based in Pretoria.

    A three-day loss of service across Africa and parts of Europe last year was the final straw for some. “I switched because BlackBerry was frustrating me with all its constant freezing at the most inconvenient times, short battery life and the daily reboots,” Mgojo said. Nevertheless she added: “I still use it for social network because it’s cheap compared to buying data bundles.”

    RIM hopes to bat away growing competition in its most important African markets by releasing its jazzed up BlackBerry 10 software in South Africa and Nigeria at the same time as other global markets next year. “At a time when Nokia is strengthening its distribution arm in Nigeria and Apple has recently appointed its first official distributor … the opening of the first BlackBerry-branded retail store is a logical step [to remain] the country’s No 1 smartphone vendor,” said Nick Jotischky, an analyst with Informa Telecoms & Media.

    And for the consumer there still seems a popular groundswell for RIM’s best known product. Manzo George, a businessman who owns three BlackBerrys, said he had no plans to switch over to an Android phone anytime soon. “When people ask me why not try a new brand smartphone, I tell them there are smartphones and then there are BlackBerrys.

  • ACN senators hold constitution review hearing

    State police, immunity for governors and status of local councils were prominent issues at the public hearings in Lagos Central, West and East senatorial districts yesterday.

    Other issues included devolution of powers, creation of more states, recognition of three geo-political zones , constitutional roles for traditional rulers, removal of the Land Use Act, fiscal federalism and state police.

    Others are rotational presidency, gender issues, residency and indigenship, and rotation of governorship across the three zones in the state.

    The senatorial district sensitisation programme organised by Senators Oluremi Tinubu (Central), Gbenga Ashafa (East) and Ganiyu Solomon (West) took place simultaneously in the three districts.

    The Lagos Central public hearing, organised by Senator Tinubu, was chaired by a member of the House of Representatives in the Second Republic, Pa Adekunle Ali.

    At the meeting, it was agreed that four committees will be set up to look at the memoranda and come up with the district’s position.

    The committees will be chaired by Ali, former Minister of State for Defence Demola Seriki, Wasiu Eshinlokun Samnni and Olajide Jimoh.

    Senator Tinubu rejected the 1999 Constitution, saying it was a legacy of the military government which has never reflected the will of Nigerians.

    She recalled that the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) had consistently called for an overhaul of the constitution to guarantee true federalism, good governance and grassroots participation.

    “As the people entrusted with your mandate in Lagos , I and other members of our great party, the ACN, have made known the party’s position on some issues highlighted above and consistently called for devolution of power, fiscal federalism and creation of state police.”

    Mrs Tinubu, who is a member of the Committe on Constitution Review, said the Southwest public hearing would hold today at the Lagos Airport Hotel, Ikeja.

    Senator Tinubu urged Lagosians to demand the listing of the Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs) in the constitution and conferment of special status on Lagos.

    At the East forum, Senator Ashafa said the 1999 Constitution had been a source of disagreement among stakeholders.

    He said: “The National Assembly is aware that the 1999 Constitution is militarised, hence the decision to exchange ideas and aggregate views of stakeholders to produce a document that will truly reflect the wish of the people.”

  • Sociologists in Education hold conference

    Young academics in the field of Education Sociology will get an opportunity to develop themselves during the 6th Annual Conference of the Association of Sociologists of Education of Nigeria (ASEN) coming up between 16 and 19 of this month at the University of Lagos (UNILAG).

    This is because Chairman of the Local Organising Committee (LOC) for the conference, Dr Soji Oni said there would be a pre-academic conference to address salient issue in the field of scholarly writing on October 16.

    In an interview with The Nation, Oni said this is the first time such a programme will be incorporated into the annual conference of ASEN and assured interested participants of the quality of facilitators that would teach them practical ways to go about publishing their academic articles.

    “This is the first time we are adding a pre-academic conference to expose budding scholars to scholarly writing. It is a way of encouraging masters and PhD students as well as scholars in the early stages of their careers. The workshop will feature different presentations and practical demonstrations. For instance, different journals have different requirements,” he said.

    Meanwhile about 250 participants from faculties of education and sociology departments of universities, polytechnics and colleges of education are expected to attend the conference, which has as theme: “Education and Social Violence in Nigeria”.

    Oni said the LOC has received more than 100 abstracts for the conference, which keynote address will be delivered by Prof Abubakar Momoh of the Department of Political Science, Lagos State University, Ojo.

  • Students hold freshers’ night

    Last Friday, the Association of Political Science Students (APPAS), Imo State University chapter, held its award and freshers’ night. It was a night of glamour as the students and their friends from other departments trooped into the Eastegate hotel, Owerri, the venue of the event.

    The event was graced by MC Egbeigwe, one of the popular comedians on campus, past governor of the association, some members of the Students’ Union Government (SUG). The programme featured activities such as music and dance performances by budding artistes in the university.

    An ex-official of the association, Tobechi Anozie, urged the freshers to be obedient and serious with their studies. He recalled his days 2006 when he graduated from the department, saying it was his hard work and dedication to his studies that earned him Second Class Upper division.

    Awards were presented to students in categories that included Most Vibrant Parliamentarian, Most Diplomatic, Political Oracle, Most Expensive Fresher, Mr APPAS and Miss Fresher among others.

    Jude Ibe won Mr Fresher category while Miss Fresher went Gloria Duru.

    Speaking to CAMPUSLIFE, the president of association, Chinonso Asiegbu, commended other executive members for their commitment to service. The Chief Judge of the faculty of Social Science also thanked all members of the association for being good ambassador of the department.

    Prince Oliver, one of the recipient of the award, thanked his colleagues for finding him worthy of the honour.