Tag: journalist

  • Journalist finds fortune in palm oil business

    Journalist finds fortune in palm oil business

    A journalist, Blessing Ime Affia, is charting a new path in palm oil business, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    With a thriving business, the Founder, Chief Executive, Hebron Eagle Palm Enterprise, a subsidiary of Hebron Eagle Communication, Blessing Ime Affia’s  climb to the top is an inspiration to many budding entrepreneurs.

    She speaks of her dissatisfaction with her job as a reporter. It was there she discovered her interest in business that has led to self-sufficiency.

    A graduate  of Mass Communication, she was a newscaster and producer with DBN Television. She was interested in something that would make her financially and economically independent. Her motivation to start her own business began when she realised she was not getting fulfilment in journalism.

    Her words: “I have worked with various media houses, such as  NTA 2 Channel 5, where I basically learnt what media was all about, worked with Silver Bird Television as an Assistant Producer and a reporter for the day’s news bulletin. I also worked with Galaxy TV as a presenter and producer for women’s programme (Woman-to-Woman) and also Children’s programme (Tara-tata- The Children’s playhouse), which I designed. But before then, I worked with the old DBN as a newscaster and reporter.

    She continued: ‘’Hebron Eagle Palm Enterprise -A subsidiary of Hebron Eagle Communication – started when I realised that I was practically not being fulfilled as a journalist at that time.

    ‘’Not being fulfilled in media haunt, I settled into full-time business in agriculture where I used Hebron Eagle Palm Enterprise as a  subsidiary to my Hebron Eagle Communication company which I initially registered.”

    She said: “About two and half years, after I started, it appeared there was no direction but going to FATE Foundation, my business ideas were restructured and my mind was and still is adventurous, reading daily and widely to get more information about palm oil and agriculture as a whole.“

    She is another success. She began the business from her kitchen table in a rented house. She started small. ”I started with N20, 000. I had to call my mum to ask what it would take to start the business and that I would not mind sending that amount immediately and she obliged. In fact, when the “consignments”came, I was filled with joy.”

    Today, the business is striving. “The worth of my business? I will say, is growing. There is an ongoing restructuring at the factory at home. NAFDAC is playing a dominant role. I am trying to get my acts together to do real work.”

    Her challenges: “My failure was not getting funds when I needed it, but I realised it is not all about getting the money but with adequate structures on ground, it will help facilitate the business and create value in the lives of others. I see failures as welcome alternative to growing my entire being greatly.”

    The business is moving from the kitchen table to the factory floor. Currently, the company has a work force of  seven.  Palm oil has been the flagship product of the company.

    It has been the bane of its success. Her business has benefited from unquestioned loyalty borne out of mutual trust. However, as the business   continues to grow, its future success hinges on the diversification of the sector. Right now, she believes she is  yet to realise the full potential of  the  industry.

    She is hoping to expand her agro- based product lines to increase productivity, boost income and improve standard of living. She believes failure is just as important as success. While she admits there is plenty of hard knocks, she is confident her gamble will pay off in the long-term.

    Her joy: “Well, like I always tell my best friend, who is one major source of my daily joy and monitors my growth daily, I am my best friend every second. I look behind today and say that my late dad will be applauding me daily because this was one dream he nurtured systematically when we relocated to the village from Lagos in the early ‘90s before he passed on December 22,1998.

    I am daily fulfilled because people are pleased with the product and satisfied when it brings out that correct taste in your Edikang Ikong Soup,Afang,Atama …and so on. Most especially I am happier when the women who produce the product are happier to be part of the joy of others.”

  • Lagos is my success story and I am a journalist (2)

    It is not ‘just a billboard’ if it suggests subliminal bias to impressionable minors. It is not ‘a harmless campaign’ if it corrupts the thinking of the youth. Thus every element of the ‘Lagos is my success story’ media campaign manifests as a ritual of provocation; a rite of mediocrity, scorched by prejudice and shackled to ignorance.

    The grandeur of the campaign subsists in its classification of role models; Lagos names its finest and celebrates them. But role models, like mentors, should be exemplars of excellence, ethics and unimpeachable character.

    Thus of hip hop crooner, Olamide Adedeji a.k.a Baado and Sunday Punch Editor, Toyosi Ogunseye, who would Governor Ambode request to mentor his teenage child? Of Fuji maestro, Wasiu Alabi a.k.a Pasuma Wonder and Prof. Sophie Oluwole, the UNILAG academic working with various African countries to have indigenous African knowledge systems included in schools’ curriculum, who would Ambode suggest as mentor to his daughter?

    Of hip hop singer, Banky W and Ajanaku Babatunde, a staff of Ojota Senior Secondary School, who won the Best Teacher Award in the Lagos Secondary Schools Category recently, who would Ambode suggest as mentor to his son?

    As Lagos celebrates its 50th anniversary, it excludes teachers and journalists from its narrative out of spite – latent spite perhaps. The spiteful dialectic of the incumbent State government is sweepingly comprehensive and accurately projects the fallacies and notions of the ruling class about the worth and contributions of educators and journalists to the statehood.

    Beneath this curious malice, an uglier message resonates: “Journalists and teachers are worthless in Lagos.” Thus Governor Akinwumi Ambode and his team once again, amplify his predecessor’s barbed love and veiled loathing for teachers and journalists.

    True, Lagos announces the best teacher in the State and awards a prize to the recipient often in a drab ceremony. But the latter’s exploits are deliberately underplayed and hidden in plain sight.

    While Lagos celebrates marketers of filth, sex scandals, violence and corruption – alongside very few remarkable citizens – as the State’s pride, at its 50th anniversary, the State deliberately ignores the achievements of the moral, devoted, sterling men and women by whose exploits and contributions the likes of Governor Ambode and his team became the ‘titans’ they claim to be today.

    Teachers moulded Ambode and his team into the men and women they have become today. And I am sure the incumbent government remembers how it used journalists to achieve its dream of emerging as Lagos’ new ruling class – a sad reality this writer continually objects to.

    Yet Lagos violently silences the excellent achievements of exceptional teachers in the State, the same way it stifles the attainments and value of journalists to Lagos. This is the juncture at which the governor’s lackeys would scoff and exhume ‘revelations’ and ‘realities’ of the media’s dirty secrets. Thus it won’t be surprising to hear them prattle about the level of corruption and incompetence of journalists and the Nigerian media. It’s sadder to note that their argument could be true, in most part.

    This doesn’t mean that all journalists are corrupt. Not every journalist can be tarred with the brush of incompetence and corruption. Perhaps the Lagos government has suffered unsavourable experiences by journalists thus its undisguised disdain for them.

    But shall we as journalists cum citizenry of the State also condemn the Lagos government as a coven of brutes and looters of public fund simply because of tragic experiences with previous governments?

    Would it be appropriate to label Governor Ambode as irredeemably corrupt, incompetent and vicious, simply because most incumbent and past public officers have been established so? Would it be logical to infer that his ongoing development drive is a ruse, a coordinated scheme to con the electorate and earn their mandate for a second term simply because most governors are known to do that? Would it be alright to tar the ‘indefatigable governor’ with the brush of the pseudo progressive and performer simply because his predecessor and peers have established themselves so? If it would be wrong to imagine such of Governor Ambode, it is likewise unforgivable to consider all journalists corrupt and ‘lap dogs’ of the ruling class, simply because of a few or many ‘bad eggs.’

    I do not care what manner of relationship the State nurtures and sustains with its ‘friendly journalists’ and ‘media managers’ in the State; I speak for the youth. I speak for the diligent men and women pulling all stops to foster development by engaging the citizenry and ruling class via progressive, honest, public service journalism.

    It is unclear what manner of due process birthed the ‘Lagos is my success story’ media contract/jamboree but the manner of execution of the campaign, from the trashy bill boards used to its horrid subliminal messages, establish the mediocrity, shallowness and prejudice of the team in charge.

    Lagos emphatically markets hip hop artistes to the youth as role models, irrespective of their true nature. Olamide for instance, is a very talented and brilliant artiste – no doubt – but he continually preens about people wanting to kill him in almost every music track. He celebrates promiscuity, consequence-free violence and sex in lewd lyrics and expressive beats. And you could really dance to it.

    Toyosi on the other hand, is an investigative journalist whose work has enriched the human condition in Lagos teaching hospitals, industrial complexes, socioeconomic and security sectors. It is only in Lagos government’s middling and misshapen universe that a character like Olamide would command greater recognition and respect than Sunday Punch Editor, Toyosi Ogunseye, and The Cable’s former Editor, Fisayo Soyombo, among others.

    Sunday Punch’s Toyosi has won the CNN/Multichoice African Journalist of the Year Award, back to back, among several local and international media excellence awards. Her stories, like celebrated investigative journalists, Emmanuel Maya’s and Fisayo Soyombo’s depict and shed light on the corruption of the human condition and likely solutions to societal maladies.

    These are men and women of uncommon valour and devotion to the pursuit of public good and they are celebrated world over for their exploits.  Lest we forget the very few but rare breed of honourable senior editors, journalists and multiple merit award-winners at Nigeria’s major newspapers.

    These journalists and their ilk expose the shamelessness, incompetence and greed of public officers and so-called ‘corporate titans.’ They are serial award winners for public service journalism that any nation would be proud of. But the Lagos government scorns their achievements.

    Perhaps if Toyosi, Soyombo and colleagues were children of a governor, corporate titan or friend of the incumbent government, they would be celebrated as great role models and ambassadors of Lagos.

    Welcome to Lagos, the State that gleefully hosted Kim Kardashian in celebration of perverse celebrity in curious circumstances. This is Lagos, where foreign footballers, artistes and politicians with expiry dates are canonised while the timeless contributions, citizenship and excellence of journalists and teachers are ignored, simply because they have got no ‘swagger.’

    Yeah, Lagos values ‘swagger’ over merit. It celebrates brilliance only when it is garnished with the base and corrupt, atrocious ego and strut.

    However, some of  the persons celebrated in  the ‘Lagos at 50’ media campaign are indeed deserving of recognition. They are men and women of merit and remarkable citizenship. You  could identify them as your politics and personal ethics dictate.

    Ambode’s ‘Lagos is my success story’ for all its glamour and ingenuity, symbolises the cultural shift of Lagos from disciplined enterprise, humaneness and morality to unbridled hedonism. It markets celebrity to the youth as the zenith of ambition and human endeavour. It is the stuff dreams are maimed by.

     

  • Lagos is my success story and I am a journalist (1)

    Lagos despises journalists and teachers, it would seem. The Lagos government has no regard for the educator and pressman. In the estimation of the incumbent government for instance, journalists and teachers belong to the invisible divide, the negligible integers loitering at the foot of the totem pole, in the State’s warped categorisation of ‘eminent’ citizenry.

    This among other reasons, explains the incumbent government’s brazen disregard for teachers and journalists, in its showy ‘Lagos is my success story,’ media blitz.

    Of course, the media team in charge of the project will rant and rave. They will claim that it is impossible to represent every interest in the ongoing media campaign launched by the State in commemoration of Lagos’ 50th anniversary. They will dismiss this as yet another outburst from a journalist with ‘hidden agenda’ against Mr. Ambode. That’s understandable, they need to justify the salaries they earn – whether they deserve it or not.

    However, this writer has no agenda against Ambode. In fact, the incumbent governor attracts applause as he unfurls as a humane and decisive administrator – if only he would sustain the pace at which he seeks to improve infrastructure, security and the economic growth of the state.

    Beneath trifling considerations about the media campaign for the State’s 50th anniversary, ugly truths resonate in shrill notes. Funke Akindele, actress; Fuji artiste, Wasiu Alabi (Pasuma Wonder), hip hop artistes, Bankole Wellington (Banky W) Tuface Idibia and Olamide are celebrated as worthy role models and ambassadors of Lagos State.

    That these characters are celebrated alongside elderly folk of various callings, indicate that the State government nurtures a robust fascination with the youth and a hankering to connect positively with the youth divide. This is impressive even in the face of the underlying ugliness that informed the State government’s choice of subjects for the campaign.

    Akindele, Alabi Pasuma, Banky W, Tuface Idibia and Olamide are artistes and celebrities; like Folorunsho Alakija, Michael Otedola and other elderly subjects used for the campaign, they are widely adjudged to be rich, famous, poster icons for several youths.

    Governor Ambode and his team perpetuate the emphatic message to impressionable youth: “Only celebrity artistes, billionaire businessmen and politicians are recognised as role models by Lagos State. They are the only ones worth celebrating by Lagos.”

    Lest we forget the random pictures of the artisan and market woman used without emphasis in the campaign; the latter will undoubtedly be referenced by apologists of the shoddy and quite shady campaign.

    The use of the random artisan and trader alongside Lagos government’s preferred ambassadors is instructive. The artisan and market woman represent the highly populated divide of have-nots and residents of Lagos suburbs and backwaters. They are of the segment that the State government and politicians perpetually exploit to get votes and win elections via an insidious culture of tokenism and sound bite politics.

    The artistes including Olamide, Banky W, Funke Akindele and Tuface Idibia are of the disposable ‘muscle’ divide; they represent the agents often deployed by the State government and political class to achieve influence with the electorate. The Lagos government, like governments world over, persistently make use of celebrity artistes to influence the electorate and sway votes to advantage. They understand that these artistes enjoy large following among the citizenry hence they persistently tap into and cash in on the power of their celebrity.

    Whether the subjects used in the campaign are worthy role models and true ambassadors of the soul and essence of Lagos is yet another subject fit for future discourse. This brings us to Governor Ambode and his team’s exclusion of journalists and teachers from the campaign. I choose to highlight the State’s exclusion of educators and pressmen from the campaign given the crucial roles they play in the development of the State.

    Journalists and teachers represent the State’s middle class. Their contributions to nationhood are immense: teachers are nurturer of society and journalists are its conscience and custodians of morality. But like policemen and soldiers, among others, they are persistently undervalued and vilified. This explains why retired teachers are never treated well by the State.

    Even in Lagos, retiree teachers are denied their gratuity and many of them still die wretchedly, of hunger and lack. At their death, their family members are made to jump through hoops in order to receive the retirement benefits the deceased were denied in their lifetime.

    We have great teachers; I categorically refer to primary and secondary school teachers in Lagos yet none of them was deemed worthy of celebration as Lagos clocks 50. I hope Ambode’s aides won’t start making noise about how they celebrate the best teachers across the state’s district. This piece condemns the incumbent government’s neglect of the teachers as it celebrates Lagos’ most prized ambassadors, as the State clocks 50.

    That journalists are also neglected however, comes as no surprise. This is the juncture Ambode’s men would scream: ‘Soni Irabor is a journalist. He was included!’ Good for Mr. Irabor. It’s worth celebrating that he was included. But we also have journalists that have won over 10 to 25 local and international awards for media excellence, for stories written about developmental issues affecting Lagos and various parts of the country and even Africa.

    They include Emmanuel Maya, Toyosi Ogunseye, Adekunle Yusuf, Ajibola Hamza, Muyiwa Lucas, Fisayo Soyombo, to mention a few. These journalists are in their youth, like the artistes featured by Ambode’s team but they are deliberately ignored. They are not worth celebrating, according to Governor Ambode and his team.

    Nonetheless, the story of Lagos will never be complete without acknowledging the contributions of past and present journalists and teachers. These esteemed segments of the citizenry are however, overlooked and their relevance severely underplayed by the incumbent government, like its predecessors. This is why no teacher and journalist are represented in the State’s 50th anniversary media campaign.

    This loathing for educators and pressmen can hardly be understood even as it continues to unravel. Thanks to teachers, education reflects in Gov. Ambode. Great thanks to Edumare and his teachers, he is gradually becoming a source of pride to Lagos and Nigeria perhaps. Part of the glory should definitely be given to his parents and the governor himself as it requires a great deal of discipline and adherence to norms for a man to evolve like Ambode.

    Once again, it’s worth celebrating that Lagos now has a governor who believes in fostering development at the grassroots. Ambode determinedly institutes development in areas erstwhile neglected by his predecessor, Babatunde Fashola. This no doubt indicates that somewhere within Ambode’s bulk subsists appreciable and inspiring humaneness, foresight and lust for excellence.

    The governor will do well to ensure that retirees and pensioners in the State receive their benefits in the first six months into their retirement. Retired teachers do not get paid in time. They have to wait for several years before they receive their benefits from the state. Many have died without receiving their benefits.

  • Gunmen kill journalist in Bayelsa

    About five gunmen suspected to be hired killers, on Sunday shot killed an employee of the Bayelsa State-owned radio station, Glory FM 97.1, Mr. Famous Giobaro.

    Giobaro, who worked as a Desk Editor in the station, was reportedly attacked in his house located in a mini estate at the INEC Road area in Yenagoa, the state capital.

    The gunmen were said to have broken into his apartment at about 5am; shot him many times in the stomach at close range and left without stealing anything.

    It was gathered that the killers gained access to his house by climbing the fence through a ladder after cutting the barb wires.

    The assassins, who seemed to have knowledge of the house, reportedly pulled down the kitchen door and forced their way to the broadcaster’s bedroom through the living room.

    Two unidentified men, who were in the bedroom with the deceased, were said to have tried to resist the gunmen from entering the room.

    But they were said to have hidden in the wardrobe and the toilet when the gunmen started shooting unceasingly at the door.

    A neighbour of the deceased, who spoke in confidence, said the gunmen drilled many bullet holes on the door.

    He said Giobaro, who tied a piece of wrapper round his waist, was first hit by a bullet when he scrambled out of his bed following the sounds of gunshots.

    Narrating the incident, he said: “They went to his house. They cut the barb wire and climbed the fence through a ladder. They went to the kitchen area and cut the protector, passed through the kitchen door and entered his living room.

    “When they got to the room and discovered it was locked. They started marching the door but two other guys there with him tried to resist them. But they started shooting at the door and in the process one of the bullets hit him and he raised the alarm.

    “The two guys, one ran into the wardrobe while the other escaped into the toilet to save their lives. When the gunmen eventually entered and saw him lying on the floor, they shot him again many times at close range and left through the way they came.

    “They didn’t steal anything and they didn’t go to any other flat. It was a case of assassination”.

    The source said the children of the deceased were not at home when the gunmen struck as he sent them to stay temporarily with his separated wife.

    He added: “They were in a mission to kill him. They shot many bullets on the door. They still came to him on the pool of his blood to shoot him many times in the stomach”.

    It was gathered that the police came shortly after the incident and took the corps to the morgue of the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) in Yenagoa.

    But sources asked the police to beam their searchlight on an unidentified lady, who was involved in a failed romantic relationship with the deceased.

    The late journalist was said to have received multiple threat messages in connection with the relationship before he was killed.

    The state chapter of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) condemned the incident describing it as sacrilegious.

    The Chairman, NUJ, Mr. John Angese said the killing of Giobaro was a big blow to the journalism family in the state.

    He asked the police to investigate the incident and bring the perpetrators to book.

    But the Police Public Relations Officer, Mr. Asinim Butswat, said the police were investigating the incident.

  • Remo 2 vs 1 Wikki Tourists: Ganaru, journalist, referee attacked in Shagamu

    Remo 2 vs 1 Wikki Tourists: Ganaru, journalist, referee attacked in Shagamu

    All hell was let loose at the Shagamu Stadium on Sunday during Remo Stars 2-1 win over Wikki Tourists in the match day 15 of the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) as the visitors’ head coach Mohammed Baba Ganaru, centre referee and sports journalist, Kelvin Ekerete were attacked by the home fans.

    The home team got the first goal through Victor Chinedu before Jonathan Richard scored the equaliser for the Big Elephants.

    The Sky Blues scored the second goal in a controversial circumstances via penalty. The penalty call was protested by the Wikki Tourists players but at the end the day the penalty was awarded and scored by Victor Mbaoma.

    However, a sport journalist, Kelvin Ekerete was also rough-handled by the fans and his mobile phone was snatched. He was left with bloody nose.

    Kelvin’s undoing was his audacity to film the harassment on the match officials and the visitors.

    In a telephone conversation with SportingLife, Ganaru said the referee lost control of the match after he was attacked and intimidated which pressured him to award a dubious penalty to apiece the angry home fans.

    “We lost the match through a dubious penalty. The officiating was very bad. There was intimidation and the atmosphere was very bad. The fans attacked me and the centre referee when we were going to the dressing room at half time. Our chairman was harassed and our cameraman was also attacked. And to my surprise the referee gave a very dubious penalty to Remo Stars,” Ganaru told SportingLife.

  • Why we gave out brand new car to journalist – VON MD

    Why we gave out brand new car to journalist – VON MD

    MD, VON Automobile,Tokunbo Aromolaran  speaks on the gesture of giving out a brand new Made in Nigeria Hyundai i10 to a journalist recently in Lagos. The presentation which was part of the company’s ‘Buy made in Nigeria’ vehicles campaign, was witnessed by dignitaries including Senator Ben Murray Bruce, his wife, Evelyn and Chairman CMC Connect, Yomi Badejo-Okusanya.

    ARE you still in doubt of the ability of Nigerians to produce top quality made in Nigeria automobiles? Look no further, as VON Automobile Limited, a division of the Stallion Group, is already leading the way with top of the range automobiles. This much the Managing Director, Mr. Tokunbo Aromolaran set out to prove recently, when the company gave out a brand new Hyundai i10 to a journalist, Gboyega Alaka of The Nation Newspapers.

    According to Aromolaran, the gesture, which was a fulfillment of a raffle draw held for journalists at the VON Estate, Ojo last November 28, is to create an awareness amongst Nigerians that top quality automobiles are being locally assembled in Nigeria, and get Nigerians to patronise and have pride in the products.

    The motive, he said, is to encourage patronage and expand the factories and production capacity to serve the nation better. He said, “If you’re driving locally made cars, you create an avenue for additional production, additional employment, with value added and  increase our GDP….”

    Despite bearing a first name like Tokunbo, Aromolaran said he is unwavering in the fight against tokunbo (imported fairly used vehicles). As a nation, he said, Nigeria needs to go through the pain of developing its automobile industry in order to enjoy a viable industry. He noted that of the top one hundred countries in the world, Nigeria and Bangladesh are the only two that do not have viable automobile manufacturing industries, which he said is no longer acceptable.

    He said bringing in cars through the borders does not do the country any good, as ‘importers’ don’t pay duties. By allowing those vehicles come in, he said Nigeria is only allowing the Republic of Benin, which does not have a vehicle assembly plant, to collect duties on what it has not earned.

    He stressed that “If Nigerians start patronising locally assembled cars, our auto industry would grow and in the next three years, our second-hand auto market will also grow, which will not be tokunbo cars but cars deriving from our own market here, not cars that have been used for eight years.”

    The VON Automobile premises along the Lagos-Badagry Expressway in Lagos, is a massive auto assembly plant with installed manufacturing capacity for 45,000 units in one shift. The company set out in 2012, with a target of manufacturing affordable vehicles for Nigerians. The overall vision is to turn Nigeria into a cornerstone of auto-manufacturing in Africa. The company boasts of the expertise and facility and a conviction that it can create a world-class automobile behemoth, which will in turn create a huge multiplier effects on the Nigerian economy and society.

    Vehicles assembled there include Ashok Leyland Falcon/Hawk mass transit bus, AL Garbage Compactor, AL 1718, AL Troop Carrier and IVECO trucks. The company is also creating substantial direct and indirect employment, conditioned upon the market environment. To start with, all the safety materials it uses in buses assembled in the factory are locally sourced, to the extent that it has attained 30% local content. Some of these items include windshield, window frames, sealants, paints and labour.

    VON also assembles different models of Nissan passenger vehicles such as Almera, Patrol, NP300 and Urvan bus and Hyundai models, including Hyundai i10, Grand, Civic Bus, County Bus, HD 65, HD 78 and HD 120.

    Aromolaran assured on strong quality control in the OAN, which he said are like partners. He said “Nissan will not allow any vehicle leave this plant unless it has passed their test.”

    He also said the Nissan Patrol produced at the VON plant can compete favourably with any brand in the world.

    In terms of labour, Aromolaran said “We have recruited mechanics, trained them formally and turned them into super auto engineers and auto mechanics. They work on an automated conveyor system and know that the result of their work is important to the next stage, and dare not mess up.”

    In his remarks, Senator Ben Murray Bruce reiterated his support for made in Nigeria products, promising to do whatever it takes in the National Assembly and in government to influence positive changes towards locally assembled made in Nigeria automobiles. He again advocated long-term payment pattern based on single digit interest rate, saying Nigeria “cannot move forward if all we do is for a young graduate to drive a 30-year old car from Belgium. People forget something. A modern day car can drive 40, 50 miles per gallon; that car from Belgium gives you 5 miles per gallon.”

    He also called on President Buhari to, by law, compel all his ministers and government officials to drive made in Nigeria cars, as this would enhance trust in the products.

    He however disagreed with the VON MD on the call to shut the borders, saying such actions would paralyse business activities in the border towns. Rather, he suggested that inefficient customs officers

     

  • Task force arrests fake journalist, 67 miscreants

    A man has been arrested by Lagos State Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences Unit (Task Force) operatives for allegedly posing as a journalist with Television Continental (TVC).

    The task force Chairman, Olayinka Egbeyemi, a Superintendent of Police (SP), in a statement, said  Soji Gboye, 36 from Ilaje in Ondo State, was arrested during an enforcement operations around Maryland and environs.

    Sixty-seven miscreants were also arrested and traders unauthorised places were dislodged.

    Egbeyemi said Gboye was arrested while obstructing the task force operatives from performing their duty.

    Gboye, he said, could not “properly identify” himself on interrogation.

    According to him, on being contacted, TVC management said the suspect was not its worker.

    He said the Commissioner of Police has directed that Gboye be transferred to the State Criminal Investigation Department, Panti, Yaba, Lagos Mainland, and others charged to court.

  • Police rescue kidnapped  journalist

    Police rescue kidnapped journalist

    A journalist with a private radio station in Ilesa, Osun State, Unique FM, Dele Ajayi, who was kidnapped by gunmen on Monday, has been rescued by the police in Ondo State.
    Ajayi was found in Ondo, Ondo West Local Government Area, several hours after he had been declared missing.
    It was learnt that Ajayi, an indigene of Esa-Oke in Obokun Local Government Area of Osun State was seized in Ijebujesa, Oriade Local Government , and taken to Ondo.
    A source said Ajayi was forced to drink a liquid substance when he was abducted after which he slept off and later found himself in Ondo.
    It was learnt that his official car was found in Ijebujesa.
    Although the victim could not be reached for comments, it was gathered that he reported at Fagun Police Division in Ondo from where he moved to Ilesa.
    He is receiving treatment at an undisclosed hospital in Osun State.

  • ‘Free abducted journalist’

    ‘Free abducted journalist’

    The Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Benue State has called for the release of the abducted News Editor of Radio Benue, Mrs. Iyuadoo Toragbidye.

    The NUJ accused the police of not doing enough to rescue her or find her vehicle, which her adductors escaped in.

    They urged the police to track the hoodlums and secure her freedom.

    A statement by NUJ’s Secretary, Agber Emmanuel, condemned Mrs. Toragbidye’s abduction, describing her as a harmless journalist and caring mother.

    Toragbidye is the wife of the Zonal Manager of First City Monument Bank (FCMB), Achia.

    A member of the family, who spoke to The Nation, pleaded with her adductors to release her to unite with her kids.

  • Radio journalist kidnapped in Benue

    The Benue Police Command said a Radio Journalist, Mrs Iyuadoo Tor-Agbidye, had been kidnapped on Friday in her house in Makurdi.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the kidnapped journalist is married to Mr Achim Tor-Agbidye, a Zonal Manager with First City Monument Bank (FCMB), Makurdi.

    The Commissioner of Police, Mr Bashir Makama, confirmed the incident to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Friday in Makurdi.

    Makama said the police had already swung into action by setting up a network for the arrest of the suspects and appealed to the public to volunteer information that would lead to their arrests.

    “We have already visited the site; we are constructing our narrative with the purpose of narrowing down possible suspects before effecting arrests.

    “The police cannot provide security for each person so, what we do is to improve the general security of the people by taking proactive steps to curb crime in the state,” he said.(NAN)