Tag: home

  • Home: Sweet home (3)

    Dear Reader, I welcome you specially to this glorious week. MERRY CHRISTMAS! I will be sharing with you this week, being the week to Christmas, Christ, is the reason for the season. It is very important that I ask you these very vital questions: Do you really know why you celebrate Christmas? Where do you stand with Jesus Christ today, as you celebrate His Birth day? It is an important issue to ponder about. May your reason of celebration be Jesus Christ, the reason for the season!

    It is possible for one to be busy and doing everything to make the season glorious, but never know the reason for the celebration. It is also possible to be celebrating, without knowing the One that we are celebrating.

    So many people get together and have fun, but they don’t know the meaning of their celebration. Some people think Christmas is a time to decorate the house, give out beautiful gifts, fill the home with a lot of good things, but in actual fact, they don’t know Who they are celebrating. Year after year, a lot of people celebrate Christmas, eat and drink; so many people don’t remember Jesus Christ, the reason for the season.

    Christmas Means Christ

    Christmas literally means the celebration of Christ. “Christ” is a Greek word and title, which means the “anointed “Messiah.” Based on the words of ancient prophets, the first century Jewish people expected the arrival of the Messiah promised by God, as a great Deliverer of the people.

    Christmas, therefore, is a Christian holiday on December 25 that commemorates the birth of Jesus. Ancient Romans also commemorated Jesus’ birth by marking a division of the calendar still in use today. The years before Jesus’ birth are marked as B.C. (Before Christ), and the years after Jesus’ birth are marked A.D. (Anno Domini, which means, in the year of our Lord).

    Jesus’ biography as recorded by Luke shows how Mary and her husband Joseph left their home in Nazareth and travelled to Bethlehem, to enroll in the census ordered by the Roman emperor, Augustus. Finding no room in inns in the town, they lodged in a manger, where Mary gave birth to Jesus. Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem, the home of the house of King David from which Joseph was descended, fulfilled the prophecy of Isaiah. This is confirmed to Mary by a visit from angels and shepherds. Unlike any other baby, the one born that night in Bethlehem, was unique in all of history. He was not created by a human father and mother. He had a heavenly pre-existence (John 1:1-3, 14). He is God, the SonCreator of the universe (Philippians 2:5-11

    Do you have a personal relationship with Jesus?

    This is an individual thing — a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. He is alive, and wants to know and be known by you. No “religion” can save you, nor can any denomination or church or organization. Where do you stand with Him today, as you celebrate His Birth day? It is time for you to surrender your life to Jesus Christ, if you don’t have a personal relationship with Him.

    This entails confessing your sins and accepting Jesus as your Lord and Saviour. If you are ready for this new birth experience, please say this prayer: Lord Jesus Christ, I come to You today, I am a sinner. I cannot help myself. Forgive me of my sins, cleanse me with Your blood. Deliver me from sin and Satan to serve the living God. I believe You died for me and on the third day, You rose that I might be justified. I accept You as my Lord and Saviour. Make me a child of God today. Thank You for accepting me into your kingdom.

     

    Congratulations, you are now born again! I believe that you will begin to experience the reality of the price that Jesus paid for your sins at Calvary. All-round rest and peace are guaranteed you, in Jesus’ Name!

     

    Call or write, and share your testimonies with me through: E-mail: faithdavid@yahoo.com, faithdavid2013@gmail.com Tel. No: 08141320204; 07026385437; 07094254102

    For more insight, these books authored by me are available at the Dominion Bookstores in all Living Faith Churches and other leading Christian bookstores: Making Marriage Work, Marriage Covenant, Building A Successful Home and Success in Marriage (Co-Authored).

  • Home: Sweet home (2)

    DEAR Reader, last week, I showed you giving and receiving as secrets for enjoying a sweet home. This week, I will yet show you another secret, which is Thanksgiving. What is Thanksgiving? Thanksgiving is the act of giving thanks, appreciation, expression of gratitude to someone for a favour or service done. But in this context, thanksgiving is unto God, for His faithfulness. The Word of God says: It is a good thing to give thanks unto the Lord, and to sing praises unto thy name, O most High. To shew forth thy lovingkindness in the morning, and thy faithfulness every night (Psalm 92:1-2). God has done a lot for you. So, it is good that you give Him thanks. If you don’t give Him thanks, it means you are doing a bad thing. Thanksgiving is a must, for you to keep the joy of the Lord flowing in your home and family. It opens up the gates of God and ushers you into His presence, thereby granting you audience. In the excitement of the season, time must be set aside to appreciate and thank Him for His faithfulness towards you and your family, appreciation for divine protection, divine provision, divine health, unity, security, safety, promotion, etc. These are all the faithfulness of God.

    You need to spend time to think deeply and you will see that you owe God thanks. Think of His mercies and loving-kindness towards you and your family; without Him things could have been worse. Many started the year with you but not too many are alive to see the end of the year! Often times, a lot of us are so bothered about what God has not done, that we tend to forget what He has already done. The Word of God says: Bless the Lord, O my soul: and all that is within me, bless his holy name. Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits (Psalm 103:1-2). Have you enjoyed God’s benefit since the year began? Don’t take God for granted. Give Him thanks.

    The fact that you are still alive is worth thanking God for. The Word of God says: Let everything that hath breath praise the Lord. Praise ye the Lord (Psalm 150:6). Do you still have breath? You owe God thanks. The scriptures says: Let everything that hath breath praise the Lord. It didn’t say, “Let everyone that has car, house, wife, husband or what have you?” You owe God thanks for your breath.

    There are a lot of things to give God thanks for. Has God done anything for you this year? If you think well, you will know that He has done so much. Thanksgiving is a commandment from God as instructed in I Thessalonians 5:18 and Ephesians 5:20. If you would want Him to continue His blessings in your life and family, read the scripture and obey His commandment. When you obey the commandment of thanksgiving, you open the door for great blessings. A life of thanksgiving is a life of sweat-less and tasteful Christian experience. If you settle down to acknowledge Him, He will acknowledge you too.

    Give God thanks for what He did yesterday, and you will compel Him to act today. You don’t have to wait for a reason to thank Him; just thank Him for who He is. When you stop having a reason to thank God, then you have created a reason to be imprisoned. There is always a reason to thank God. The Word of God says: Less the Lord, O my soul: and all that is within me, bless his holy name. Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits: Who forgiveth all thine iniquities; who healeth all thy diseases; Who redeemeth thy life from destruction; who crowneth thee with lovingkindness and tender mercies (Psalm 103:1-4).

    Let the woman who has no child yet, thank God with joy in her heart for even making her a wife to a man. Let the unemployed thank God for the gift of life and health. Let the singles thank God that he or she is a qualified candidate to be married. Let the businessman that is yet to break even at the end of the year stop pointing an accusing finger at God, but thank Him for life and for being able to do business at all. In everything and for everything, give God thanks, while you are still alive! Thanksgiving unto God is better acknowledged, when you are a child of God. You become a child of God when you confess Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour (born again). If you would like to do so, please say this prayer: Lord Jesus Christ, I come to You today, I am a sinner. I cannot help myself. Forgive me of my sins, cleanse me with Your blood. Deliver me from sin and Satan to serve the living God. I believe You died for me and on the third day, You rose that I might be justified. I accept You as my Lord and Saviour. Make me a child of God today. Thank You for accepting me into your kingdom.

    Congratulations, you are now born again! I believe that you will begin to experience the reality of the price that Jesus paid for your sins at Calvary. All-round rest and peace are guaranteed you, in Jesus’ Name!

     

    Call or write, and share your testimonies with me through: E-mail: faithdavid@yahoo.com, faithdavid2013@gmail.com Tel. No: 08141320204; 07026385437; 07094254102

     

    For more insight, these books authored by me are available at the Dominion Bookstores in all Living Faith Churches and other leading Christian bookstores: Making Marriage Work, Marriage Covenant, Building A Successful Home and Success in Marriage (Co-Authored).

  • “Under this bridge is my home until…”

    “Under this bridge is my home until…”

    She is tormented by the scorching sun by the day and the noisy environment of the ever busy Ojuelegba motor park.

    Come day or night, rain or sunshine, she sleeps in the middle of the open under the flyover bridge.

    The pains of not being able to defacate have forced her to live off liquids. She even refused a meal from this reporter for the fear of embarrassing herself in the glaring eyes of the world. At night, she makes do with a small bucket right in same spot. Covering her act from the back and front with a old dirty wrapper she uses to cover herself from the cold of the night and from the mosquitoes that have made her their buffet.

    Another blood-stained cloth was used to cover her badly injured legs from perching flies.

    On the pavement turned bed, where she sits and lays her head, a long stretch of carton separated her from the concrete ground. A handless umbrella and some haggard cups and small ‘Ghana must go bag’ for a pillow laid beside her.

    She is no insane woman. Infact, she spoke so well that anyone would wonder what she was doing in the middle of such a busy place.

    Mrs Rita Obi has chosen to either receive the treatment she sought after when she came to Lagos four months ago or remain under the every busy Ojuelegba flyover bridge where she has made a home for herself right in the centre of the park.

    The plight of the Asaba, Delta State wife and mother of two began four months ago when she came to the Centre of Excellence, not in search of greener pastures, but to get a permanent treatment for her legs.

    She was knocked down by the side of the road in Port Harcourt city by a hit and run driver while answering to the call of nature. Since then, her life has never been the same.

    The Lagos University Teaching Hospital LUTH turned her back because the doctors were on strike.

    Dejected, she opted for her plan b, an elder at Morning Star Gospel Church, Rufai Street, Surulere, Lagos but was not successful.

    And so decided to see a church elder, Morning Star Gospel Church on Rufai Street in Surulere, Lagos, to no avail. The woman shared her experience with The Nation.

    “When I got to LUTH four months ago, I was asked to go back because they were on strike. So I went to the church, but the prophet who used to open the church had gone. I know the church was always open till day break so people can come, stay and pray.

    “The church officials told me the mode of operation had changed and the gates of the church were now being locked at a stipulated time. The elder I knew, I was told went abroad to meet with his wife who has children and now I’m waiting for him because LUTH told me to notify them whenever I get a helper.

    “I saw a police officer who I explained my plight to. He described my situation as a manageable one since I could still use my stick to walk. My intention was to sleep in the premises of the police station at Ayilara but I wasn’t permitted to stay there and that was how I ended up here. But how can I sleep when there is always human and vehicular traffic on both sides of the road day and night.

    I was instructed to go to LUTH from Port Harcourt. I can’t go back because what brought me here hasn’t been achieved. The man I had in mind to see is the leader of the entire church and he travelled but I know him well so I will wait till he returns.

    The 65-year-old woman said her children looked for her once but have stopped coming because things are not easy for them. I am the bread winner of the family. My kids whom i sent to school left school for reasons I can’t understand.

    As expected, hoodlums at Ojuelegba have been making life hell for her. But Mrs Obi has devised a way of dealing with them.

    “Even when they harass me, the situation has become inevitable. Whenever they come with the motive of chasing me away, i call on God to save me. It is a situation I cannot help.”

    She pleaded with the state government to assist her to get to the teaching hospital. If I had the funds, I would have gone there myself.

    Feeding is a problem. A lady came and raised my morale and said she will be bringing me food. But then, she fell sick and I haven’t seen her since then.

    “My prayers have been answered! This is a miracle! Mrs Obi acclaimed, when the lady in question showed up, staring at this reporter and watching and listening keenly to the conversation with her.

    “How can I contact my family to come take me away when i am the breadwinner?” she asks?

    She was formerly an official of defunct African Continental Bank (ACB), Marina. And according to her, she used to live on Zamba Street, Lawanson Street, off Itire road in Surulere.

    Though she is thankful to God for still sparing her life despite her ordeal, Mrs Obi said this of a Good Samaritan.

    “I never used to hold my faeces till now. The lady who brought me salad and mayonnaise this morning will think she has done well but I will end up disgracing myself if I eat it. Eating this delicious meal will prompt me to use the toilet which I can’t so I will wait till darkness comes so that I can eat it when I can defecate as soon as my bowels are moving.” She added giggling.

  • ‘I almost cry each time I come home’

    ‘I almost cry each time I come home’

    Although Nigeria is richly blessed with highly skilled professionals in all fields of human endeavour, its vital sectors are ironically in shambles,  no thanks to the monster of brain drain that has forced many of its best minds to seek greener pastures in other parts of the world. OLUKOREDE YISHAU, who spent time with some Nigerian professionals resident in Botswana, United States and Turkey, reports on factors that are making them flee their fatherland.

    THE air smells good. The road network near superb. Junctions are fitted with streetlights. And the people obey them. Commercial drivers comport themselves well and passengers have little or no cause for altercations. Here electricity supply hardly fails and importers of electricity generating sets look for market elsewhere. Water supply is managed in such a way that the country’s deficiency is well-covered. Welcome to Botswana, the landlocked Southern African country, where some of Nigeria’s best brains have found home.

    In Botswana, many a Nigerian banker, lawyer and academic not only occupies top positions in the corporate and academic world; many top-flight professionals from Nigeria regularly arrive the country to swell the rank of those who have fled from what they see as a system that stifles talents.

    Those who ditch the country for better climes can hardly be blamed. Back home, majority of Nigerians live under the yoke of poverty, diseases and corruption of the endemic proportion, yet their leaders merely pay lip service. And the house, not a few believe, looks set to fall.

    Ask Hilary Inyang, Frank Ibikunle and Tunde Oladiran. They are three of the Nigerians, who have found home in Gaborone, the capital of Botswana. They are all professors at the Botswana International University of Science and Technology (BIUST). The school runs a temporary campus in Gaborone but will later move to Palapye, a town not far from Jwaneng – the home of the richest diamond mine in the world.

    Oladiran, who has been in Botswana for over two decades, toyed with the idea of returning home recently as the vice-chancellor of a state university, but he jettisoned the idea for a post as BIUST’s Head of Mining Energy and Geological Engineering. He was with the University of Botswana at the time. His reason for turning down the offer was that the right things were not put in place. Things, he said, were done haphazardly.

    “At the time I left Nigeria, the naira was sliding down seriously. Before I left Nigeria to the UK for studies, it was almost one naira to one dollar. You could spend naira in London. To see the naira slide down was shocking. I think another thing that added to it was the insecurity at that time and also the provision of utility. When I was at the polytechnic, we were living on the third floor and, of course, there was no water. We used to go close to Asejire to wash clothes and to Oba Dam in UI to fetch water and carry it up the stairs.

    “It didn’t need to continue and having come out, one has seen that life can be better. In Botswana, the system works. The country has zero tolerance for corruption. Everything works for good. I have always returned home, even though sometimes distressful because of water, road and electricity. Each time I come to Ibadan, not only Ibadan, Nigeria generally, I almost cry,” he said.

    Like Oladiran, Inyang, who is the Vice-Chancellor of the BIUST, was caught by the home bug after staying in the US for over 30 years. He returned to Nigeria as the President of the African University of Science and Technology (AUST) in Abuja. But, he found the environment stifling and returned to the US. Botswana saw the good in this egg-head, who has helped America and other countries in the area of environmental engineering and climate change and stopped him from taking a job at the University of China.

    Inyang, who was a finalist for the United Nations Under-Secretary, told The Nation: “Circumstances in Nigeria were not conducive. Botswana already leads in African governance. There is a history of good governance there but that has to translate to advances in science and technology. In Botswana, the economy is diversified. They are embarking on an economic diversification drive. And they have picked me as the person to help the country push that forward through. That is how to build African intellectual systems. There must be a translation from research to entrepreneurship.

    “For example, in Botswana I will be setting up with a budget I will get next year from that government. There will be entrepreneurship support centres in every local government area; we call them districts there and use those outreach centres to infuse knowledge into local companies. I plan to engage with banks to give loans to support initiatives but those companies must get certification as to whether they received the training and are able to attend most of the new technology briefings that they will be given at the local level. We could have done this in Nigeria, but the seriousness of Nigerian agencies is in doubt.

    “They don’t spend that much time here. I was a VC here. So, I know what I am talking about. They now want to be like politicians. They keep quiet about the ills of society. They are afraid. Universities since time immemorial have been the place where you have the great thinkers and lions of society who speak out against the ills of society without fear of favour. From the times of Galileo Galilei who said the world was not flat and many others. This is why I resigned from my position as VC here and went to America.

    “The 60s were the age of African political independence. What should have followed should have been an age of intellectual growth and renaissance but that never happened. What followed was a bunch of coups that never allowed creativity and innovation to take root in Africa. So for that reason, Africa has become dependent on Europe and America for so many things, while the Asians have moved on. Universities have to be the doyens of social thought; that is why in most countries they have dictatorships, intellectuals and journalists are the ones they go to first. But here it is not. These are problems that must be corrected.”

    Until early this year, Ibikunle was a lecturer at the privately-owned Covenant University, Ota, Ogun State. BIUST has ‘hijacked’ him with superb condition of service, including relocating his family and they are having it good. Compared to many of his colleagues in government-owned universities, Ibikunle was well paid by world-class Covenant University, the number one private university in Nigeria. But, what Botswana offered him through BIUST was too good to be resisted.

    But, Botswana is not the only countries where Nigerians have found home away from home because of what they describe as a failed system. The United States, Canada, South Africa, England and Turkey also feature in this realm. Nigerian scientists and other professionals regularly troop out of the country to take up abode elsewhere.

    Scary statistics, grave implications

    The effects of brain drain on Nigeria’s vital sectors are too disturbing to ignore, for Nigeria’s loss is other countries’ gain. The worst hit is Nigeria’s health sector, now in a parlous state. According to a report by the Partnership for Transforming Health Systems II (PATHS2), 227 medics trained in Nigeria left the country in 2012. The same report also said 637 Nigerian doctors left the country in 2010 and 3,552 in 2007, which was the peak period. One of the debilitating consequences of this ugly trend is paucity of medical professionals to man the country’s hospitals. The president of the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), Dr. Osahon Enabulele, said of the 71,740 medical doctors registered with the Medical and Dental Council, only 27,000 are practising in Nigeria. The result is that only 40 doctors serve 100,000 Nigerians. This is against the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommendation of 2.3 doctors, nurses and midwives per 1,000 people as minimum threshold of health worker density.

    According to the WHO representative in Nigeria, Dr Rui Vaz Gama, a recent assessment made by the global health body revealed that “36 countries in the African region (including Nigeria) have shortages estimated at 820,000 doctors, nurses and midwives.” Yet, at least 40,000 Nigerian medical doctors are reportedly practising in the United States.

    Former US Ambassador to Nigeria, Walter Carrington, said over three million Nigerians live and work in the US and Canada alone. Instructively too, a Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) report indicates that 215,000 medical consultants in Britain are Nigerians. Many of them got qualified there and never bothered to return home. It is believed that if Nigerian doctors in the UK or Canada or United States return home en masse, the healthcare system in those countries may collapse.

    The implication of the brain drain, especially concerning doctors, is also captured by a recent NMA projection, which states that before the end of this year, no fewer than 5,000 Nigerians will seek medical attention in countries with developed medical services. It added that Nigeria loses about N125 billion annually to capital flight as a result of patients’ treatment cost overseas, among other things.

    But, it is not only a parlous health sector that Nigeria has to show for the monster of brain drain bedevilling it. Also in a bad shape are the country’s universities, which are now reeling under the pangs of paucity of good hands, among other afflictions. While many first-rate universities abroad are brimming with celebrated professors of Nigerian origin, universities back home are lacking in top-level manpower and other things that make universities tick. Going by a recent article by the Vice-Chancellor of the Plateau State University, Prof. Nenfort Gomwalk, 70 per cent of lecturers in the country’s public universities are assistant lecturers with only master degrees. Most of them, the VC said, have spent an average of 10-15 years pursuing their PhDs without success.

    Another grim picture of the situation in the sector was painted by the findings of an 11-man committee on Needs Assessment of Nigerian Public Universities. The report, which was submitted to the former Minister of Education, Prof. Ruqayyatu Ahmed Rufa’i, in 2012, said the universities have only 37,504 lecturers compared to 77,511 non-teaching staff employed on full-term basis. That is not all. According to the report, only 43 per cent of the inadequate number of academics has the requisite qualification for teaching, which is PhD, leaving a majority of the teaching personnel as junior staff or assistant lecturers. The net result is over-bloated student-lecturer ratio, as high as 1:100 in many universities compared with 1:4 in Harvard University and 1:3 in Cambridge University.

    This has kept tongues wagging. One of those who believe brain drain, corruption and insecurity are damaging the country is Carrington. He said: “Over three million Nigerians live and work in the United States and Canada, to say nothing of the large numbers in the United Kingdom. They excel in their contributions to all sectors of our society. I have said many times to American audiences that I regard Nigerians as the most accomplished immigrant group in the United States. What made Nigeria the country that I looked up to for so long was the fact that it produced some of the most educated, most talented black people to be found anywhere on earth.

    “My country and others around the world profit from Nigeria’s greatest export her accomplished people. I often ask Nigerians who are legally in the US why they remain. The two major impediments to going back which they cite are their fears of the omni-presence of corruption and the growing absence of security.”

    Carrington’s stand may make more sense with the scary experience of Prof. Victor Ibeanusi, Dean of School of Environment, Florida Agriculture and Mechanical University, United States. His resolve to return home to help from time to time has been hampered by an incident during a visit to Abuja. During one of his visits, armed robbers stormed his hotel room and were almost manhandling him before they were distracted by voices and hurried out of his room. Appraising the situation, Oladiran said insecurity and absence of basic amenities would keep professionals abroad, adding that unless poor conditions of service and living were addressed, the country would continue to lose many of its best brains to better climes.

    According to Dr Elizabeth Rasekola, who is the President of the African-Carribean Consortium on Science and Technology, Nigeria ought to be better than it is. She added that the situation of things in the country is what is encouraging the menace of brain drain. Rasekola said the country should have managed its oil resources to the advantage of its people.

    She said: “What is disappointing is what Nigeria has done with its oil resources. Malaysia’s oil is owned and controlled by the people and government. They even export oil and have assets abroad. Malaysia gave the oil giants only five years to prospect and thereafter ensured complete transfer of technology and others. They now own the oil 100 per cent. Nigeria has not been able to do that. It is a shame. I worked for Petronas for two years and I cried a lot of the time because NNPC was supposed to be doing the things Petronas, which is owned by Malaysia, was doing. They own assets outside Malaysia. They own assets in South Africa. What does NNPC own outside Nigeria? They haven’t even invested enough in Nigeria. Not only has our inability to manage this resource to the benefit of the people encouraged brain drain, it has totally demoralised the development of Nigeria beyond terms you can quantify. The damage has been colossus.”

    Experts give conditions

    Some professionals in the Diaspora have said for them to return home or for more professionals not to join the bandwagon, basic amenities such as roads, electricity and insecurity should be tackled. They also want corruption curbed. A WHO report once rated Nigeria 191st of 192 countries with the world’s un-safest roads. A committee set up by the Federal Government to realise a United Nation’s mandate of reducing the high number of deaths recorded on Nigerian roads, said auto crashes kill 162 deaths per 100,000, forcing the Health Minister, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, to say auto crashes kill more people in Nigeria than diseases. This cannot be otherwise given the fact that only about 15 per cent of the country’s over 160,000 kilometres of secondary and tertiary roads is paved and motorable.

    Another headache Nigerian professionals want addressed is electricity supply in the country, which is currently nothing to write home about. Despite the huge investment on power generation in the last decade, the country has been unable to generate up to 5,000 megawatts of electricity when smaller countries generate far more and are self-sufficient. The Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) last Wednesday said the country’s power generation now hovers between 3,800 mega watts and 4,000 mega watts. Significantly, if power projects under various stages of completion are completed and operational, power generation, according to experts, will only reach about 10,000 MW.

    The Minister of Power, Prof. Chinedu Nebo, said the country needs about 200,000 MW before it can realise its dream of adequate power supply. The privatisation of the Distribution Companies (DISCOs) may not yield immediate changes. For now, they can only distribute the power generated by the TCN. The implication of this is that Nigerians have had to generate their own electricity. At the last count, the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) said no fewer than 60 million Nigerians own power generating sets, requiring more than N1.56 trillion to fuel them yearly.

    Corruption, according to Nigerians in the Diaspora, is another challenge the country has to surmount. A Tribune-Review investigations show that the country’s money is regularly stolen through multinational banks into secret accounts and shell companies. An estimated $1 trillion gets stolen from developing countries, including Nigeria, in a typical year, according to Global Financial Integrity, a Washington-based non-profit organisation that traces illicit money. Raymond Baker, director of Global Financial Integrity, said: “Places such as Nigeria represent the ugliest chapter in global affairs since slavery.” Unfortunately, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) have been unable to make the desired changes, as the war against sleaze has been specious and half-hearted.

    The worsening insecurity and corruption were also the reasons the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Global Competitive Report 2012-2013 ranked the country 134th in the world only 10 countries were worse off. The WEF warned that Nigeria’s economic situation remained grim.

    The report finds out that the environment does not support competitive economy. Reasons for slamming Nigeria with this unfavourable report: corruption, government inefficiencies, worsening insecurity, poor infrastructure and so on.

    The WEF said: “The institutional environment does not support a competitive economy because of concerns about the protection of property rights, ethics and corruption, undue influence, and government inefficiencies. The security situation in the country continues to be dire and has worsened since last year (134th). Additionally, Nigeria receives poor assessments for its infrastructure (130th) as well as its health and primary education levels (142nd). Furthermore, the country is not harnessing the latest technologies for productivity enhancements, as demonstrated by its low rates of ICT penetration.”

    Nigeria lags behind some of the countries on the continent, where its professionals are finding new homes such as South Africa, Botswana, Kenya and Ghana, which made an impressive record moving up 11 places to 103rd position. South Africa is ranked 52nd this year, remaining the highest-ranked country in sub-Saharan Africa and the third-placed among the BRICS economies.

    The 10 ten spots on the report remain dominated by countries outside the continent where Nigerian professionals are running to in large droves such as Switzerland, Finland, Sweden, the Netherlands, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States. To add salt to injury, the country has been cash-strapped for some time now, reducing the cash available to government to spend improving basic amenities such as roads and insecurity, as represented by Boko Haram in the North and other social vices in other parts of the country.

    The Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, told a bewildered nation recently that the country may soon be reeling from cash crunch and may be unable to pay salaries. The monthly allocations to the three tiers of government from the Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FACC) have been in bad shape for some time now. It got so bad that the FAAC could not meet its obligation to state governments and many of them had to resort to borrowing or dipping their hands in reserves to pay salaries and do other things. Only N3.893 trillion was received as gross revenue in the first six months of 2013, as against the projected revenue of N4.215 trillion for the period, leaving a shortfall of N321.73 billion.

    A FAAC document puts the monthly budgeted gross federally collected revenue for the country at N702.54 billion, which it planned to realise from three sources mineral revenue, N465.057 billion; non-mineral revenue, N158.711billion and value added tax, N78.77 billion. This is the breakdown of the N3.893 trillion earned for the first half of this year: January, N651.26 billion; February, N571.7 billion; and March, N595.71 billion. In April, May and June, revenue receipts by the country were N621.07 billion, N590.77billion and N863.02 billion. It is, therefore, apparent that the country recorded significant revenue drop between January and May. Other months, except June, also witnessed a revenue shortfall. January, N51.28 billion; February, N130.84 billion; March, N106.84 billion, April, N81.47 billion and May, N111.77 billion.

    There was a surplus of N160.48 billion in June as the country’s revenue receipts of N863.02 billion exceeded the budgeted N702.54 billion. As a result of the grim financial outlook, experts believe that the country may rake in about N7.78 trillion for the fiscal year, instead of N8.43 trillion it projected. So, chances of concentrating efforts on capital projects are slim.

    Why efforts to reverse the trend have failed

    Four years ago, the Federal Government tried to take the advantage of the global meltdown to get Nigerian professionals back home. It worked with the African Diaspora Initiative (ADI). ADI’s Director-General, David Okoror, estimated that 7,500 Nigerians returned to work in the financial, telecoms and information technology industries in a period of seven years. The founder of WazobiaJobs.com, a recruitment portal for West Africa, Ade Odutola, guessed that 10,000 skilled Nigerians returned because of meltdown.

    Years before the meltdown, the Directorate of Technical Cooperation in Africa tried to encourage brain gain. The DTCA was established in 2001 to sensitise experts in the diaspora to look back into Africa. Its Director-General, Suleiman Shuaibu, said this was to stop a situation where Africa, though blessed with some of the best brains, is the least developed continent in the world.

    The way things stand, with no seriousness on the part of government to address insecurity, corruption, absence of basic amenities and lack of better work incentives, observers insist that getting back the professionals abroad and stopping new ones from going overseas will remain a dream. And not a few will continue to look for countries with better incentives, orderliness and sense of belonging, which observers say Nigeria is not prepared to provide.

    In an article, Dr. Jide Adelugba, Consultant Psychiatrist at the Regional Psychiatric Centre (Prairies), Canada, said: “The situation of everyday living in Nigeria needs no further documentation; we all know that it is very bad when compared with that of advanced countries of Western Europe and North America…The root cause of brain drain in Nigeria lies with our successive leaderships and governments that have demonstrated, very convincingly, that the interests of Nigeria and its citizens were never their priority. They relentlessly pursued their own agenda.”

    He added that the various governments that have ruled the developing nations of Africa should be blamed. “Those governments, through their ineptitude and lack of vision, have turned their populations with productive capacities to willing sophisticated slaves in foreign lands. It is not in the interest of developing nations that this trend should continue unabated. The idea of free, trade globalisation and free movement of labour would find new meanings with the apologists of brain drain. For the Nigerian people, the impact of brain drain is too costly and should no longer be ignored,” he said.

    Chukwu, however, said Nigeria’s continued loss of trained professionals to countries with better work incentives was the result of globalisation. He said: “Some of our Nigerian brothers and sisters trained by Nigerian money are outside, but we can get them back, if we can pay for their services.” But, since paying for their services goes beyond just cash and the country seems handicapped to address other needs, the minister’s wishes are not horses and beggars cannot ride. And the question remains: Who is the next ‘Andrew’ checking out?

     

  • Home support mounts for Jonathan

    Home support mounts for Jonathan

    As expected, people are now assembling, gathering themselves into groups. Their aim: To drum support for President Goodluck Jonathan’s reelection in 2015.

    The groups are insisting that the Otuoke-born President in Ogbia Local Government Area, Bayelsa State, must fight to retain the juiciest seat in Aso Rock beyond 2015.

    Curiously, the Jonathan-must-contest groups appear to have chosen Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, capital as their base of operation. They are holding meetings and sweating profusely to convince people on why Jonathan whose administration is fraught with challenges should be allowed a second term.

    One of the groups, Nigerian Youth Project for Goodluck Jonathan (NYP) 2015 recently met at the Ijaw House, Yenagoa. The state Coordinator of the group, Mr. Justice Alakiri, said the forum was formed to unite the youths across the country to support Jonathan.

    “There are 101 reasons why Jonathan should come back as the President. Despite existing challenges since he assumed office, he was able to perform well”, he said.

    He claimed that Jonathan was the President to have ruled the country. He called for a united Nigeria and said there was no need for division ahead 2015.

    Alakiri delved into some of the controversies facing Jonathan’s administration. According to him, the National Conference proposed by the President was a good development. “It is an avenue to discuss ethnic differences and challenges facing us and to work for solution”, he said.

    He dwelled on the crisis rocking the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), an expected Jonathan’s platform for 2015. But he consoled his members that “there is one PDP”.

    “There is no other party known as the new PDP. There is only one party which is the PDP. It is the best party that can produce the right result for this country”, he claimed.

    The Deputy Director-General, NYP, Alhaji Aliu Suleiman, named uniting the youths across the country and drumming support for Jonathan as the two objectives of the group.

    “We have seen Jonathan’s work and all the youths should give him maximum support and allow him to come back for a second term. Even the north are in support of him”, he begged.

    Before the NYP’s gathering, another group consisting mainly of Jonathan’s kinsmen had begun to visit notable persons in the state to garner support for their kinsman.

    Wari-to-Wari (House-to-House) for Jonathan 2015 insisted that Jonathan had done a lot to merit a second term. Its Director-General, Mr. Ogidi Benjamin, said the aim of the group was to mobilise 60 per cent of Nigerian youths for Jonathan.

    While visiting the Deputy Majority Leader of the state House of Assembly, Mr. Tonye Esanah, in Yenagoa, Benjamin said Jonathan had done well through the Subsidy Reinvestment Programme (SURE-P), scholarships to indigent students, establishing new universities and building schools for Almajaris in the north.

    But, Esanah used the opportunity to deride the north and said no region or zone had the monopoly of power in the country. He reflected on the claims by Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu that Jonathan signed a single-term pact with the governors and raised some posers.

    He said: “Does power belong to one ethnic group in this country if we consider ourselves as brothers and sisters? Do we see that just one part of this country has the sole right to rule this country? If we are operating a constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the law said that any other law that contradicts the constitution remains inconsistent, can a gentleman agreement supersede the Nigerian constitution?

    “Can a party agreement supersede the Nigerian constitution? Aliyu should produce a document signed by Jonathan containing an agreement that he should not come back for a second term. If he produces that we will all will campaign against Jonathan.

    “I know Jonathan so well that if he had gone into such agreement and signed a document, he would have honoured it. But do you know what we discovered, governors within themselves signed and gave him one tenure.

    “But some of those governors are no more governors. Some of them are in the Senate now. Since those governors decided to give him one tenure, other governors now can still come and decide to give him another tenure.”

    His logic attracted applauses from members of the group. But he was not doe yet. He insisted that a single term was not enough for any President to turn the fortunes of the country around considering the rot that had existed in the state for over 50 years.

    “Are we thinking that it is going to be automatic to turn round the fortunes of this country for four years? How can Nigerians think that Jonathan will turn round the fortunes of the country under four years. We should try him for another four years?” He queried.

    He added: “Power solely comes from God. In Bayelsa, if it is by population, a man from Otuoke wouldn’t have won any election. But the wisdom of God, a man from a small community was chosen to lead this country.

    “We have been so neglected for several years and God appointed a man from Otuoke to rule this country. This is a region that has been feeding this country and you are saying that a man from such place is not worthy to be our President. It is not fair.”

     

  • Onazi suffers home loss

    Onazi suffers home loss

    Ogenyi Onazi’s Lazio dominated the first half, but were punished by two Genoa goals for a shock 2-0 result in Rome yesterday.

    Genoa could have been a goal down early,but Daniele Portanova crucially charged down a Miroslav Klose effort in the opening five minutes.

    Moments later,Mattia Perin needed a sensational save to deny Klose’s curling header after great work down the left from Bruno Pereirinha.

    First Klose, and then Candreva also had chances to put the home side ahead, but couldn’t as the half ended goalless.

    Genoa had the chance to take the lead straight after the restart when Gilardino sprung the offside trap to chest down a Biondini cross, but Federico Marchetti was quick to close him down.

    It was still a surprise that Genoa broke the deadlock. Kucka burst past Pedro Cavanda on a Fetfatzidis through ball down the left and smashed his finish across Marchetti from a very tight angle after 59 minutes.

    Then with 70 minutes played, Ederson went on a mazy run until his shot was charged down at the near post, but Michael Ciani held out an arm to deflect away a pass in the box for an inevitable penalty.

    Gilardino fired his spot-kick into the roof of the net to double Genoa’s lead.

    Lazio poured forward, leaving gaps at the back and Fetfatzidis skimmed the upright from distance, as Genoa were entirely happy to sit on their lead and wait for counter-attacks.

  • At  home amid the chaos

    At home amid the chaos

    LESS than a week after collecting my bags at the domestic terminal at Lagos Murtala Muhammed International Airport, I have come to fully accept that all the warnings and cautionary tales about this chaotic city were little more than old wives’ tales and urban legend.

    Yes, the traffic and roads are insane. The people are loud and aggressive. The nights can certainly get sketchy. And most importantly, it contains pockets of poverty that strain the mind’s ability to comprehend.

    Lagos faces a future fraught with numerous challenges, but any city has its woes, and at its heart, Lagos is like other metropolises in that it is a place where millions of hopeful people flock in order to pay huge amounts of money to live in small, often rundown homes in exchange for the sheer privilege of being there.

    Clearly there’s a reason why we urban-dwellers make that decision, despite all the difficulties and downsides of living in a densely-populated environment that thinks nothing of chewing up and spitting out a person who doesn’t have the talent, means and luck it takes to survive there.

    Some of these reasons are largely based on atmosphere and superficial concerns. Parisians love their city for its beauty, high art and refinement. In Tokyo it’s the brash futurism juxtaposed against the soothing peace of the Japanese approach to life. Romans’ strongest amour is reserved for their country’s spectacular food.

    As for Lagos, part of what draws thousands of new residents to the city every week is its dynamic culture, the spirit of its people and the excitement of its raucous atmosphere, parties and commerce.

    But in Lagos, as in every of the world’s other capital cities, the real draw is the sense that anything is possible — a strong, passionate hope and drive to succeed that persists even among many of its most downtrodden citizens.

     

    Big dreams

    While it is exceedingly difficult to come up from nothing in this teeming city on the Atlantic, every person who makes the decision to pack up their lives and start anew in Lagos must truly believe that they have the capacity to do just that. Given how intimidating this town can seem even to a short-term visitor with sufficient means, it must be terrifying to move here from a small rural village in Borno State or the Republic of Niger with little more than the clothes on your back.

    Yet new success stories are told every day, even as millions of people starve, flounder and struggle to feed their families. In every megalopolis around the globe, it’s that dream of reaching epic heights that drives people to fight through the soul-crushing lows.

    There’s a famous saying about my hometown of New York City that “if you can make it there, you can make it anywhere.” It’s an apt slogan for the Big Apple, the place where big dreamers go in America, but I believe that it should be passed on to Lagos.

    Lagosians, as I’ve been told countless times since I arrived here this past weekend, often drive upwards of three or four hours each way in exasperating go-slows just to get to and from work. And to top it off, they seem to work longer hours than the people of any other city I’ve visited. It’s why the clubs only really start hopping around 1 a.m. They do what New Yorkers do, only they’ve taken it a step further, and I like where they’ve landed.

    Lagos to me is a heaving, collective organ of striving and selling and enjoying and lamenting. At the same time, it’s an exciting place to visit and explore, and a gateway to the horrors of concentrated urbanity. It’s New York in Africa, and that’s a high compliment coming from a Manhattanite.

     

    The Lagosians

    The people of Lagos will be what I remember best upon my return to the U.S., I’m convinced of it. Dissertations have probably been written by previous Western visitors about how welcoming and personable and lovely people are across Nigeria. These are well-known facts among those who have been here.

    What impresses me most about Lagosians is how much I see myself reflected in them. New York has always seemed like the one place in the world where a fast-talking, loud, aggravating person like myself could fit into the social order, or lack thereof.

    But what blew me away in my interactions with Lagosians is that they are all those things, only magnified. Much as Lagos is bigger, dirtier and more hectic than New York, in my experience, the people of Lagos are often much more interesting, outspoken and more fun than my friends and I tend to be. You very nearly have to assault them if you want to pay the bill, no matter how many Gulders everyone has had, and their energy seemingly knows no limit.

    They read newspapers, listen to the radio and watch movies from Nigeria, America, England and beyond, absorbing a wider range of knowledge than many insular New Yorkers ever do.

    They dance better, they know how to show people a good time, and they want to be your friend the moment you get past their hardened shells, which can be thicker than those of most New Yorkers, but fall away much quicker. Lagosians laugh, scream and cry louder than we do, and they drive in a manner that would have our cabbies handing their taxi medallions in out of pure shame.

    At the same time, much like New Yorkers, they sometimes get a bad rap among their disapproving fellow countrymen for being rude, manic, overly obsessed with money and generally unpleasant. Those negative impressions should be struck from the record in regards to both cities, because though we learn to put up barriers to maintain our sanity in the face of so much humanity, both New Yorkers and Lagosians are just fronting, and that charade of toughness helps us retain our exuberant essence.

     

    The dilemma of progress

    Looking back on the defining moments of my time in Lagos as my journey here nears its unfortunate end, the first things that come to mind are fried croaker with jollof rice and plantains; dancing at Fela Kuti’s shrine and the endless hours spent laughing with new local friends as they manoeuvred their cars through the city’s congested streets.

    But the experiences of one eye-opening day persist in my memory as well, and they are not easily ignored considering how destructive the trend they represent is to the spirit of Lagos, and the ways they clearly illustrate the challenges that lie ahead for the city, its government and its residents.

    Thursday is the day that I began to see clearly why Lagos must change in order for it to respect its people, its heritage and its character.

    My photographer and friend Cameron Barnes and I started the day by visiting the Oto-Ilogbo Extension slum of mainland Lagos, where we found ourselves face-to-face with the reality of a situation that as Americans had always previously existed for us only as a concept and a smattering of pictures and news stories.

    We saw with our own eyes what the poorest Lagosians deal with on a day-to-day basis, walked the trash-strewn streets, spoke with folks who call it home, stood atop the mound where they relieve themselves in full view of their neighbours and friends. We were stunned, saddened and humbled to our cores, and neither of us will ever forget our walk through Oto-Ilogbo.

    But we had to continue to work, and from there, we trekked to Victoria Island for an interview with some of the city’s well-off professionals, young people who thought nothing of spending $25 on a bowl of pasta with pesto. It was a contrast so stark it has stuck with us to this moment, and it mirrors the troublesome wealth divide between much of Africa and the West.

    But this is a story about Lagos and Nigeria, not about international economic forces, which clearly have done next to nothing to help the situation. The wide dichotomy between these two extreme results of modern capitalism’s excesses recalled the myriad news reports I’ve read on corruption and the yawning income gap between the rich few and the impoverished many in Nigeria.

     

    Government’s role

    The need to find a workable situation to the global slum travesty will only grow in coming years, as the United Nations reported in 2003 that nearly a billion people already lived in slums worldwide, and that a third of the world’s population will reside in them by the mid-2030s.

    And yet it appears that Nigeria’s local governments have chosen a slash-burn-redevelop approach to their urban slums. As Barnes and I learned in both Oto-Ilogbo and Mpape, Abuja – which have been targeted for demolition, but have so far escaped that fate – and hundreds of thousands people from Lagos communities from Bar Beach to Badia East know all too well, local governors are more interested in tearing down slums, kicking out their residents and building shiny office buildings and hotels than working with slum-dwellers to find workable solutions.

    The blanket arguments against the slum-dwellers are many and varied: they’re squatters, they’re criminals, they don’t own their land, they shouldn’t be subjected to such horrendous living conditions.

    But in the end, even if many of them were able to be fit neatly into one derisive box or another, the denizens of these marginalised communities are still humans, and they deserve some form of dignity and compensation, if their lives are to be uprooted in the name of making millions for developers and appeasing the wealthy.

    It’s a problem that’s playing out around the world, but if Lagos is to become a world-class city, as its leaders have said they intend for it to be, it needs to find a way to deal with its ballooning slum problem over the coming years, or it will fall victim to its own excesses, as the people of Oto-Ilogbo did long ago.

    Just as Lagos is messy, multi-faceted and impossible to define, so too are my thoughts as I take stock of this mind- and world-expanding trip that I’ve been given the privilege to take part in by the International Center for Journalists, International Press Centre and U.S. State Department.

    There’s no one way to sum up my impressions of Lagos, just as there are so many different versions of the city within its expansive environs.

    Lagos is a place with wonderful qualities and with nearly intractable problems, but as can also sometimes be necessary in the course of human relationships, I have learned to love it in spite of itself.

  • Monarch donates to homes

    Monarch donates to homes

    The Ojora of Ijoraland, Oba Abdul Fatai Oyeyinka Aromire has donated to motherless and old people’s home in Lagos.

    The monarch made the donations as part of activities marking his 19th anniversary of the ascension of office. He donated bags of rice, baby materials, pampers, bicycles, food flasks, clothes and among others.

    On why he chose to celebrate his anniversary by donating to motherless homes and the old people’s home, Oba Oyegbemi said it was his way of appreciating what God has done in his life.

    “This is my little way of thanking God for His blessings on me since assumption of office as Oba. My major problem is that all the wealthy people in the country are not doing what they are supposed to do in assisting the less-privileged peopele. So, what I am doing is an act of thanking my God for His help,” he said.

    The Oba, along with his council of chiefs, was received by the Matron of the Nigeria Red Cross Society Motherless Home, Mrs Juliana Obanife who, with the state’s secretary of the association, Mrs Nwike Ijeoma urged Nigerians to imbibe the spirit of giving.

    “The little we can do to help the children we should do because some of them may become leaders tomorrow. There is nothing too much or too small in assisting the less-privileged. I urge all to cultivate the habit of giving to the poor in the society,” he said.

    The traditional ruler also advised the government and the well-to-do in the society to always help the old people and the less-privileged people.

    “My advice to the government and businessmen is that they should take care of these old people and the motherless,” he said.

    The monarch also urged government to consult traditional rulers while carrying out developmental projects in the country.

    “Let us go back to square one. In years past, before the government will do anything, they will seek the advice of traditional leaders because we are the ones at the grassroots. We are very close to the people and we know how to talk to our people concerning any issue. Let the government see traditional rulers as partners,” he said.

     

  • I want to go home, ailing Taraba governor tells doctors

    I want to go home, ailing Taraba governor tells doctors

    After about eight months in German and United States hospitals, ailing Taraba State Governor Danbaba Danfulani Suntai, is eager to return home.

    The governor, who survived an air crash in Yola, the Adamawa State capital, last October – he was the pilot – has told his doctors to allow him return home, Taraba State officials who visited him said yesterday. They spoke to our reporter in Jalingo.

    Suntai sustained multiple injuries, and was initially flown to Germany from where he was taken to the United States.

    The officials, however, added that doctors, particularly the physiotherapist handling Suntai, advised that it would be unwise to fly him back now. They urged him to stay a little more and get “full recovery” before returning to continue with his job.

    They also reportedly advised against receiving too many visitors who are also warned against discussing politics with him.

    It was gathered that contrary to claims, the ailing governor was never taken to the John Hopkins University Hospital in the United States. Suntai has been receiving physiotherapy/treatment at a clinic residence in New York since leaving the German Hospital in Hannover in March.

    The Chief Medical Director (CMD) of Taraba State Specialist Hospital, who is also the governor’s physician, Prof. Zakari Yusuf Aliyu, had suggested that Suntai be evacuated from the German hospital to the U.S.’ John Hopkins because, according to him, it has better medical gadgets to treat the governor’s ailments.

    Aliyu said Suntai was suffering from “spinal cord persistent” and “closed head injury” which made him have “expressive and receptive alphasia”.

    A member of the Taraba State House of Assembly and a friend to the Suntai family, Hon. Mark Useni, told The Nation that Suntai had recovered and was looking good when he was with him a few days ago.

    “The governor has recovered and even said he is tired of the environment there. His return is only being delayed on the advice of his doctors,” Useni said.

    Useni, along with a former Deputy Speaker of the Taraba Assembly, Hon. Abel Peter Diah, and the Commissioner for Water Resources, Mr. Rebo Usman, who visited the ailing governor in New York, returned at the weekend.

    On whether the governor could walk, read and talk, Useni said: “I cannot lie to you. We spent a long time with the governor, chatting. When we went outside and took photographs with him, he suggested that we should go to the Green House to conclude our discussions.

    “While we were with him (Suntai), the Venezuelan Ambassador to Nigeria called him and they had a lengthy discussion on the telephone. If the governor is not well, what would he be telling the Venezuelan ambassador on the telephone for such a long time?

    “Yet, while we were still with the governor, the chairman of the Taraba Muslim Pilgrim Board also called from Nigeria and they spoke,” Useni said.

    Useni added that as they were chatting with the governor, a House of Representatives member representing Bali/Gassol Federal Constituency, Hon. Haruna Manu, also joined and took photographs with him.

    Hon. Abel Peter Diah said their visit to Suntai was not official.

    “When I saw the governor walking and talking well with us, I said in my heart that human beings are wicked – this is a man they are saying he is in a vegetable state.

    “When we arrived, we were waiting for him on the ground floor. He came down from an elevator.

    “He greeted all of us by name and even asked about those at home. So, I began to wonder – is this a dream?

    “You wouldn’t believe that when we were discussing, he (Suntai) told us not to bother about what people say about him.”

    Acting Governor Alhaji Garba Umar, who also recently saw his boss in the United States, said his condition had improved so fast, contrary to what he (Umar) was told at home by Suntai’s opponents.

    Garba said on BBC Hausa News service at the weekend, that he supported that Suntai should continue to stay in the United States for “complete recovery”.

    It was gathered that Suntai’s residence in his village, Bali, has been renovated.

    Besides, there are dresses emblazoned with the governor’s portrait – all in anticipation of his arrival.

    It was gathered that Suntai has not been told that former Speaker Istifanus Haruna Gbana, his then deputy, and the majority leader, had been impeached.

    Diah said even when the governor sought to know whether the House of Assembly under their leadership was cordial with his deputy (Garba Umar), he just answered in the affirmative –that “all is well”.

    Suntai has also not been told that National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, has set up a party panel to probe his health and office, and the matter and other sundry litigations against his prolong absence were in court.

    Senator Emmanuel Bwacha (Taraba South) also spoke to The Nation on telephone from New York at the weekend while with Suntai.

    Bwacha said he was surprised that Suntai’s opponents were not God-fearing, in spite of God’s wonders on the Taraba governor.

    “Let anyone say whatever he or she wants (on the governor’s health). I am with the governor now, but I don’t want to react to what people say because when they misinform the public and you are trying to say the true things, they say you are playing politics.

    “But may God forgive them so that they can repent. They will soon see the governor returning hale and hearty,” Bwacha added.

     

  • Creating business empire from home

    Ever heard of backyard entrepreneurship? No. Then you are behind time. Backyard enterpreneur-ship is thriving. To be in the business, all you need do is to convert that space in your backyard into a farm. Many, who are into it, are making their millions quietly and boosting the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    Prince Arinze Onebunne, Chief Executive Jovana Farms, said backyard small-scale enterprises have enormous capacity to touch lives.

    There are inspiring and interesting accounts of backyard entrepreneurs, who have achieved tremendous financial success from this relatively low-profile venture. Many of these small businesses have emerged because of the country’s sluggish economy that has compelled the unemployed to look inwards.

    If one has any unused land at the backyard, the Jovana Farms chief said this is an opportunity to start a small business. From mushroom farming to raising guinea pigs, all these are passive money spinners. The resourceful entrepreneur noted that everything needed by people can be provided by backyard entrepreneurs. He said he and his team of farmers are ready to help people start up businesses within their backyards.

    Noting that there was a gap in the food system, he said the demand for vegetables in cities is huge and growing as fast as the urban population. Besides, he said one can start raising rabbits for profits. Most rabbits are raised for meat or pets, while others are raised for research. Rabbits have many important vitamins and minerals, such as vitamin B that provides energy and zinc that is good for the immune system and iron, which carries oxygen through the blood.

    He said one needs just about N70,000 to set up a micro rabbits business. A little care, proper planning and timely technical advice can bring amazing results for any farmer, he said. However, because of the rate at which rabbits reproduce and grow past their useful age, there has to be careful planning to keep overhead low and stock moving.

    Another opportunity, he said, was fingerlings production, which stemmed from the fact that Nigerians are large consumers of fish. The fishing farming business is not growing as expected due unavailability of fingerlings.This is because of inadequate infrastructure for hatcheries for fingerling production. For this project he said one needs about N180,000. Prince Onebunne noted that a huge demand exists for fish fingerlings as they don’t require huge investment for aspiring farmers. Fingerling catfish are very inexpensive and grow rapidly, he added.

    What entrepreneurs need, he said, is the knowledge to maximise the potential and tap into the market. Knowledge of how to raise healthy fingerlings, design wooden hatching ponds and what number to start with. For him, the highest possible quality breeding will result in good profit.

    Besides, he suggested rearing of guinea pigs, saying it is one of the most practical and versatile animals one can raise. They are small and easy to handle. To raise guinea pig, Onebunne said one requires at least N50, 000.These include the cost of acquiring wooden cages for them to sleep or stay.

    He suggested snails, saying they are the easiest animals to raise. To start, Prince Onebunne said one needs snails and cages. Snails eat wide varieties of food making them inexpensive to rear. Once fertilisation has taken place, the snail would seek a suitable spot to lay its eggs. Naturally, the snail, most times, digs into the soil to a depth of 0about nine centimetres to lay its eggs.

    Therefore, the soil should be soft for burrowing. The best and most suitable soil is the humus soil (black soil). One snail can lay as many as 30-150 eggs in the growing year. The eggs hatch between 30 and 35 days. They need access to soil to reproduce and grow in a healthy manner. One can use old tyres, baskets, cages of different sizes and snail pens.

    Another money spinner is the quail birds. They thrive very well in cages and are relatively inexpensive to maintain. He said the birds can be raised without stress and one can start with N85,000.

    The birds mature in about six weeks and are usually in full egg production by 50 days of age. If properly mated, quail birds have high fertility and good egg hatchability.

    The adult male bird weighs about 140grammes, while the females are slightly heavier, weighing from 120 to 160grammes. One can make money from selling the birds, eggs and hatching eggs. A female quail bird has the ability to produce 280eggs per annum. He said with good hygiene and management, quail birds are not susceptible to diseases.