Tag: News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)

  • Synagogue:  Lagos court remands engineers in prison

    Synagogue: Lagos court remands engineers in prison

    The two engineers, who constructed the collapsed seven-storey guest house of the Synagogue Church of All Nations — Akinbela Fatiregun and Oladele Ogundeji — are to remain in Kirikiri Maximum Prisons till May 3, a court ruled on Tuesday.

    Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo of an Ikeja High Court gave the order in a ruling on their bail applications.

    “Ruling is preserved for Tuesday, May 3, 2016,” Lawal-Akapo told a crowded courtroom.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the engineers were on April 26 ordered to be remanded in Kirikiri Prisons by Lawal-Akapo following their `not guilty’ plea to a 111-count charge bordering on gross negligence and criminal manslaughter.

    Earlier during Tuesday’s proceedings, counsel to Fatiregun, Mrs Titi Akinlawon (SAN), in her submission before the court, promised that the defendants would not jump bail.

    “The fifth defendant has been charged before at the Magistrates’ Court and he did not jump bail; he presented himself at all times.

    “Prior to when he was granted bail by the magistrates’ court, he was granted police bail and he always presented himself.

    “Since the entire essence of remand is for the defendant not to jump bail, the defendant going by his antecedents, has proven himself to be honourable by not jumping bail on previous occasions,” Akinlawon said.

    Mr Olalekan Ojo, counsel to Ogundeji in his application before the court, said Ogundeji needed to be on bail in order to build his defence.

    He said:“The case of the prosecution is founded on gross negligence, it will collapse or succeed on the strength of experts’ opinion and it is not pertinent for anyone to state the evidence is overwhelming on technical issues.

    “Because of the technical nature of the evidence, there is need for the fourth defendant to be on bail to liaise with experts to build his defence.

    “He cannot do this while on remand at the Kirikiri Maximum Prisons.”

    However, the prosecution led by Mrs Idowu Alakija, the State Director of Public Prosecutions, noted that the court was not obliged to grant bail to the engineers.

    She said:“The granting of bail is not mandatory, this court has the discretion to grant bail; but in so doing, it has to look at the facts before it.

    “My Lord, both the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal had in an avalanche of cases held that a court needs not restrict itself to matters in the affidavit, but the proofs presented in court.

    “We have emphasised that Oladele Ogundeji has no address within the jurisdiction of the court.

    “If this court is to grant bail, I urge the court to grant accelerated hearing without delay because we have had too many delays caused by applications presented by the defence in this case.’’

    NAN also reports that the collapse of the guest house on Sept. 12, 2014 led to the deaths of 116 persons, 85 of who were South Africans.

    The Coroner’s Inquest instituted by the Lagos State Government had in its verdict on July 8, 2015, said the building collapse was caused by structural failure due to a combination of designs and detailing errors.

    The coroner ordered that Synagogue church should be investigated and proceeded against by the relevant authorities for not possessing necessary building permits while the two engineers involved in the construction of the building should be tried for criminal negligence.

  • Nasarawa Poly to establish Radio/TV station

    Nasarawa Poly to establish Radio/TV station

    Dr Silas Gyar, Rector of Nasarawa State Polytechnic, Lafia, said the institution had concluded plans to establish a local Radio and Television station.

    The rector disclosed this on Tuesday in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in his office in Lafia.

    According to him, the decision is to strengthen the Mass Communication Department of the institution.

    “The station will not just strengthen the department, but will also help in disseminating information within the campus and the entire state.

    “The management is working round the clock to secure a broadcast license so that the Mass Communication Department can start transmission on Naspoly Broadcasting Service (NPBS).

    “The NPBS, when established, will help in disseminating information about activities on the campus to the immediate community and its environs,” he said.

    The rector said that the department had secured state-of-the-art equipment, and has competent manpower to run the stations.

    He said that the polytechnic was awaiting full accreditation by National Board for Technical Education to commence the project.

    Gyar commended the Nasarawa State Government for building male and female hostels in the institution, and appealed for more support.

  • “My conversion, key to my first class result”

    “My conversion, key to my first class result”

    Miss Rabiyat Usman, a first class graduate of the Rhema University, Aba has said that her conversion to Christianity transformed the course of her life and academics.

    Usman, therefore, charged undergraduates of Nigerian Universities to fear God and be disciplined, if they wanted a brighter future.

    The 23-year-old graduate gave this advice in Aba on Monday, after her graduation on Saturday, during an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Aba.

    Usman, who has finished her youth service, urged undergraduates to prepare themselves for a competitive world out there with discipline, fear of God and obedience to the university authorities.

    The first class graduate said that there was no future for lazy and undisciplined graduates in the larger society, hence the need for a brighter future through hard work.

    She said she made a first class honours degree because she was fortunate to have accepted Jesus Christ as her Saviour early at Living Word Academy.

    “I actually came into this Secondary School at Nkwerre, Imo State from a different religion, but I became a Christian in JSS 1, while studying in the secondary school.

    “My conversion made all the difference because Christianity really helped me to learn the tenets that support hard work and connection to God’s assistance. It was God all the way.

    Usman thanked Brother Emma Okorie, the Rhema University Chancellor, for believing in her.

    According to her, she was given a scholarship from JSS 1 at the Living Word Academy, Nkwerre, Imo State, to her final year in Rhema University, Aba.

    The Okene-born Usman said that she had secured admission to Buckingham University, in the U.K. to further her education, before returning to bless Nigerians with her expertise.

    She, however, noted that she would prefer to study at Harvard University, but stressed that she needed some scholarship or funding, to help her to pay tuition overseas.

  • Freight forwarders back NIMASA’s Anti-Piracy Bill

    Freight forwarders back NIMASA’s Anti-Piracy Bill

    Some freight forwarders on Monday urged the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) to ensure that the Anti-Piracy Bill before the National Assembly becomes a reality.

     

    The freight forwarders made the plea in separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos.

     

    They said that the bill, if passed would among other things, restore the nation’s maritime business-friendly status.

     

    A clearing agent, Mrs Jane Oparaeke, said that it would be a dream comes through to see the nation’s waterways regaining its safety status enjoyed in the early 80s.

     

    She said that with NIMASA at the forefront of the campaign, “there is every hope of the bill scaling the hurdle in the National Assembly’’.

     

    “It is now the duty of other stakeholders to encourage the drive that will make the nation’s ports the hub of maritime in West Africa sub-region,’’ she told NAN.

     

    The Logistics Manager, Red-Line Shipping, Mr Inuwa Omika, said that if the bill is passed, the apprehension by shippers bringing their goods to Nigeria, would be eliminated.

     

    “Passing the bill will go a long way in enabling high inflow of goods into the country,’’ Omika said.

     

    A freight forwarder, Mr Joseph Asika, urged the law enforcement agents in charge of the nation’s water ways to be more proactive.

     

    Asika suggested that the security agencies should be more vigilant to stop piracy and armed robbery at sea.

     

    A Client Services officer at Denca Services Ltd., Mr Stanley Momma, noted that shippers patronising Nigeria’s neighbouring seaports would come back to Nigerian ports “if the conditions become business friendly’’.

  • 22-year-old emerges LAUTECH overall best student

    22-year-old emerges LAUTECH overall best student

    Miss Saidat Sanni, a 22-year-old student from the Department of Statistics had emerged the overall best student of the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH), Ogbomoso.

     

    Prof. Adeniyi Gbadegesin, the Vice-Chancellor of the institution, announced Sanni as the overall best at its 13th Convocation held in Ogbomoso on Friday.

     

    Sanni, who hailed from Abeokuta in Ogun State, emerged after securing a Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA) of 4.88 to overrun Olufemi Ige of the Mathematics department, who secured a CGPA of 4.85 in the 2013/2014 session.

     

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Sanni was the best student in the 2014/2015 session before emerging the best among the 10,317 graduands, which was a combination of 2013/2014 and 2014/2015 academic sets.

     

    In her valedictory speech, Sanni urged other graduands not to relent in the spirit of excellence, integrity and service, which had been their watchword in school.

     

    “We are here, we made it and we did it. Nothing good comes easy.

     

    “More challenges will come our ways, however, with endurance, perseverance, commitment, patience, hard work and steadfastness in prayers, we shall make it,’’ she said.

     

    Speaking on her success, she told NAN that her success was hinged on the vow she made to her parents not to disappoint them.

     

    “My father once called me to look at a story in one of the newspapers, where a lady was celebrated for being the overall best student and I vowed never to disappoint him.

     

    Sanni, the daughter of Mr Bashir and Silifat Sanni, said that her watchword, “I can do well’’ was a driving force, adding that she was always thinking of the positive side.

     

    “We cultivated the habit of reading from home. I initially wanted to study medicine but was admitted to study Mathematics,’’ she said.

     

    Earlier in his speech, Prof. Gbadegesin said it was a thing of joy that the institution was still able to soar by dint of shrewd management to produce the great hope of tomorrow comparable to any standard in the world.

     

    “in spite of the paucity of funding and the challenges of conducting credible research and other social encumbrances bedevilling the university system in general, we are resolved to turn things around for better.

     

    “The university has reached an era of consolidation, using the gains and successes of the past as springboard for projection and advancement into the future, harnessing maximally its capacity,’’ he said.

     

    He commended the Federal Government for its intervention projects through the NEEDS Assessment Intervention funds and the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND).

     

    Similarly, Gov. Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State said that it was worthy of note that despite the dwindling revenue of the two proprietors of the institution, it was still waxing stronger among its equals.

     

    Ajimobi, who was represented by Mr Soji Eniade, the Oyo State Head of Service, assured the university that the government was not unconcerned about the welfare of staff and the students.

     

    Prof. Wale Omole, the Pro-Chancellor, LAUTECH urged the graduands to make excellence, integrity and service their watchword as they move into the world.

  • Use of Pidgin English on stage has limited our comedians – Basketmouth

    Use of Pidgin English on stage has limited our comedians – Basketmouth

    A comedian, Bright Okpocha, popularly known as Basketmouth, on Friday said that adoption of Pidgin English on stage by Nigerian comedians had limited their reach and popularity.

    Basketmouth told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that many comedians would have gotten international fame and recognition if they were entertaining in English.

    He said that Nigerian comedians also needed to step up their game in order to be globally competitive.

    “One of the problems we have right now in the industry and which makes it difficult to break out of our cultural background and society is the language barrier.

    “Ninety per cent of our Nigerian comedians entertain their audience in Pidgin English and which limits their reach.

    “You can only break even in Liberia, Ghana and Sierra-Leone, all English speaking West African countries, but can’t go beyond that in Francophone countries.

    “So, if you continue being lazy as a comedian and not striving to be universal with your materials, you are going nowhere.

    “Joke is a joke, as long as you don’t make it too cultural because nobody in America, with the right audience, knows about the Warri people or the Yoruba people or Hausa.

    “So create your jokes and even more universal which is the major problem we have right now.

    “This is the reason why South Africans can break into the Western world because of the fact that they deliver their jokes in English and their structure is better than ours.

    “In Nigeria, the entertainment is massive, but with no structure,” he said.

  • Actress Annie Idibia named Slimtea Ambassador

    Actress Annie Idibia named Slimtea Ambassador

    Nollywood actress,Annie Macauley-Idibia, has been unveiled as brand ambassador of the popular weight loss brand, Slimtea.

     

    Slimtea Nigeria, makers of the tea, disclosed this in a statement made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Friday in Abuja.

     

    “It is fitting for Mrs Annie Idibia to be a part of the Slimtea weight loss movement, bringing with her a unique perspective of family health.

     

    “We are excited to have her join the Slimtea family and we look forward to working with her.

     

    “It is truly a perfect partnership as she is the epitome of a graceful motherhood,”the statement said.

     

    In her remark, the actress expressed happiness and her willingness to work with the slimtea team.

     

    “I am happy to be associated with the brand called Slimtea.

     

    ”Through this partnership, I’m looking forward to helping many women on their weight loss journey,” she said.

     

    NAN reports that with the latest announcement, Idibia has become the second Nigerian celebrity to be named slimtea Abassador, after actress Ini Edo was unveiled earlier this year.

     

    Slimtea is a 28-day detox tea that kick starts the body system into natural weight loss .

  • NUC urges varsities to access free $4m e-content at NgREN

    NUC urges varsities to access free $4m e-content at NgREN

    The National Universities Commission (NUC) has urged Nigerian universities to access the $4 million EBSCOHost e-content through the Nigerian Research and Education Network (NgREN) for free until Dec. 31.

    NUC’s Executive Secretary, Prof. Julius Okojie, who made the call in a statement on Friday in Abuja, said such access would enhance the online presence of universities and improve their global ranking.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that EBSCO is a multinational company and provider of research databases, e-journals, e-books and provider of academic e-libraries to schools and corporations.

    He said that NgREN was established to provide an elaborate infrastructural backbone to interconnect all Research and Education Institutions in Nigeria and link them with other Research and Education Networks (RENs) worldwide.

    “NgREN has secured access to EBSCOHost e-content-including e-books, journals, and academic magazines, which will be available for free to all Nigerian Universities until December 31, 2016.

    “These resources valued at about $4 million would, in fact, grow the number of available resources in the nation’s university libraries and as a result, heighten research activities amongst institutions in the Nigerian University System (NUS).

    “By accessing the EBSCOHost e-content, Nigerian Universities stand a better chance of enhancing their position in international university rankings just as in the accreditation of programmes, where library holdings form a major component of the assessment.

    “Universities in Nigeria are hereby encouraged to utilise these resources, which are available on the NgREN at no cost until the end of 2016,’’ he said.

    Okojie said that plans were underway to ensure that Universities on NgREN continued to access EBSCO and other e-content beyond the expiration of the current service.

    He said that EBSCO Information Services, South Africa, was one of the foremost leaders in the provision of quality research content, powerful search technologies and intuitive delivery platforms.

    According to him, the platform also offers premium content in databases, e-books, journals, magazines as well as very versatile discovery tool for searching across all library resources.

    The executive secretary said that since its formal launch in July 2014, the NgREN has made significant progress in reducing the cost of bandwidth for subscriber institutions.

    He said the cost of subscription had reduced from an initial $1,260 megabits per seconds (mbps) to $160 mbps and to a present cost estimate of $50 per mbps.

    “Some other notable achievements of the network include the reduction in travel costs as a result of the video-conferencing facilities and capacity building cost savings through online and remote training modules,’’ he said.

    He said that NUC in partnership with the Committee of Vice-Chancellors established NgREN to ensure that universities could communicate, collaborate, access and share resources across national and international boundaries.

    NAN recalls that NUC and EBSCOHost on April 12 orgainsed a Capacity Development workshop for Nigerian universities to provide training and sensitisation on access and use of EBSCO e-Book Academic Collection.

  • Boko Haram: IPCR commences peace building programme

    Boko Haram: IPCR commences peace building programme

    As peace return to Adamawa after the Boko Haram insurgency, the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR) has commenced training of stakeholders in the state on peace building.

    The Project Coordinator of the Peace Building Training Project, Mr Chukwuemeka Mbah, made this known in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Yola on Friday.

    Mbah said more than 200 stakeholders drawn from seven local governments of Yola North, Yola South, Hong, Gombi, Girei, Fufore and Song in central zone had benefited from the training.

    He said the second batch of the training would commence next week in Mubi town for stakeholders in northern zone of the state.

    The coordinator said that the zone comprised, Madagali, Michika, Maiha, Mubi North and Mubi South Local Government Areas.

    According to him, the institute and other experts have identified Adamawa as a fragile state.

    Mbah said that institute decided to intervene after the return of peace to douse tension created by suspicion among the diverse people of the state.

     

    “From our research in IPCR and from open source intelligence, we have identified Adamawa as a state that need a lot of intervention in terms of peace and coexistence.

    “After this insurgency a lot has happened; there is a lot of mistrust, hatred and we need to really start fostering coexistence.

    “Madagali and Michika are very fragile areas where we need a lot of interventions, especially now that things are going back to normal.

    “This is what we call the early recovery stages of conflict and that is where peace building has to be brought in,’’ Mbah, who is Coordinator External Conflict Prevention and Research, said.

    He lauded the support and commitment of UNHCR and Adamawa government to the project.

  • Debt: Arik Air resumes claims payment of N18.9bn to FAAN

    Debt: Arik Air resumes claims payment of N18.9bn to FAAN

    Arik Air on Thursday claimed that it had paid a total sum of N18.9 billion to the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) from January 2007 till date.

     

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Managing Director of Arik Air, Mr Chris Ndulue, made the claim while briefing aviation correspondents in Lagos.

     

    NAN reports that the airline’s operations at the Murtala Muhammed Airport were disrupted on Wednesday by aviation unions and some FAAN workers, over its alleged N12.5 billion indebtedness to the agency.

     

    However, Ndulue, while apologising to the airline’s passengers for the inconveniences caused by the development, confirmed that Arik Air had resumed both domestic and international operations.

     

    He noted that it was very strange that while the airline’s records showed the payment of N18.9 billion, FAAN claimed that it received only N11.4 billion.

     

    According to him, every efforts have been made over the years to reconcile the disputed figures, including the setting up of a ministerial committee by the former Permanent Secretary of the aviation ministry, Mrs Binta Bello.

     

    Ndulue said while the committee was still trying to resolve the issue, FAAN instituted a suit against the airline in October 2015 at the Federal High Court, Lagos.

     

    He said FAAN again informed the court on Feb.3, 2016 that parties should be allowed to explore an amicable resolution to the dispute by appointing an independent auditor, to reconcile the figures.

     

    “So the issue of whether Arik Air is indebted or not to FAAN has been put before a competent court in a suit initiated by the agency.

     

    “For FAAN to resort to self-help or by its staff is an affront on the Federal High Court and the Nigerian State.

     

    “A situation whereby staff of FAAN and union members turn themselves into debt collection agents, on behalf of the Federal Government is absurd,” Ndulue said.

     

    Also speaking, the Chairman of Arik Air, Mr Arumemi Ikhide, confirmed that the airline’s management had met with the Minister of State for Aviation, Capt. Hadi Sirika, over the unions’ action.

     

    “We are prepared and want to pay for services rendered, but we will not be bullied. What happened yesterday (Wednesday) is not good for the image of the country,’’ he added.