Tag: Naija

  • Naija Home unveils new Sony showroom

    Naija Home unveils new Sony showroom

    Consumer electronics giant, Sony Middle East and Africa, with Naija Home Automation Limited, has unveiled its newest electronics store at Jara Mall in Ikeja, Lagos State .

    Jobin Joejoe, managing director of Sony, said: “We are delighted to showcase Sony’s latest products at Naija Home store. Our consumers here can now access the best technologies under one roof. The store testifies to Sony’s commitment to champion and support the region’s passion for music and dance…”

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    The outlet offers world-class shopping experience with extensive lineup of televisions, home entertainment, digital imaging products and premium audio accessories, including the new ULT Power Sound series featuring wireless speakers and headphones.

    Speaking at the inauguration, Adegoke Fayoade, commissioner of Police, said: “Sony is a global leader in the technology sector. With this launch, Nigerian customers can enjoy an immersive experience in a convenient and accessible location in Ikeja, Lagos.”

    Also present were Naija Home’s Amit Khandelwal and Sujay Kumar, and Saurabh Bhalla, regional manager of Sony.

  • Between Naija and Ghana Jollof (2)

    Between Naija and Ghana Jollof (2)

    Welcome back my sisters,” Sexy Jola greeted the pack with a bubbly smile and excitement as each of us took our seats that evening.

     Except for Sola, Jolaolu’s husband, the other men (Daddy Innocent and Daddy Nkem – Ada’s husband) who joined us last week were already seated too. It seemed the men were becoming even more committed – they arrived earlier than most of us ladies and helped with the arrangement.

     “Back to our Jollof wahala: between Naija and Ghana Jollof, which do you prefer?” Jolaolu asked and gave Mummy Fawas a sign – the Nigeria-born Ghanaian stood up immediately, taking Tamara with her as she walked to her apartment. And a few minutes later, they appeared bringing with them coolers of rice and Ghanaian famous pepper stew, which they arranged alongside a big bowl of croaker fish on the table behind the seats. The plates and drinks were neatly placed on one corner of the big table. And there was music playing in the background. What better way to unwind?

     “Today na today,” Ada whispered to me. I gave her a side smile and pulled my thoughts back to what Jolaolu was saying. “Let’s thank our men for their contributions to today’s meal. And you’d notice some new faces in our midst and more seats. That is because we are still expecting some visitors today. Please welcome our new sisters to our ‘Women’s Corner’ (laughs)!”

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     “You are welcome to our corner!” The pack welcomed with warm hugs Sweet Stella (a computer whiz), Christabel the fashionista (the one we call the fashion police) – remind me to tell you a couple of things about her in my subsequent write up – and Mummy Judith with the “wicked” generator.

     “It’s nice to be able to join this noble house. You ladies have impressed me. I used to think you ladies were wasting time, gossiping as most women do but after reading about your exploits on Evelyn’s column, I was moved to join this house,” Christable said; while Stella nodded her head in agreement, adding: “I too cannot wait to be part of the gist.”

     “I am particularly interested in the food,” Ada said with a laugh.

     “So back to the matter: which do you prefer, Naija or Ghana Jollof?” came Sexy Jola’s question which was followed by the shouts of “Naija”, “Ghana”, Naija”, “Ghana”.

     “Ladies…Ladies! Welcome back to the second part of the Jollof game. Remember last week, we had a fill of the Naija Jollof and we shared it with some of our friends – some of whom are here already…” while she was still talking, her hubby, Sola, walked in with two friends.

     “I hope you ladies have not forgotten us,” queried Jolaolu’s husband. “I’d like you to meet Hon. Tunde Aremu and Dr. Thompson Mshelia.”

     “Thanks for having us,” both men greeted after the house saluted them with our signature greeting; while Jolaolu intimated them with the game. “Mummy Fawas, Tamara, ladies, it’s time to share the meal.” And so began the evening party.

     “If you ask me, I prefer Ghana Jollof, and you will see why after eating this,” Mshelia said after receiving his plate of rice. His statement which seemed to annoy sexy Jola brought smiles to Mummy Fawas face. “I would rather bet my money on Naija Jollof,” Aremu said.

     “Thank you Doc. Please, before you make your choice, let us taste the Ghana Jollof. Please, feel free to state your choice. You see, Mummy Fawas and I took a bet to see which of the two varieties would get the most votes,” Jolaolu said as we dug into the meal.

    What do you think? Send your comments to evelyn.osagie01@gmail.com.

  • Star Scholar Naija makes its debut

    A TV reality show designed to bring out the best in kids, Star Scholar Naija (SSN), was at the weekend unveiled in Lagos.

    Scheduled for airing on DSTV and GOTV on the Africa Magic Family Channel in August, its organisers, Eagles’ Nest Limited, said the initiative  will see 16 talented teens immersed in a learning experience with a view to presenting future model citizens. This will also broaden their knowledge and experience of the world around them through creative, scientific exploration and problem solving strategies, thereby mastering coping skills for a successful life.

    Its Corporate Affairs Manager, Joe Obinna Benneth, said the teens, between 13 and16, will be camped in a safe nest, a hostel-like accommodation for 21 days, where, under the guidance of a host, facilitators and counsellors, would be exposed to games, talent hunts, academic and critical reasoning exercises and sporting activities. They will compete as individuals and in groups. A Star Scholar will emerge based on points tally in a league format.

    “Auditions will start in April 2019. Aside its entertainment value, the show is designed to groom and nurture inherent talent; instil discipline and promote friendship; reward academic excellence; teach and encourage teamwork; build problem solving skills; encourage role modeling using mentors to inspire; teach and encourage global awareness and sustainability. Interested contestants should text scholar/ name/sex/age/location to 32811,” Benneth said.

    According to Eagles’ Nest Limited, major brands and the West African Regional Director, Ford Foundation, Mr. Innocent Chukwuma have endorsed the project.

  • Stop calling Nigeria ‘Naija’, NOA appeals

    Mr Garba Abari , Director-General, National Orientation Agency (NOA), has appealed to Nigerians to stop referring to Nigeria as `Najia’ to keep its originality.

    Abari told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Tuesday that the new trend of making funky the original name of Nigeria was worrisome and not in the best interest of the country.

    “We try in all our advocacy visits to insist that Nigeria must be referred to as Nigeria and not Naija.

    “So, our schools have a role to play in this; the media itself has also got a very fundamental role to play because it is the media that helps in the propagation of this kind of misnomer.

    “All of us, as individuals, as corporate organisations, as media, whether broadcast, print or online, must wake up to the reality.

    “That the more we use these misnomers referring to our country, the fallout of it is that, a significant percentage of our younger ones will not even remember that Nigeria is the original name of our country.

    “I want to appeal to all Nigerians, young and old to always refer to our country as Nigeria.”

    Abari also urged parents to key into the efforts to preserve the country’s original name by discouraging their children and wards from referring to Nigeria as `Naija’.

  • President Buhari, beasts of ‘Naija’ etc…

    Another year gone; let us begin to intuit its truths. Are we different from what we signified and who we were? We have President Muhammadu Buhari. He is the shining beacon of our hope. With Buhari, we hope to cross our threshold of tragedy, death and plunder, come 2016.

    Until then, our roads will remain cratered and ditched with death. Our youths will remain unemployable and bereft of hope. Our hospitals will remain corridors of death. Are our schools functioning yet? Are our lawmakers mature now? Has the executive grown in wisdom, the judiciary too? Have we wizened with age and grief as a people?

    Change is here, and at its dawn we encounter truth as we hardly knew it. What really is the tenor of the truth? Our truths? Shall we continue to weep like the fanatic, over our dying dreams and the faded fantasies we struggle to forget? Shall we begin to rejoice despite all odds, in spite of misery and death; our lives’ constant staple?

    There is not yet a Nigeria of defined, stable boundaries, and economies. There is not yet a sense of shared destiny save our unity of the downtrodden and the damned. The most prescient portrait of the Nigerian character and our ultimate fate as a nation shamefully played out over the last few months and in the last few days. It plays out even as you read; the persistent fuel scarcity and outrageous hike in pump price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), reveals our murderous obsessions, violent impulses, moral bankruptcy, our hubris and inevitable self-destruction.

    The tiresome avarice and predatory lust that drove proprietorships of filling stations nationwide to hike fuel price from N87 to N500 per litre at the twilight of former President Goodluck Jonathan’s regime recalls very sadly to mind, that violence of the wild that holds motionless for endless hours, the kidnapper in his lair, the assassin in his ambuscade and the public officer in his plunderous perch – this violence belongs primarily to the predator while it hunts its prey.

    In the last few days, of his administration, it manifested in uncontrollable spasms that saw us brutalise the helpless and enable our worst. As the fuel scarcity persisted, Nigeria gradually sputtered to a standstill, businesses shut down, banks cut short their work hours to midday, families starved – particularly those whose livelihoods depended on daily use of PMS- and the queues got longer like photographs of civil death in our homegrown dystopia.

    It became clearer at some level that Nigeria was gradually hitting rock bottom, many of us groaned that we were damned—just as some of us know that our citizenship culture founded on a national enterprise that survives on  corporate greed, limitless exploitation and the continued extraction of crude oil is doomed.

    The most frightening facets of the horror story unfolded in our filling stations and spilled over to our streets and neighbourhood mini-marts, utility service providers and  grocery stores. As fuel station managers hoarded fuel and closed shop in desperate bid to make a killing by selling it at outrageous prices to helpless motorists and folk whose survival depended on it, the neighbour next door on whom several families and businesses depended for supply of certain crucial products like cooking gas, kerosene, engine oil and so on, joyously inflated prices of the essential products, to the chagrin and discomfort of patrons in need.

    Consider for instance, the case of a notable pastor and gas dealer in Agege; the family promptly closed shop and hoarded gas for two days even as neighbours and friends thronged their doorstep pleading with them to resume business and sell gas to them. Of course, they did after effecting a hike in price of the product. The ‘godly’ family dispassionately sold gas to friends and neighbours at N6, 000 per gas bottle. That was an astonishing hike from the product’s initial N3, 000 price before the fuel scarcity.

    Friends and neighbours of the family grumbled under their breath as they paid for the product; those that couldn’t recoiled to seek kerosene, accusing the pastor and his family for their ‘lack of sensitivity,’ ‘amorality’ and fraudulent claims to godliness. Of course, pastor and wife responded in kind, claiming that they were duty bound to separate business from holiness. “Na holiness we go chop?” said the pastor. The latter, a Lagos State civil servant erstwhile paraded himself as a noble businessman and compassionate ‘man of God.’

    There is little difference between the family’s bestiality and the savagery of the ruling class and fuel station managers who accentuated the scarcity by hoarding fuel in order to sell it at N500 a litre. While their variously savage peers may advance arguments to support their monstrosity citing certain dreadful norms of commerce and industry, it need be told and understood that it is desperate, savage acts like theirs that ruins nations and enable the perpetual dominance of the haves over the have-nots.

    A similar malady manifests even as you read as fuel station managers persistently hoard fuel to sell at higher pump prices despite President Buhari’s directive that PMS pump price remain at N87 per litre.

    What is happening in Nigeria is a precursor to a dreadful war between the country’s elites and the impoverished, a war caused by diminishing resources, chronic unemployment and underemployment, overpopulation, declining crop yields caused by climate change, and rising food prices; capital and operating costs belie hope and prosperity for industry. The unfolding doom has nuances, put precisely, it has a thousand meanings.

    A recent Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) report generated ripples over its summations on Nigeria. No thanks to the Economist magazine’s sister publication, the Nigerian newborn may arrive knowing he has come where the sun dies everlastingly for the bliss of the fig. The EIU report ranks Nigeria 80th out of 80 countries assessed in its ‘Where-to-be-born’ index.

    The 2014 Human Development Index (HDI) report ranked Nigeria amongst countries with low development index at 153 out of 186 countries that were ranked. Life expectancy in the country is placed at 52 years old while other health indicators reveal that only 1.9 per cent of the nation’s budget is expended on health; 68.0 per cent of Nigerians are stated to be living below $1.25 daily while adult illiteracy rate for adult (both sexes) is 61.3 per cent.

    ”As the population is growing, the resources that we all depend on, the food, energy, water, is declining. The demand for these resources will rise exponentially by the year 2030, with the world needing about 50 per cent more food, 45 per cent more energy and 30 per cent more water,” noted Dr. Aisha Mahmood of the Central Bank of Nigeria.

    She said: “In Nigeria, there is the issue of youth and employment; 70 per cent of the 80 million youths in Nigeria are either unemployed or underemployed. We are all witness to what happened recently during the immigration recruitment exercise and this is simply because 80 per cent of the Nigerian youth are unemployed.”

    This will inevitably lead to a class war as the deprivation of the working class will eventually morph into violence. In the background, a severe and scarier grotesqueness emerges; it is the acquiescence of presumably humane folk to the bemusement of prosperity. This blunts the sense, inflates the ego and inspires disdain for the less privileged. It is the affliction of the ruling class, fuel station managers and the gas-dealing pastor and his family.

  • Sam Miracle, King Rokan storm Yankee Nite in Naija

    Sam Miracle, King Rokan storm Yankee Nite in Naija

    US-based Nigerian artistes, Sam Miracle and King Rokan, have concluded plans to storm Lagos for a show tagged Yankee Nite in Naija.

    The forthcoming musical show is an exclusive event packaged to celebrate and unite the two popular music stars who have successfully promoted the Nigerian culture through their unique styles of music around United States of America and beyond.

    According to organisers, the show has been slated to hold on December 13, 2015 at White House Hotel, Ikeja, Lagos.

    The event, packaged by Afro Rock and Rokan Entertainment will have in attendance, notable socialites, celebrities, movie stars and other professionals. And Soji Taiwo Omobanke is expected to be the Master of Ceremony.

    Other renowned individuals expected to grace the show are  Sulaimon Atawewe, Queen Ayo Balogun, Qdot, Wale Thompson, Asiwaju Dele Taiwo, LKT, Yinka Quadri, Saint Janet, Jaiye Kuti, Doris Simon, Mistura Asuramu, Afeez Owo, Wale Sango, Funsho Adeolu, Sola Vibrator, Juwon Adeyemi, Linda Adedeji, Kristo C and Bashman.

  • Olamide’s Shakiti bobo leads chart on MTV Base Naija Top 10

    Olamide’s Shakiti bobo leads chart on MTV Base Naija Top 10

    •As Seyi Shay, Runtown return

    Olamide’s hit track, Shakiti bobo and Korede Bello’s Godwin have maintained the top two positions on the Official MTV Base Naija Top 10 chart for the fourth week running.

    However, Seyi Shay’s song, Right Now and Runtown’s Banger have successfully returned to the chart at the number 10 and 7 spots respectively.

    The videos directed by Meji Alabi and Justin Campos hit the airwaves a few weeks ago and have since taken over the streets, clubs and airwaves. The chart also features the Clarence Peters directed video,Asai by indigenous rapper, Phyno, Reekado Banks’s Katapot and So More from Dem Mama singer, Timaya.

    Gambit Records signee and guest of the week, Mz Kiss also brings her A-game on the show dropping exciting bars during her freestyle before giving out autographed CDs to three fans.

  • Enterprise Bank begins MoneyGram ‘Naija Send’

    Enterprise Bank Limited has begun MoneyGram “Naija Send” – Outbound money transfer services from Nigeria with MoneyGram International.

    In a statement, the bank, which is currently undergoing a business combination with Heritage Bank Limited, said the product is one of the ways to positively impact the lives of her customers both in Nigeria and in the Diaspora.

    It said MoneyGram “Naija Send” enables walk-in and existing customers enjoy the opportunity of sending money abroad on the MoneyGram International platform, adding that the product is designed for everybody, and has proven to be a convenient means of meeting personal financial needs.

    The bank said the product makes it easy for parents, who have children schooling abroad, to pay school fees, send pocket money and meet other educational expenses.

    “Under this service, money is sent in naira, but received in the currency of the receiving country. This eliminates the risk attached to carrying physical cash in transit while travelling abroad. For additional security, money sent from Nigeria cannot be received in Nigeria,” it said.

    The bank said with its introduction, customers can now walk into its over 150 branches across the country to receive, or send money to their loved ones in over 200 countries, adding that the service establishes Enterprise Bank firmly as a Send-and-Receive Agent of MoneyGram International.

     

  • Naija Street Champ: Six finalists enter studio with top music producers

    Naija Street Champ: Six finalists enter studio with top music producers

    From all indications, it appears the six finalists in the ongoing Naija Street Champ, a music talent hunt contest, are headed for stardom, as they have now entered the studio with the three partner producers, ID Cabasa, Terry G and D’Tunes.

    The six finalists are currently under the mentorship of ID Cabasa, who is helping them to develop their skills to qualify for the final stage.

    Each of the contestants will have equal chances of winning the N1million prize money and three years recording deal through public voting online and SMS. The contestants’ first track, which was produced on ID Cabasa’s beat, has been uploaded on the project website.

    To listen and vote for their favourite contestants, the public is enjoined to log on to www.naijastreetchamp.com/votes or SMS winner stage name to 33142. The finalist with the least votes will be evicted until the final four emerge.

    The top four finalists will then compete for the N1million prize money at the grand finale of the competition, where the ultimate winners of the maiden competition will emerge.

    The six finalists are Sulaimon Idris (Dabreez) representing Surulere zone; Shanuolu Adesola (Sholz) representing Ipaja Zone; Rodney Brown Edemhanria (Rodney) representing Ikeja zone; Abimbola Olugbenga (Raptitude) representing Bariga/Akoka zone; Christian Olamide (Dakris) representing Agege/Ogba zone and Celestine Ogar (Big Daddy Africa) representing Festac zone.

  • Ghana meets  Naija this  month

    Ghana meets Naija this month

    THE fourth edition of the music concert tagged Ghana meets Naija is set to hold on Saturday, May 24. Slated for the Accra International Conference Centre, the concert features performances from seasoned musicians, including Sarkodie, Castro, Guru, Davido, Kcee and Wizboy, among others.

    The 4th edition of GHANA meets NAIJA is sponsored by telecommunication network, MTN, with support from Unibank, official sponsors of the Black Stars, Smirnoff, Africa World Airlines, Oak Plaza Hotel.