Tag: Nigeria newspaper

  • “33’’ Export unveils 40th anniversary label in Calabar

    Nigeria’s premium beer, “33” Export Lager, unveiled its limited edition 40th anniversary label at the ‘City of Friends’ event in Calabar, Cross River state at the weekend.

    In an atmosphere of camaraderie, the foremost beer brand unveiled a special limited-edition bottle label to mark the historic milestone.

    Thousands of consumers witnessed the momentous event at Municipal Garden, Calabar where a limited-edition bottle label that speaks to the brand’s uncompromising quality was unveiled.

    Read Also: Life Lager wraps up 2019 edition of Hi-Life Fest

    Raising the roof at this delightful unveiling was the turntable skills displayed by DJ Neptune and DJ Necterr matched by MC Galaxy’s energy and KCEE’s rousing performance. KCEE thrilled the crowd with great hits like ‘Limpopo’, ‘Hakuna Matata’ and the collaborative track with Wizkid, ‘Pull Over.’

    The Portfolio Manager Mainstream Brands, Omotunde Adenusi explained the commitment of the “33” Export brand to delivering unrivaled quality and bringing people together.

    “We are excited to celebrate this historic milestone. The limited-edition 40th anniversary label is a celebration of “33” Export’s four decades of providing consumers a great tasting beer. “33” Export is a unique beer brand known to nurture relationships and strengthen the bonds we share and we thought it apt to celebrate this moment with our loyal consumers.”

  • Forex restriction: Food businesses count losses

    The new policy regime placing restrictions on forex for food import has remained hotly debated with concerned stakeholders arguing very strongly that the policy should be reversed considering the unintended, albeit dire consequences its implementation may bring about. Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf, Charles Okonji and Medinat Kanabe in this report examine the issues

    To say the federal government is no longer at ease with food import is clearly stating the obvious. As to be expected President Muhammadu Buhari had last week in clear terms expressly instructed the country’s central bank to stop providing foreign currency for food imports.

    Justifying the move, presidential spokesman Garba Shehu said it was aimed at improving Nigeria’s agricultural production and attaining more food security.

    “The president … said the foreign reserve will be conserved and utilised strictly for diversification of the economy, and not for encouraging more dependence on foreign food imports bills,” reads the statement.

    Shehu also quoted President Buhari as saying, “Don’t give a cent to anybody to import food into the country.”

    The restriction on foreign exchange means businessman and businesswoman in Nigeria who depended on the banks for foreign currency to import food items into the country would have to source from alternative dealers which tends to be more expensive.

    Groundswell of support for forex policy

    At the last meeting of its monetary policy committee, Godwin Emefiele, the CBN governor, announced the bank’s plans to restrict forex for milk importation.

    “We believe that milk is one of those products that can be produced in Nigeria. Milk importation has been going on in Nigeria for over 60 years. If you Google West African Milk or Friesland Campina today, they say that they have been importing milk and that they have been in Nigeria for over 60 years,” he said.

    “Today, the import of milk annually stands at $1.2-$1.5 billion. That is a very high import product into the country. Given that it is a product that we are convinced that it is a product that can be produced in Nigeria.”

    Lending his voice to the argument in an interview with The Nation, the CBN’s Director of Corporate Affairs, Mr. Isaac Okoroafor said the government took that drastic measure in the interest of the national economic growth and development.

    “The implementation started since 2015. We started by excluding 41 items; subsequently we included others, now we have eliminated all sorts of food import which we know that can easily be produced in Nigeria. The country cannot be food sufficient if we continue like this,” he recalled, adding, “There will never be an amendment because the issue is this, why should we be exporting jobs to other countries? Today we are complaining that there is a high rate of unemployment, leading to some extent of insecurity in the country, why should we allow people to import food that can be produced in the country?”

    Pressed further, the CBN’s spokesman said, “We need to improve wealth in our rural communities and I am saying we will not change course, we will even be more aggressive on this programme. The move is an attempt to stop the importation of items that Nigeria has the capacity to produce, stressing that the country’s foreign reserves should not be wasted on importing food items.

    “If you recall, we started with about 41 items (food and non-food items), because we believe that those items can be produced in the country. As we stand today, there are about 43 items on that list and I will say substantially most of them are food items.”

    “The president said some states like Kebbi, Ogun, Lagos, Jigawa, Ebonyi and Kano had already taken advantage of the federal government’s policy on agriculture with huge returns in rice farming, urging more states to plug into the ongoing revolution to feed the nation. We have achieved food security, and for physical security, we are not doing badly.

    “Buhari said he was delighted that young Nigerians, including graduates, have started exploring agriculture-business and entrepreneurship, with many posting testimonies of good returns on their investments. But the order has attracted several reactions from farmers, industrialists, economists and financial pundits.”

    Chain reactions over new policy regime on food import

    As to be expected, since the presidential directive, the announcement has sparked controversy from different quarters with majority of the stakeholders crying blue murder, over a policy they described as anti-people, noting that Nigeria’s food sufficiency, as touted by Buhari, is wildly exaggerated.

    Critics also said the president has no constitutional right to direct the policies of the CBN, an independent institution.

    Firing the first salvo, the Director General of Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Mr. Segun Ajayi-Kadiri warned that such policy may be counterproductive if implemented by fiat, without ensuring necessary alignment with the fiscal policy and other economic policy initiatives of the administration.

    In his reaction, he said, “Clearly the objective of Mr. President is noble. The directive, we understand, is aimed at consolidating the progress made towards food sufficiency, conserving our foreign exchange and encouraging consumption of locally produced food. The implication of this is that importers of food items will not get forex with which to import from the official foreign exchange. They will have to buy from the parallel market.”

    Ajayi-Kadiri however stated the organised private sector need to know what type of food, finished/ready to eat or as input for further processing, “In the case of the latter (in particular) you need to know the local capacity available to meet national demand and if not adequate, creditably determine what time and resources are needed to ramp up capacity and production. There is need to pre-determine these as part of the implementation strategy. This is so that the local producers that are being incentivized are not overwhelmed by smuggling and we are able to sustain the self-sufficiency.”

    However, the Director General of Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Muda Yusuf complained that the current forex policy conceptualisation and management is adversely impacting investment.

    “If policy and regulatory risks continue to escalate as we are currently experiencing, the chances of stimulating investment, whether domestic or foreign, would remain dim. Over the last couple of years, food inflation had been a source of worry.  It has consistently been ahead of core inflation.  This is reflection of the productivity challenges in the agricultural sector which has lately been complicated by security challenges across the country and attacks on farming communities,” Yusuf said.

    According to him, the sector is still largely dependent on smallholder farmers, and with little mechanisation and application of technology, the sector would be enhanced.

    “Transportation is another key impediment to food security in the country.  These are fundamental issues that need to be addressed, and urgently too,” the LCCI boss stressed.

    Kingsley Mogahalu, former CBN deputy governor, said the directive is against the independence of the CBN.

    Writing on his twitter handle, @MoghaluKingsley, Moghalu said, “The issue here isn’t whether or not CBN should allow access to forex for food imports. It is about whether such an economic policy of a central bank should be imposed by a political authority. A major reason for our poverty, instability and weak economy is weak institutions. Our marketplace should be regulated and guided in a rational manner that creates a level playing field. Our economy will not be saved by Ad hoc political decisions like this, handed down by the very institutions that should be shielded from the whim and caprice of politicians.”

    Echoing similar views, Ayo Oyoze Baje, a public affairs commentator said it is scandalous that a country that is supposed to be Africa’s largest economy still imports red palm oil, with which it once controlled 40 % of the global market in the 60s but has since drastically dropped to 1.8% in the New Millennium!

    According to him, the emerging economic scenario of the ban on forex for food import, laudable as it is therefore, throws up some fundamental questions.

    Raising some posers, he said, “How would this policy directive work effectively against the dark backdrop of epileptic power supply needed to enhance the capacity of food processing and preservation by the  small and medium scale enterprises down to the rural areas, where the farm produce come in large amounts? How would it assist the value chain of food processing, preservation and marketing?  What with over 1,000 porous borders, inadequate personnel of the customs service to check the expected upsurge in smuggling? How would the policy mitigate the scourge of poverty, pitched against waves of insurgency, banditry and the killing spree of innocent farmers by fully armed Fulani herdsmen?  That such mindless killings affect largely agrarian states in the North-East, and the Middle Belt that has since snowballed to the North-West states should be worrisome indeed.”

    Policies, he insisted, should emanate from the stakeholders’ input and backed by law instead of command- and- obey structure. Besides, he should be mindful of the impact of such policies on the people, take actions to ensure security and regular power supply instead of putting the cart before the horse!”

    Amaka Anku, Africa director for the Eurasia Group, said that whether the policy was implemented or not it sent a troubling message for an economy suffering from high unemployment, low foreign direct investment and sluggish growth.

    “Most actors, especially the central bank, should know that a total ban of food imports is not practical and I doubt that will be the policy,” she said. “But his comments will continue to drive home the sense that Buhari has no idea how to manage an economy and will raise uncertainty about what other [foreign exchange] restrictions are coming, and contribute to already low business confidence.”

    Ironically, the Chairman, Lagos State Branch of Nigerian Association of Small and Medium Enterprises (NASME), Mr. Solomon Aderoju supports the federal government’s decision, expressed that the step was in the right direction as it is favourable to the association and manufacturers in the country at large.

    The NASME boss stated that his members did not only applaud the pronouncement, but could not wait to hear the full implementation of outright ban on imported food items.

    Unintended consequences of new policy

    Speaking to a cross-section of experts, they argued matter-of-factly that the policy if implemented as it is would result in dire consequences including job losses, skyrocketing cost leading to cost inflation to mention just a few.

    In the view of Lanre Alabi (not real name), the decision to restrict forex was in bad fate to say the least.

    In a chat with our correspondent over the weekend, he disclosed that his firm is involved in the importation of food supplements and other allied products and was already hurting from the policy.

    Specifically, he said, his company had opened some letters of credit with some banks to import some of the food supplements on behalf of some major manufacturers in the next six months and was therefore at a quandary when the federal government announced the decision to stop such gestures to importers of food items.

    “The decision is completely uncalled for. The decision that has been crossing our minds since the policy directive is why on earth government should adopt such a policy with wide-reaching implication without making some allowances for businesses operating in the sector?”

    According to Yusuf, it is worrisome to note that the implications of policy pronouncements for investors’ confidence and the general sentiments of investors are very dire.

    “Unemployment levels in the country has reached a disturbing level of over 23%, and rising. Youth unemployment is even much more.  Yet the panacea for dealing with the scourge of unemployment and poverty is investment.  If policy and regulatory risks continue to escalate as we are currently experiencing, the chances of stimulating investment, whether domestic or foreign, would remain dim,” he noted.

    Rather than apply knee jerk approach to issues, the LCCI’s leading light said, “Rigorous impact study should precede major policy changes, supported by empirical data.  This is necessary to minimise shocks and dislocations in the investment environment.  This is also imperative to stem the increasing cases of job losses.

    Timeline of forex restriction

    In 2015, the CBN announced that it had banned forex for the importation of 41 items saying the move would conserve scarce forex and encourage local production.

    The items banned at the time were rice, cement, margarine, palm kernel/palm oil products/vegetable oils, meat and processed meat products, vegetables and processed vegetable products, poultry chicken, eggs, turkey, private aeroplanes/jets, Indian incense, tinned fish in sauce(Geisha)/sardines, cold rolled steel sheets, galvanized steel sheets, roofing sheets, wheelbarrows, head pans, metal boxes and containers, enamelware, steel drums, steel pipes, wire rods(deformed and not deformed), iron rods and reinforcing bard, wire mesh, steel nails, security and razor wine, wood particleboards and panels, wood , fibre boards and panels, plywood boards and panels, wooden doors, toothpicks, glass and glassware, kitchen utensils, tableware, tiles-vitrified and ceramic, textiles, woven fabrics, clothes, plastic and rubber products, polypropylene granules, cellophane wrappers, soap and cosmetics, tomatoes/tomato pastes, Eurobond/foreign currency bond/ share purchases.

    In December 2018, fertiliser was added to the list bringing the total banned items to 42. In March, the apex bank announced that commercial banks and bureaux de change operators in the country should stop the sale of forex to importers of clothing materials.

    Although the apex bank has assured that the directive will be implemented in phases so that the impact on food prices and inflation can be managed, a lot of people hold the view and very strongly too that the harm has already been done.

  • Meet celebrities who insured their body parts

    In Nigeria, the policy of celebrities insuring their body parts might be strange, but in America and Europe, body parts insurance started decades years ago. It was led by the first Hollywood stars of the silver screen.

    In this list, we have put together gross body parts which have been insured by celebrities.
    Here are the stars who have insured their famous body parts…

    Leg Insurance

    Heidi Klum

    Heidi Klum

    Heidi Klum, ex-Victoria’s Secret model, who was once married to Henry Olusegun Adeola Samuel popularly known as Seal, insured each of her legs for $2 million. She flaunts her well-toned pins at every opportunity.

    Mariah Carey

    Mariah Carey

    Mariah Carey realised the value of her legs after she became the face of shaving company Gillette. She ultimately decided to get them insured for a whopping $1 billion.

    Cristiano Ronaldo

    Cristiano Ronaldo

    Ex Real Madrid footballer star, Cristiano Ronaldo also known as CR7 got his legs insured for $144 million.

    Rihanna

    Rihanna

    Rihanna, the ‘Love The Way You Lie’ crooner insured her long legs for $1 million.

    David Beckham

    David Beckham

    David Beckham, the English former professional footballer and co-owner of Salford City insured his legs for $70 million during the height of his success.

    Michael Flatley

    Michael Flatley

    Lord of the Dance and famous Riverdance performer Michael Flatley insured his trademark tapping legs for $39 million.

    Betty Grable

     

     

     

    Betty Grable

    Betty Grable, an actress in the 1940’s insured her trademark legs for $1,000,000.

    Buttocks insurance

    Jennifer Lopez

    Jennifer Lopez

    Jennifer Lopez, actress and singer insured her buttocks for $27 million.

    Kylie Minogue

    Kylie Minogue

    Kylie Minogue is reported to have insured her shapely buttocks for $5 million.

    Daniel Craig

    Daniel Craig

    James Bond actor, Daniel Craig got his body insured for $9.5 million while shooting Quantum of Solace since he had to perform several dangerous stunts.

    Smile and teeth insurance

    Julia Roberts

    Julia Roberts

    Pretty Woman actress, Julia Roberts who was considered one of the highest-paid actresses in the world didn’t want her dazzling smile to fade, so, the Oscar winner insured her teeth for $30 million.

    America Ferrera

    America Ferrera

    Ugly Betty actress, America Ferrera got her smile insured for $10 million after she became a face of toothpaste brand Aquafresh.

    Breast insurance

    Dolly Parton

    Dolly Parton

    Dolly Parton’s 40DD breasts were first insured in the 1970s for $600,000.

    Madonna

    Madonna

    Madonna has had her breasts insured for $2 million.

    Holly Madison

    Holly Madison

    Former Playboy Playmate Holly Madison took out an insurance policy worth $1 million on her breasts.

    Voice insurance

    Bruce Springsteen

    Bruce Springsteen

     

    Bruce Springsteen insured his voice with Lloyd’s of London for a cool $6 million.

    Hand insurance

    Keith Richards

    Keith Richards

    Rolling Stones’ guitarist Keith Richards had his hands insured for $1.6 million – though, some sources claim the amount was just for his left hand’s middle finger.

    Unusual insurance

    David Lee Roth

    David Lee Roth

    David Lee Roth, the lead singer of Van Halen, obviously thought of his sperm as his biggest asset and got it insured for over $1 million.

    Shirley MacLaine

    Shirley MacLaine

    The actress is a firm believer in extra-terrestrial life and took out a $25,000,000 policy to protect herself against any losses arising from alien abduction.

    Tongue and taste bud insurance

    Miley Cyrus

    Miley Cyrus

    After all the controversy stirred up by her 2013 MTV Video Music Awards performance, Miley Cyrus insured her tongue for a million dollars.

    Gene Simmons

    Gene Simmons

    If anyone is known for their tongue, it’s KISS frontman Gene Simmons. The rocker had his super-long tongue insured for $1 million so KISS fans wouldn’t have to worry about him losing the trademark.

    Egon Ronay & Ilja Gort

    Ilja Gort
    Egon Ronay

    Hungarian-British food critic Egon Ronay insured his useful taste buds for $400, 000. Similarly, famous Bordeaux wine maker Ilja Gort insured his nose for a jaw-dropping five million euros.

    Angela Mount & Gennaro Pelliccia

    Angela Mount
    Gennaro Pelliccia

    Wine expert Angela Mount was so good at her job that her employer took out an insurance policy of $16 million for her taste buds. Costa Coffee took out a $15 million insurance policy on its chief taste taster Gennaro Pelliccia’s taste buds.

    Hair and facial hair insurance

    Merv Hughes

    Merv Hughes

    Famous Australian cricket player Merv Hughes was even better-known for his famous handlebar mustache. The player took out a $317,000 policy on his tuft of facial hair.

    Troy Polamalu

    Troy Polamalu

    A spokesman for Head & Shoulders, former Pittsburgh Steelers player Troy Polamalu is known for his three feet of curly black hair. The shampoo company wanted to keep his luscious locks safe by insuring them for a million bucks.

    Tom Jones

    Tom Jones

    British icon Tom Jones is so well-known for his unbuttoned shirts that he insured his chest hair for a staggering seven million dollars.

    Waist insurance

    Bette Davis

    Bette Davis

    Known as one of the greatest actresses in film and television history, Bette Davis was the first woman to win the Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Film Institute. Famous for her tiny waist, she had it insured against weight gain for $28,000 (over $400,000 today).

    Nose insurance

    Jimmy Durante

    Jimmy Durante

    The actor Jimmy Durante insured his famous schnoz under a LLoyd’s policy for $140,000.

  • Still on Atiku’s ‘treasonable’ comments

    My editor forwarded a number of very strong comments on my article on President Goodluck Jonathan’s response to Atiku Abubakar’s so-called treasonable comment. Most were derisive of the position I took, and others even snorted at my description of the president’s comment as undemocratic. I respect their views, and, as I always say, I have an obligation to defend their right to make any comment they think fit.

    Alhaji Atiku, you will recall, rehashed a popular statement warning of violent change if peaceful change was disallowed. In the article, I had argued that Atiku reserved the right to make that statement, and that it was not treasonable as the president angrily concluded. The responses sent to my editor denounced my support for ‘treason’, described my premises as illogical and prejudiced from beginning to the end, and finally dismissed my competence to write in such temper. One other critic even wondered why I was opposed to a minority emerging as president.

    I still think the president overreacted to Atiku’s statement, and that that reaction was certainly not the sort we should expect from the nation’s number one office, which should by now be used to all manner of provocations. First, I looked at the nexus between violent and peaceful change, and doubtless found the logic sound, as indeed most of those who have heard it over the decades rightly think. If peaceful change is denied, you do not need any clairvoyant to foretell the consequences.

    If the responders would look at the statement again, I am sure they will find it an elementary truism. Second, I looked at the context of the statement, and I tried to situate it within the frustrations emanating from the clash of propaganda between the rival camps of Jonathan and Atiku. I suggested that Atiku was becoming frustrated that Jonathan’s advertisement campaigns were more effective, and all but hinting that if the party primaries were held immediately, Jonathan would breast the tape first. One of the responses wondered what the advertisements had to do with the treasonable statement.

    Third, I suggested that the presidency in Nigeria was too imperious to allow democracy to flourish, particularly free speech. I still think this is true, and I would rather support the ordinary citizen underdog than give the president the benefit of the doubt. Nigerian leaders always behave as if they own us and must dictate to us. In a democracy, they must be made to understand that free speech, no matter how harshly rendered, must never become, in their imperial eyes, treason.

    What I did not say, but which I assumed everyone understood, was that Atiku made the statement within the context of the PDP, not within the context of a national political combat. Of what use would his statement be if he faced, say, Muhammadu Buhari? In any case, if anyone had the right to make the statement within the context of the PDP, it was even Jonathan, the aspirant advocating change in a situation where a northern aspirant was resisting change.

    I think most commentators did not calmly analyse the Atiku statement and they allowed themselves to be carried away by the feeling that the oligarchic North was as usual trying to lord it over the rest of the country. We must make up our minds what kind of country and democracy we want.

    We are not too young a country or democracy to allow free speech, even if rendered in strong words. Much more than the rest of us, it is the leadership that must come to terms with our opinions, anger and resolve, whether couched elegantly or inelegantly. An appropriate humorous response from Jonathan, the frontrunner, would have put Atiku on the defensive. 

  • BUKOLA OLOPADE: My romance with road races

    Bukola Olopade, CEO of Nilayo Sports Management Limited, patent owners of Access Bank Lagos City Marathon, among other road races, is a man on a mission. The mission is to take road-race to all notable cities in the country and at the same create opportunities and develop support base for talented Nigerian athletes.

    As plans for the fifth Lagos City Marathon enters final lap, Olopade, who was sports commissioner in Ogun State, said it has added The Abeokuta N10km race coming up in November, and the Remo Ultra Race in December of this year, to its races, while Abuja Road Race may happen next year.

    He dreams of taking road races to all important cities and towns in the country to showcase to the rest of the world the unique beauty and passion inherent in Nigerian people and places.

    “In ten years, I’m hoping that the Lagos City Marathon would have achieved platinum with IAAF. We recently introduced a fee to the race, but this was something we told the whole world at the press conference of the maiden edition. We said that at the fifth edition, a fee would be introduced. And we have introduced the fee now for both the 42km and the 10km. The fee is N5000 flat. We are hoping that this initiative would create a better quality race rather than a quantity race. That would give us 60,000 true road runners. Not people who would jump on the bus and come to the finish area and fight for a medal.

    “In 10 years time we like to sit back and say Abeokuta Road Race, Remo Road Race and Uyo and Abuja races are gold label and the almighty Lagos and Abuja road races are platinum. That is our dream. There is a new love for athletics; that is where we are heading.”

    Before road races, Olopade found football. However, he admits athletics has become his newest bride. “Have I discovered a new favourite sport in athletics? The answer is yes. So, you find me in Japan and Qatar to watch world relays and World Championship respectively. I have a new love for athletics and if it is well articulated in this country it would empower many young people.”

    Olopade, however, remembers the days of small beginnings and attributed the success story to people and idea.”

    “To be honest, it is to the credit of Chief Solomon Ogba, the former Commissioner of Sport in Delta State and former AFN (Athletic Federation of Nigeria) president. It was him that threw the challenge at us when he said it was a misnomer for Lagos – one of the biggest megacities in the world – not to have a road race and that road race is becoming a phenomenon all over the world. So, we sat down and came up with a concept, which we took to the former Lagos State government that was able to quickly understand the benefit inherent in a road race and plugged in immediately.”

    Olopade further speaks on his foray into football, wheelchair basketball, politics and his lifestyle in the interview with TAIWO ALIMI.

    Galvanise corporate bodies to come into road races

    First, our integrity was well established. And when you look at the people in Nilayo, we have collectively almost 60 years in sport and combined 30 years in sports marketing and brand and image management. But more importantly is the fact that we discover that it is not true that corporate bodies do not want to come into sports sponsorship, but largely because they have been waiting for people they can trust and whose visions can tally with theirs for them to be able to support graciously what everybody will agree is a veritable tool of empowerment for young Nigerians.

    Motivation

    I don’t know how to tell lies, so I would say the first motivation was how to make money for my company. I did see the opportunity and I have no regret, no apology. But after all said and done, my pride now is that we are part of a global brand that is empowering Nigerians, not just young Lagosians, but Nigerians in general. For me, personally, the fact that the sport that I love so much has now become bread and butter for me, my family, my friends, and my colleagues is a thing of joy. It is gratifying to know that something that you love doing can also be a source of comfort for you.

    From sports commissioner to sports marketing

    My first experience of watching a private sector work with government was the Gateway Games (2006 National Sports Festival) while I was commissioner. And that opened my eyes that the private sector could support sports as long as you have integrity. I always give kudos to my boss, the then governor of Ogun State, Otunba Gbenga Daniel. He said ‘Bukola, the world is still scratching the wall as it concerns sports.

    You need to look inward and see how you can make sports your daily living because a lot of people still do not understand that you can make a lot of money from working in the sporting industry.’ These words kept ringing in my ears and to finish this interview without giving credit to him would be unjust and unfair. Yes! My experiences as commissioner was capacity building that I needed to be able to articulate effectively how much sports can bring into the economy and how much sports can be a very important attachment to one’s life.

    Nigeria National League (NNL) walkout

    I’m always reluctant to talk about that, but since you asked I’m going to answer. I left because I thought the NFF in their decision were wrong. I was the CEO of NNL and there was an agreement in Asaba to allow four teams to be promoted and four to be relegated at the end of the season. Whether I was against that agreement or not, the moment the NFF Congress sat down and reached an agreement, it became binding on me. And they came to that agreement because the NFF gave them permission.

    When the NFF turned around I called my friend Amaju (Pinnick), I said I was out because for me, and like I’ve been saying in this interview, integrity matters. What was the agreement we had with Bet9ja? That they would continue to support NNL once the Premier League run by LMC sends down four demoted teams and we sent up four promoted teams. The agreement was breeched without us being carried along by the LMC by not demoting any team and left all teams in the Premier League. I found myself in a situation and I had to make a decision, so I pulled out. Was that why Bet9ja pulled out? I say yes because they felt an agreement has been breached. Rather than taking us to court, they pulled out quietly.

    Wheelchair basketball

    I never left wheelchair basketball. We have Nilayo Basketball Team. We’ve won every competition in the last two years and as a way of support I still do the needful. However, I contested for the president of wheelchair basketball again and Solomon Dalung (Nigeria Sports Minister) in his wisdom, somebody told him that I was going to disturb somebody from becoming the Paralympics chairman and I was disqualified for no reason.

    So I packed my bag and came back to Lagos. But I do not believe that people need to be on a board of a federation to support. So, I’ve never left my children in special sports. They know me and I have a passion for them. In Access Lagos City Marathon, we created space for the wheelchair race and we are doing the same thing in Abeokuta Road Race. I won’t forget them.

    Unwinding

    Like what I’m doing right now. Calling Seyi and Femi (his staff) names but more importantly I have a great crew. They are my friends and colleagues and we play and enjoy ourselves. I do a lot of exercise and eat well.

    Family influence

    I have the most beautiful wife who is my best friend and my pillar. She is a wonderful woman. There are days I pinch myself and ask myself how she still tolerates me. It’s nice to always talk about family. I usually send messages to my team and friends about how important family and friendship are to your personal happiness and not focusing too much on fame and money.

    I have a great family. My children are my life. Apart from my biological children I have hundreds of children and they all make me happy. I am an accomplished man. I often joke, God forbid, that should I die tomorrow there must be a big party because there is no regret. I chop this life no be this life chop me.

  • Trump as the “Chosen One” – Four Theses

    This week, Donald Trump’s megalomania reached a new high when he pronounced himself God’s representative on earth by declaring that he is the “Chosen One”.

    About a week ago, he had startled all Americans by declaring that he would not only be reelected in November 2020 but would go on to succeed himself after the constitutionally mandatory limit of two consecutive terms.

    Of course he did not indicate how he could and would achieve this unprecedented and unconstitutional feat: if you are Donald Trump, you have no need to explain to mere Americans, mere mortals, what destiny and your own transcendental uniqueness have in store for you. Which is why it was a logical and inevitable step for him to go further this week to declare himself as the Chosen One. Will he go on to the next step, the next level of declaring himself God’s equal and partner in directing the affairs of the planet and the universe? Don’t rule it out!

    This article is not about the inscrutable mind, ways and actions of Donald Trump. Indeed, it is about very measurable and scrutable politics of Trump, his allies and supporters in America and other parts of the world. Trump may seem so exceptional in his brand of megalomania that we think that we must quickly and usefully assimilate him to the tradition of the monstrous rulers of the past and the present. But while that is logically unexceptionable, we must go beyond that response to him to tease out aspects of his presidency of the most powerful nation in the world that we would be well advised to keep in mind. This is what I indicate in the following four theses.

    Thesis One: the alliance of big money and the resentment of the poor and the excluded

    Trump and his “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) movement is an alliance of the richest Americans and white Americans at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder. The poor and resentful whites are the stormtroopers, the foot soldiers, while the upper-class financiers, generals, corporate executives and real estate magnates to whom Trump has bestowed extraordinarily generous tax breaks are the collective mind and the planners of the Trump revolution. Though it is an uneasy alliance, all modern 20th and 21st century fascist movements have their demographic and emotional basis in this sort of alliance.

    It is an alliance of demographic segments of the population that seem to be natural enemies. What does an 8 dollars an hour kitchen maid in one of Trump’s hotels have in common with Trump, especially in light of the fact that Trump has a long history of cheating and mistreating his workers? And a coalminer in West Virginia on 12 dollars an hour, what common interest does he have with Wall Street financial brokers? The genius of Trump and the fascist movements of the past and the present is to find the glue that would cement the alliance between such seeming natural enemies.

    The glue is of course completely hidden and you will never find a single banker, general or corporate executive marching with the foot soldiers or proudly wearing MAGA caps. We might think here of a Nigerian equivalent, this being the rumours, the allegations of rich and powerful backers of Boko Haram. With very few exceptions, how many of them have ever been unmasked and identified with unassailable facts and evidence? The same thing applies to allegations of sponsorship of poor herders by rich herders in the tragic raids on the farmlands and livestock of the farming communities: the glue is hidden, the cement indissociable from the brick. In the American case, Trump marches with the poor and the resentful mostly among whites and wears a MAGA cap since, as a matter of fact, he designs, produces and markets MAGA caps. Of course this leaves out the poor and the resentful among non-whites who in fact become the target of the MAGA movement. Thus, at the heart of all fascist and neofascist movement including and especially Trump’s MAGA movement is a bitter war of segments of the poor and the resentful against one another. Whether he is the “Chosen One” or not, this is the fundamental structural foundation of Trump and his megalomania. In other words, his megalomania many seem bizarre and inscrutable but in actuality it is rationally scrutable.

    Thesis two: Trumpian neofascism as an interstate or global phenomenon

    Notably, the most consequential international fascist alliance of the 20th century was that between the so-called Axis Powers composed of Germany, Italy and Japan. Going by the number and spread of Trump’s far right allies around the world, it would seem that his neofascist “internationalism” is far more ambitious than that of Hitler and the Axis Powers. In Europe and far beyond in the developing world, everywhere that far right, militant conservative movements have risen, Trump has rushed in to lend his aggressive support. Some cases stand out: Viktor Orban and Jibbik Party in Hungary; Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil; Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines; and Nigel Farage in the UK. To this list could be added Vladimir Putin of Russia, not exactly a client of Trump as the others are, but a strong ally of Trump in the project of undermining or even destroying the foundations of liberal democracy and neoliberal globalism in Europe and the whole world. To the extent that even though he did not provide the spark that started all these right-wing nationalisms against foreigners, racial and ethnic minorities and internal currents of liberal and multicultural relations, Trump has become the most powerful and effective coordinator of their projects, to that extent is Trump the contemporary world’s greatest threat to international cooperation, multilateralism and peace.

    Let us express this development in contemporary global relations in concrete terms. After the end of the Second World War and the Cold War, with the exception of apartheid South Africa, racism, anti-Semitism, xenophobia and conservative, irredentist nationalism seemed to have been in decline everywhere in the world. But not anymore, thanks to this growing Trumpian alliance of far-right nationalisms in Europe and beyond. Thus, it is now common for leading politicians in many parts of the world to be openly and militantly racist and xenophobic as in Nigel Farage in the UK and Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil or to advocate treatment of immigrants that are against international conventions and simple human decency. Moreover, conspiracy theories and so-called “fake news” abound and thrive as driving engines for these far-right nationalist movements, Donald Trump being the greatest purveyor of all for conspiracy theories and fake news. Trump is the “Chosen One”? Only if you think of the use of the combined power of American military, economic and cultural capital to direct our world toward the Armageddon that Trump is eager to foment as his preferred solution to the world’s myriad economic and social contradictions.

    Thesis three: neofascism and the birth of a new, 21st century global civil rights movement

    For every action there is a reaction and wherever you go, there you are! Against the fascist Axis Powers of the Second World War in the 20th century, there arose, dialectically, the Allied Powers comprising Britain, France, America, the Soviet Union and China. The two formations found their greatest consolidation both in the preparations for war and the actual prosecution of the war. Apparently, while war cannot be ruled out in the contemporary situation (except of course in highly localized regions and contexts), war is not the primary locus of the opposition between, on the one hand, Trump and his neofascist allies in Europe and beyond and, on the other hand, the forces and movements of global multiculturalism, liberal democracy, social democrats and post-capitalist humanism. Although the dust is yet to clear around the diverse forces and struggles forming against Trump and his allies at home and abroad, some patterns are beginning to emerge. Perhaps the most important or most “natural” is the alignment of forces between homelands and diasporas in many parts of the world, especially in Europe and North America. Let us take a close look at this particular development.

    It would seem that like all fascist and neofascist movements of the past and the present, Trump and his allies depend and thrive on driving wedges between indigenes and foreigners, citizens and migrants. But the world is old and both Europe and the Americas have historically been shaped by migrations and creations of diasporas everywhere on the planet. And in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, the other continents and regions of the world have followed the European example of creation of diasporas, of immigrant communities around the world. And as a result, it is no loner possible to solidly demarcate “homelands” from other lands: everywhere and for everyone, there are powerful human and cultural ties to homelands and diasporas across the globe. Homelands will of course never completely disappear and neither will diasporas at some point in time cease to find new spaces of consolidation. The upshot of these long range and long-time developments is that the civil rights movements of the present and the future will be both internal and transnational, unlike the civil rights movement of the 2oth century that were mostly internal.

    Thesis four: Trumpian neofascism, climate change denial and the specter of planetary holocaust

    At their ideological and utilitarian roots, nearly all the fascist movements of the 20th century entailed a vision of unrestricted exploitation of not only natural resources but of nature itself: land, trees and plants, the oceans and waterways, mineral ores deep in earth’s core, the fishes of the seas and the birds of the skies. Human labour itself became a prime site of this exploitative war on nature and this in turn became a model for what could be done to the entire planet itself. In other words, if human beings could be worked to death and could then be discarded as if they were endlessly available for such unconscionable exploitation, what could stop us from doing the same thing to the whole planet? If you have seen mineworkers deathly sick from working for decades and across generations then you have seen an image of what will eventually happen to the mines themselves and the surrounding regions in which they are located. This recapitulation of the tenets of radical humanitarian environmental thought has become very urgent in the age of Donald Trump, the ultimate Anti-environmentalist and climate change denier.

    There are two major fronts of Trump’s apocalyptic anti-environmentalism: retreat or complete withdrawal from nearly all international treaties and conventions limiting the production of nuclear weapons of mass destruction; and retreat or outright withdrawal from all international obligations on reduction of carbon emissions. 19th and early 20th centuries capitalism did not have the benefit of knowledge that we now have about the limits logically and necessarily imposed on us by weapons of mass destruction and unlimited emission of carbon into the atmosphere. But to Trump and his allies that knowledge is either not admissible or can be rendered questionable by the counter “knowledge” that their own “scientists” can produce. The evidence is there, frightening and devastating in the extreme in such catastrophic events as Californian and Amazonian wildfires and coastlands laid to utter ruin by tsunamis and hurricane flooding. But Trump and his allies in America, Europe and the developing world reject the evidence. We are still here, are we not?

    The end of the world does not always mean the literal, physical end of the world. More complexly, it may mean the end of the world as we have known it, as it has sustained our humankind over the course of the relatively short span of time that we have exercised dominion over all the other forms of life on our planet. Trump as the “Chosen One”? Chosen to end the world as we have known it and as it has sustained us through an aeon of historical time, after which comes a humanoid, post-historical time?  How so prospectively good that anti-Trump and anti-anti-environmentalists are increasing and gathering momentum by the day, by the week, by the year.

    • Biodun Jeyifo, bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu
  • ‘Everyday realities inspire me to write’

    Betty Abah is an award-winning journalist, author, women and children’s rights activist and social media activist. She is the founder of CEE-HOPE, a child’s right and development NGO. She had practiced with Newswatch and TELL Magazine. She is a fellow of the Alfred Friendly Press Fellowships, USA, the John Knight Health Reporting Fellowship (USA), the Kaiser Family Foundation Fellowship (USA) among others. Abah has authored five books including Go Tell Our King (poetry), Sound of Broken Chains (poetry) and Mother of Multitudes (biography). She speaks to Edozie Udeze on what makes her an exceptional poet and writer

    What triggers your muse?

    I am inspired by my everyday realities, both my high and low points. I am pained by human suffering and the gross inhumanity of people in power and others who wield multifaceted powers over fellow humans. I am angry and many times my anger births my literary outputs. Poetry captures my most intense emotions. From age 10 when I started writing and particularly age 15 when I started doing poetry, I came to realise that the more depressed one gets, the deeper the work. But my work is also a vehicle of expression for my joy, fulfilments and admiration of God’s creations.

    When you read a book, what are the essential issues you look out for?

    When I read a book, especially fiction, the first thing I look out for is the style, the elegance of the writing, how the writer is able to arrest the reader’s attention with sheer elegance, and brilliance. I like to see the pages leap at my face and increase my heartbeats with sheer entertainment. Thus, the issues being treated are most times not as important to me as the pleasure I derive from reading a book. I guess I basically flow with the writer on whatever theme he/she chooses to explore, as long as you can sustain my interest with your soul-filling style, and that is so true for fictional works, and which is why our own Chimamanda Adichie and Abubakar Adam Ibrahim are among my all-time favourite writers.

    What sorts of books interest you most?

    Biography, poetry and fiction, and to some extent, motivational books. I also read the Bible a lot, especially the book of Psalms — there are a rich reservoir of inspiration—inspiration beyond words, they enrich my soul. But beyond that, I read EVERYTHING. There is no way you can broaden your mind, hold down conversation, inspire or even be a good writer if you are not an avid, actually a ferocious reader. You must read like your life depends on it. Also, as part of my activism campaign, screaming for the rights of women and children, I write and do lots of media interviews and there is no way you can hold up any good conversation or pass on quality information if you are not a ‘multi-purpose reader’ versed in your area of campaign and in a broad range of other issues.

    Of all the books you have read which character or characters struck you most?

    One of the most profound books I have read is in a non-fiction book called Three Cups of Tea: One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace … One School at a Time.  It’s a book about Greg Mortenson, an American nurse and mountaineer who went for an expedition in Northern Pakistan in 1993. Sick and tired in the course of the climb to K2, the second highest mountain in the world, he found himself in Korphe, a remote mountain village in northern Pakistan, where he was nursed back to life by a generous old man called Haji Ali. He discovered that there was no school in the village and promised to return to build a school for them. He kept to his word and returned and his humanitarian effort later led to the establishment of the non-profit, Central Asia Institute (CAI) through which he built hundreds |of schools across Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan. I was privileged to have met and interviewed him in 2006 while on a reporting programme at the Rocky Mountain Newspaper in Colorado, USA (as a fellow of the Alfred Friendly Press Fellowship). He is truly an inspiring figure who has won so many global awards in recognition of his transformative humanitarian work.  The idea of a happenstance blossoming into a major movement that would transform the lives of several thousands and transfix millions others later is for me quite captivating. But even more, the colourful and breathtaking writing style of the co-author, David Oliver Relin, now late really did it for me.

    At what point in your life did you start nursing the idea of being a writer?

    I guessed the writing life happened on me, it wasn’t planned or contemplated. I was a very withdrawn and intense child in a large polygamous family, that soaked things in quickly, and tried to rationalize so many things so early in life, indeed my maternal grandmother nicknamed me ‘the agitator’, so I guess writing was an outlet for all that. Anyway, I started writing at age 10 while in primary school in Otukpo, Benue State, doing mostly profuse letters to relatives living in Lagos, then essays, then poetry, then journalism and also now, new media. As I said, it was a natural tendency and I love it. There is nothing like giving expression to our experiences and the world around us. With writing, we are painting words on life’s canvass for all to read and be entertained, to be challenged, be informed, be inspired or to even be angry enough to act positively. So, becoming a journalist later and an author and now an advocacy writer is just priceless for me. I feel like I am in a good place fulfilling purpose. It’s just wonderful to see that situations can change, justice can be served and sanity restored through a single report or just a couple of tweets or one or two Facebook posts. I deeply appreciate all who risk their lives daily by speaking truth to power through both the traditional and social media. With the sickening level of impunity by both the leaders and the governed in our country, the correcting whip of the media is most needed. I am proud to be a part of this.

    Any particular book that triggered the interest?

    Yes, a torn copy of Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. I was eight then and wasn’t yet in school (I started school properly at age nine) and so couldn’t read but was fascinated by the artistic illustrations. Once I was able to read it, I read virtually all of Achebe’s books, virtually all of Cyprian Ekwensi’s books, virtually all the titles on the African Writers Series, Pace Setters, books by Kola Onadipe and just about everything I could find in the school library at Wesley High School, Otukpo, the town library or those supplied me by my generous classmate and friend, Ejuma Okoh. As a teenager, I literally buried myself in books.

    When and where do you prefer to read or write and how often?

    There is nothing like being curled up on the floor of my quiet study with a book, or with my note pad and pen. But then the Muse can be dictatorial and can happen anywhere— in the kitchen, bathroom, while driving, while in a meeting—just anywhere!

    what is your preferred genre of literature?

    Poetry. Definitely!

    Who are your choice authors home and abroad?

    So many, but Chimamanda Adichie among the top on the list, any time. I think people also need to read more of our great columnists like Dan Agbese more. Agbese, my journalism mentor and benefactor, is also author of so many books— splendid, indeed world-class wordsmith he is!

    When you meet any of them, what will be your first question to him or her?

    Which is your favourite, of all your books?

    Are you a re-reader and how often?

    Ofcourse! And that depends on how ‘delicious’ the book is. For instance, I have read the motivational book, How to Make Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie several times. Same for Adichie’s Americanah and Tree Cups of Tea. I also hope to find time to read Cyprian Ekwensi’s books again, for the sheer beauty of the stories, I mean who doesn’t love An African Night Entertainment, The Drummer Boy, Burning Grass, or is it The Passport of Mallam Illia?

    How has writing reshaped your life?

    It has broadened my worldview, deepened my thinking process and generally enriched my life. You know, to be a writer, you must also be a good reader, and reading is quite transformative. But also, being an author is quite fulfilling. One of the greatest joys I have ever known is seeing my published works among other books on my shelves and in the shelves of book stores. It’s an incredible feeling, I guess, like birthing and beholding your own child.

    How do you arrange your library?

    Not in any special order, though I can always track particular books when I want to. My books are my friends; they are among my most prized possessions.

    What are you reading now and what do you intend to read next?

    I have three books that I am currently traveling with—Chief Olusegun Obasanjo’s memoire, My Watch, Volume 1 (I got the three volumes and plan to read all) Steven Job’s biography Steven Jobs by Walter Isaacson, and a compelling book, However Long the Night by Aimee Molloy, about an American humanitarian Molly Melching who has lived and worked in Senegal for 45 years. Melching established the Tostan Centre in 1991 and works with communities across Senegal, Mali, Guinea and others to end child marriages and other harmful traditions such as Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) or cutting. Today, the organization has succeeded in more than 8, 000 communities in sub-Sharan African countries. I was privileged to attend a training in her centre in Senegal recently and to get the book. Quite inspiring and educative.

     

  • Mattress buying guide

    I never knew buying a good mattress can be difficult till a retiree, Mrs Edith Udug, complained to us that a mattress of a leading brand she bought collapsed after about one year of usage.

    Explaining, the brand manager of the company who pleaded anonymity said it could have been caused by many external factors. Exonerating the company, he affirmed the high quality of the product but said that Udug bought a mattress not meant for her.

    “When buying mattress, a customer must consider so many things including her weight. A mattress for someone weighing 40kilos will not do for one weighing 100kilos. We provided weighing scales for our dealers and educate them on weighing customers before selling mattress to them.”

    Weight is just one of them. Let us examine other factors to be considered before parting with our money.

    Getting a good night’s sleep is essential to staying happy and healthy. But buying a mattress without doing your research first can lead to sleepless nights and achy mornings, if you are not sleeping on a supportive base.

    So whether you are a side sleeper or suffer from chronic back pain, read on to find out what option is best for you.

    Types of mattress

    Open spring mattress: Also known as open coil or continuous coil mattresses. These contain one long piece of metal wire coiled into numerous springs. There is also an additional border rod or wire to maintain shape and provide structure. It is a great value for money option, although sides are machine-stitched rather than hand-stitched, they are lighter than other models, making them easy to turn. They tend to be less supportive than other mattresses too, so are most suited to guest bedrooms or as children’s beds, where they are used occasionally or will need to be replaced regularly anyway.

    Pocket spring mattress:  You can buy soft, medium or firm versions, depending on your preference, and they are more breathable than memory foam or latex mattresses. This is a good option if you’re looking for a bed for two people, as the separate springs will cater for your different needs and weights, while they will also minimise the risk of you rolling towards your partner in the middle of the night.

    Memory foam mattress: These more modern mattresses are made from memory foam, which is a mouldable material that also responds to temperature and weight, and has hypo-allergenic properties. This means it will mould to the shape of your body, absorb your weight and relieve pressure on your joints. Not everyone likes the sinking motion of this type of mattress, and it can get rather warm, but it’s ideal for those who need support or suffer from a bad back, as it will maintain posture and align your spine horizontally when sleeping on your side.

    Latex mattress: As the name suggests, these mattresses are filled with latex foam, which is an especially breathable material, so you won’t overheat in the middle of the night. It’s also extremely durable and should last for many years. And it’s a good option for those with allergies or asthma. They can feel rather solid at first though, so they’re better suited to those who prefer a firmer bed. Usually heavy, latex mattresses can be difficult to turn and cheaper versions can develop lumps and dents over time.

    Hybrid: Drawing from a combination of materials that usually include memory foam, latex and pocket springs, hybrid mattresses are designed to give a more balanced sleeping experience. They often come with a pocket-sprung base and a memory foam top layer, providing both comfort and support – alleviating aches and pains by responding to your body’s shape.

    Continuous and coil: These are significantly cheaper than other mattress types, but be warned that with the attractive price tag comes the likelihood of these mattresses wearing out and sagging quickly. These mattresses also move around a lot with you as you sleep – as they are designed as one unit – so if you or your partner tosses and turns in the night, we’d suggest you consider other options.

    Mattress firmness

    How firm your mattress is will affect how well you sleep. The type of firmness you need will depend on your sleeping position, height and weight. Here we explain what level of firmness is best for what type of sleeper.

    Soft: Side sleepers or those who change positions during the night are best suited to soft mattresses. This is because the way you sleep already relieves pressure from your spine so you want your mattress to mould to your body’s natural position.

    Medium soft: This is ideal for those who change their sleeping position during the night, as it will still mould to your body position but provide a little more support.

    Medium firm: This is best for people who sleep on their back as you require extra lower-back support, which this type of firmness offers.

    Firm: This type of mattress is ideal for those who sleep on their front, are over 15 stone or suffer from back pain. This is because it will keep your back in a relatively comfortable and stable position without allowing you to sink into it as you sleep, which can cause lower-back pain.

    How should you sleep while pregnant?

    During your first trimester, you’ll often feel sleepy and want to nap. It’s important you get the rest you need so sleep in whatever position feels most comfortable, including on your front or back.

    In your second trimester, you’ll feel the baby’s weight more, which can feel uncomfortable and put extra pressure on certain areas of your body. This is when a soft mattress will help, while your bigger bump means the recommended position to sleep in is on your left side, as sleeping on your back will cause your bump to press against a main blood vessel, which may cause you to feel faint.

    During your third trimester, your lower back may be a source of pain as it supports your baby’s increasing weight. To ease this, continue to sleep on your left side and with a pillow under your head, between your knees and under and around your bump to ease discomfort and take pressure off your muscles and hips. We’ve also reviewed pillows to help mums-to-be sleep.

    What mattress do you need if you suffer from joint or back pain?

    A good mattress needs to give both support and comfort and that includes ones for those who suffer from back problems.

    Although a firm mattress is recommended by some retailers, you should always look for a mattress that keeps your back aligned while sleeping and relieves pressure points along your spine and joints. This has a lot to do with your weight (the heavier you are, the firmer your mattress should be).

    Mattress care

    Once your mattress is delivered, make sure you let it air for at least four hours. This will remove any storage smells of damp or cold.

    Ideally, the mattress should then be aired weekly by removing the bed linen. Remember to turn your mattress regularly too. This will stop dips forming and your weight altering part of the mattress, causing uneven sleeping.

    You should aim to replace your mattresses every eight to 10 years though. This is not only for hygiene reasons but because it will soften over time, reducing the support it gives you.

    If you feel sore when you wake up or you find you sleep better in other beds, it’s time for a change.

  • APC must begin to reflect on life after Buhari – Princewill

    Prince Tonye Princewill was the Director, Strategic Communication for the APC Governorship Campaign in Rivers State for the 2019 Elections before the Supreme Court excluded the party from the contest due to internal crisis. He was a chieftain of the Action Congress of Nigeria on whose platform he aspired unsuccessfully to be governor of River State. In this interview with Tony Akowe in Abuja, Princewill who is a close associate of Minister of Transport, Rotimi Amaechi, speaks on the crisis that cost the party River State, the security situation in the country and lots more.

    After the 2019 elections where the APC was excluded in Rivers State, are there efforts to carry out a comprehensive reconciliation among members and where does the party in the state stand ahead of 2023?

    Anybody who wants to win wants peace, especially anyone who is not blinded by ambition. I know peace efforts were made before the elections and I suspect peace efforts will be made again soon. But it has to be initiated from outside. That means it is the duty of the party to find a way to bring all sides back to the table. The national office in my opinion is best placed to midwife a genuine peace process. Disagreements are commonplace in politics. Friction is a function of interaction. So we await the party. Clearly as the dust begins to settle and ministers are put in place, the need for a state by state reconciliation will come to the front burner.

    I will say however that party disunity at the state level was not what cost us the election. It was disunity at the national level buoyed by a few in the judiciary and in INEC that were willing to use the guise of local issues to implement a plan hatched in Rivers State Government House. We were naive to think that those threatened by Amaechi were only in PDP. Now we know that was not the case. His unadulterated closeness to Buhari and his refusal to “play” with some of his fellow leaders at the national level meant that his enemies became Wike’s friends. If an Amaechi without a state government is so influential, an Amaechi with a Rivers State Government would be unstoppable. 2019 for us was about 2023, not 2019. Amaechi was taught a lesson and we in Rivers State paid for it, through no fault of our own. Anybody weak enough can be induced to be disunited. Our fault was we underestimated how much Amaechi was hated within his own team. So at the federal level, we were really in government, but we were not in power.

    At the national level, the party seems to be fragmented along interest lines. There are those who feel your party is losing its goodwill and that the party may not be in reckoning come 2023, particularly considering that the cult-like followership of President Buhari will no longer be there. How do you react to that?

    It was the former British Prime Minister that said “A week is a long time in politics.” That applies here too. My prediction is that there will be an alignment and realignment of interests leading up to the next elections. We see it all the time. It’s nothing new. What may be new is the President may sign into law a new electoral act that will introduce electronic voting. People will become more important to politicians if that is the case. In many states, that has not been the case. Both the APC and the PDP will be affected by this and it means the possibility of a third force will become more likely.

    I agree APC will need to begin to reflect on life after Buhari. Like I said earlier, it was Buhari that won that election, against all odds. So if he isn’t there, it will be different. But if Buhari raises the hand of anyone, he or she already has a head start over the opposition. Buhari won’t raise anyone’s hand in 2023 unless he genuinely believes that such a person can do justice to Nigeria and take her to the promise land. It will be that person versus someone who can take us back to the days of sharing and I know, in the end, the progressives, under whatever banner, will win again.

    Amaechi is perceived in certain quarters as a stumbling block in Rivers APC and not a rallying point. He couldn’t stomach Magnus Abe, Lulu Briggs and a few others who left the party because they alleged he imposed Tonye Cole. You are a strong force within. What is your take?

    Let me start by saying that I am not a strong force, just a very stubborn politician who will not play politics as usual. I am easy to understand. My loyalty to party is not at the expense of my loyalty to my people. As long as my party respects my people, my party can have no problem with me. Who are my people: the youths, the vulnerable, the disabled, the masses, the Niger Deltans, the Ijaws, Rivers people and of course, the Kalabari Kingdom. Mess with any of these groups and you have messed with me. It is therefore impossible to impose someone where I am seated. I won’t take it. Amaechi did not impose anyone on us. He did not even allow the writing of results at the ward, LGA and state congresses. He, like his father Buhari, became an extreme democrat. The amount of sincere consultations we did in Rivers State, impressed even a sceptic of our politics like me. I’ve been a victim of the popular will being reversed many times and I can tell you, that didn’t happen in Rivers State. Yes, its true Amaechi expressed an opinion as to Tonye Cole at the end, but he did so only after we gave him that option. I was one of the last to agree. But I know Amaechi has genuine love at the grassroots and the best way to fight the opposition was lining up behind one position, no matter whose ox was gored. Can I agree behind closed doors and reject it publicly? No. I cannot do that. We the leaders agreed on the process of choosing a candidate and we agreed on Tonye Cole – collectively. With respect to my brother, the distinguished Senator Magnus Abe, he jumped the gun and expressed an interest to contest very early. Amaechi refused to endorse him, but he was left free to express his views and free to associate, including with Wike. He could never have won, so he ensured nobody won. I’m sure he is very happy about how he made his point. Wike owes a lot to him.

    We are experiencing dwindling external reserves and the GDP isn’t encouraging. In specific terms, what do you think should be done by the new cabinet to drive the economy, particularly from its mono cultural status?

    There are a lot of things they can do sector by sector. But I think there are a few areas that I see quick wins. Improved agricultural output is already a priority and I expect that the government will do more; same for infrastructure. We need more rail, roads, better ports and airports. Our refineries also need to be online and effective. Decades have passed without progress. But two areas are dear to me. The first is that I want the power sector to be a key target and I want to see it improved, especially at the level of distribution. This issue frustrates me so much so I took time to study it. No matter how much we generate, we don’t have the infrastructure to distribute more than 4,000 MW. The discos are a bottle neck and I now see why. The issue needs to be addressed.

    The next area for me is the creative industry, our music, our film, our comedians, our artists and our collective culture, popularly called the entertainment industry. This is the life blood of our youths and one of the largest employers of labour. I see that the CBN and BOI are doing a good job of recognising them. But they need to do more and this has to be a serious and a directly supervised initiative by the executive under the Ministry of Information and Culture and supported by Justice Ministry.

    You have been around for long: a friend to Atiku, you worked with Tinubu in 2007 and you are one of Amaechi’s confidants. Yet you are at home in the Villa. How have you been able to manage or navigate around all these power blocks and tendencies in our polity?

    I am a willing student and I did not join politics for what I can take. I joined for what I can give. Both Atiku and Asiwaju brought me up very well politically. Atiku gave me the opportunity to contest and allowed me a voice; Asiwaju stood by me and gave me the tools to fight for justice. They both handed me over to Amaechi even though they both denied it at the time. I now know why. Since then, we have been a team, even though his refusal to support me for governor kept me away from him for a while. All politics is local and so in Rivers State; you are either with Wike or Amaechi. I’ve tried the third party option. It doesn’t work. There is no way I can work with Wike. As for the Villa and the Presidency, I believe in Buhari and I’m not alone. Ninety (90) percent of my LGA agreed with me. He got our votes. We rejected anything and everything associated with Wike and we have seen a man for the masses. I’m sure they see that in me.

    With the problems that trailed APC’s adoption of direct primaries in some states of the Federation, do you see it as a better method than indirect primaries?

    If well managed, it can be a solution to many of our problems. It’s expensive and it can be an invitation to violence. But if you can check that, I will forever be an advocate for it.

    The Buhari administration has faced strong criticisms from Nigerians who feel he is not holding on to his campaign promises, especially in the area of fight against corruption. Would you not agree that the fight against corruption could be better fought?

    Of course it could be better fought because there is room for improvement. I will be the first to agree with this. But let us not be fooled by those who think nothing is being done or no significant progress is being made. Critics are available like sand. I ignore them. What I watch out for are the constructive critics. They want to see more high profile convictions and fast tracking of cases and their wishes are being heard. I am reminded of what a banker once told me. He said he can’t make it impossible for people to steal money. What he can do is make it harder and harder for them.

    From your arguments, it is obvious that you consider the last governorship election in Rivers State as a sham. But there are those who would argue that Governor Wike is solidly on the ground in that state and that he understands the politics better and has earned for himself the sobriquet, Mr. Project in Rivers. What chances does the APC have with another four years of Wike?

    INEC declared him governor. So, that is what he is until the Judiciary says otherwise or till his four year term expires or God takes control to the contrary. We all know it was a sham; it’s not breaking news. What was a surprise was who and who were involved. But now we know. He is now planning to endorse Austin Opara as his successor because he has seen that cash is King; anybody can be bought: the media, the police, the judiciary, the opposition and the youths. He knows our moral fibre is weak and that hunger has left many of us thinking with our stomachs and not our heads. We are here and watching. Let the buying begin. APC’s chances depend on APC. If like in 2015 and 2019, you predicted a President without Rivers; that may not be the case going forward. We need candidates who are popular, grass-rooted and can appeal across party lines; at all levels. We can’t afford a disgruntled electorate.

  • Goldberg Larger wears new look

    To sustain the spirit of celebration and cultural heritage, Goldberg, the premium quality beer which has become a cultural staple for pleasure-seekers for years, has launched a new golden look that speaks to its respected status in the beer community as a cultural symbol.

    With its refined, classy look, Goldberg was relaunched on August 9, 2019 at the finale of the brand’s talent hunt show, Ariya Repete, at the Ikeja City Mall, Lagos with the theme, “The Mark of Respect.’’

    For years, Goldberg has retained its spot as the regional mainstream brand for South West Nigeria. Like the traditional talking drum, Goldberg has commanded attention at weddings, birthdays, anniversaries and other parties across the cities in Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Osun, Ondo as well as Kwara. From its towering look of effervescence to the lingering bitter-sweet taste, this larger beer from the leading brewer, Nigerian Breweries Plc, is brewed for quality enjoyment.

    Goldberg represents a cultural heritage and excellent craftsmanship. It is also a common find in any cultural gathering such as festivals where oral poetry tradition is celebrated. Its panegyric element is synonymous with the Yoruba’s oral tradition which is passed down from one generation to another to preserve history and culture. To bridge the gap between tradition and modernity, Goldberg’s new look appeals to the next generation of consumers who share the values of respect, enterprise and dignity.

    It is for this reason that Goldberg earns the title of “Omoluabi’’ which conveys the value of good character, respect, enjoyment, dignity and integrity. Over the years, Goldberg has stayed true to its core value of reverence and quality enjoyment which makes it different from other mainstream beer brands in Nigeria. As a beer that treasures tradition, Goldberg has a competitive edge of restoring the true communal spirit as the toast of socialites in the South West region. Indeed, Goldberg is an iconic beer that has defined and still redefines the cultural landscape for beer consumers who cherish and relish traditional values.

    The Senior Brand Manager, Goldberg and Life, Maria Shadeko, in her remarks noted the distinctive elements of the Goldberg brand that has made it a market leader in the beer industry and how the new look will impact on the consumers. ”Goldberg beer is an ideal complement to consumers who place value on tradition, respect and culture. With its new look, Goldberg offers more than just high-quality taste for pure enjoyment but an enhanced visual delight which will make it the choice larger beer for every connoisseur.’’

    Speaking to the new theme, Shadeko added that ”with the new theme ‘mark of respect’, we will be speaking to the excellent craftsmanship and impeccable quality of Goldberg, elevating its credentials to a position of reverence and admiration. While ‘Omoluabi’ encapsulates the ethos of the Yoruba people and their values of “Respect, Enterprise, Dignity” (R.E.D), of which enjoyment is a manifestation.”

    It’s been an eventful year for Goldberg Larger. 2019 has seen the brand unveil a new brand ambassador, successfully sponsor the 2019 edition of Ariya Repete as well as re-invent itself in a new and exciting way. With a new label, a new crown cork and a newly formulated larger which promises a great tasting experience, Goldberg seeks to further establish itself as the market leaders.