Tag: Nigeria

  • God will work wonders in Nigeria – Kumuyi

    God will work wonders in Nigeria – Kumuyi

    The General Superintendent of Deeper Life Bible Church, Pastor William Kumuyi , on Sunday urged Africans to believe in God and be united in love so as to overcome the seemingly failure in the country.

    He said because all nations serve one God, we should have one goal, vision and direction just like the apostles of the early church who were not divided, but stayed true to each other in faith.

    Kunmuyi spoke during the Church two-day special mid-year celebration service held at its Conference Centre on Kilometre 42, Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, Ogun State.

    The theme of the service is: “When Mountains Move.”

    “We are not alone. God’s power resides in us as we all belong to God as members of His body that cannot be broken. God is faithful in his promise of making us priests and king in his kingdom. We are working together with Him as the tree and humans as the branches,” he said.

     

  • ‘No future for Nigeria without agriculture’

    ‘No future for Nigeria without agriculture’

    •FG makes N591b on six crops

    There is no future for Nigeria without agriculture, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. AkinwumiAdesina, has stated.

    He also declared the nation’s status as a net importer of food as unacceptable, stating each import creates unemployment and devalues the nation’s currency.

    Adesina, who spoke at the weekend during his keynote address at the 40th meeting of the National Council on Agriculture and Rural Development (NCA) in Abeokuta, emphasised the needs for people to support value-chains programme of the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA).

    He said: “The future can no longer be in oil but something we have comparative advantage in and it has to be agriculture so there is no future for Nigeria without agriculture.

    “Nigeria can no longer continue to be a sleeping giant. We have to wake up. And if we wake up, we must begin to do things differently.”

    Speaking on the GES, the minister emphasised that the programme was able to make available farm inputs such as improved seeds, fertilizer to farmers at a subsidise rate.

    On rice production, he disclosed farmers who embarked on dry season farming in 10 northern states were able to rake N32billion within the season.

    The minister added the Federal Government generated N591 billion through cultivation of value-chains in rice, cassava, sorghum, maize and cotton in two years.

    While calling on stakeholders to embrace local consumption of foods to create jobs and expand farmers’ yield, the minister urged the Ogun State Governor, IbikunleAmosun, to support local farmers in the state with distribution of free seeds.

    Amosun said that about 20,000 hectares of land is currently available in the state for investors to cultivate crops with market advantage.

    The governor urged participants to draft policies and programmes that will guarantee production of adequate and quality food supply.

     

  • Visa bond: Before casting the first stone

    Visa bond: Before casting the first stone

    Nigerian leaders should fix their country instead of blaming Britain for protecting its own interest

    Last Sunday, I had taken on Mr David Cameron, the British Prime Minister on this same page when he said that Britain plans to consult with its Nigerian counterpart to ensure that the anti same-sex bill passed by the National Assembly does not become law. I had said then that Mr Cameron and Britain should not turn Nigeria into Sodom and Gomorrah; and that we have values that run counter to what the Britons want us to embrace. In short, I had referred to them as interlopers. Then, I did not know I would have a return match this early.

    But here I am, and so soon, taking sides with the Britons today. Reports that Britain is planning a scheme that will force visitors from 18 years and above from Nigeria, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Ghana whose nationals are deemed to pose a “high risk” of immigration abuse, to provide a cash bond of three thousand pound sterling ($4,600; 3,500 euros) (about N750,000) before they can enter Britain have sent the Nigerian elite throwing brickbats at the British authorities. The scheme, according to The Sunday Times newspaper which broke the news, will take effect in November and covers a six-month visit visa. The weekly paper said the move by Home Secretary Theresa May is designed to show that Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservative Party is serious about cutting immigration and abuses of the system. Cameron wants annual net migration down below 100,000 by 2015.

    May was quoted as saying that “This is the next step in making sure our immigration system is more selective, bringing down net migration from the hundreds of thousands to the tens of thousands while still welcoming the brightest and the best to Britain”. She added: “In the long run we’re interested in a system of bonds that deters overstaying and recovers costs if a foreign national has used our public services.” A Home Office official said the six countries highlighted were those with “the most significant risk of abuse”. Now, this is something that is still in the works; and many of our elites are already losing sleep. They cannot even wait for the policy to take off before taking on the British authorities.

    Well, unlike my position last week, that I did not see how our rejection of same-sex marriage could have affected Britain to make that country’s prime minister see in that decision a need to seek a change of position by the Federal Government, today, I say unambiguously that Britain is right in taking whatever measures it deems fit to protect its interest. If we do not know what our interest is, not to talk of how to protect it, we should not blame another country that is fastidious about its. As a matter of fact, my position is strengthened every minute by the fact that none of those who have criticised the proposed scheme has adduced any genuine reason why Cameron should not restrict the number of people coming into Britain, despite that country’s own serious economic challenges. Even the Federal Government that has also threatened to retaliate measure-for-measure has not given any convincing reason on how the proposed measure will affect it or affect Nigerians. The best everyone criticising the British has said is that the proposed measure is ‘discriminatory’. For God’ s sake, what does that mean? I don’t know how something that is only ‘discriminatory’ can jeopardise the interest of Nigerians or that of their government. It is a say-nothing reason that we are adducing.

    If you ask how many people are in a particular street anywhere here, it is unlikely you’ll get anything close to the appropriate number. This has been the way we run our own lives; unfortunately, this is not how things are done in better organised countries. At any time, they want to know how many people enter their country and how many people leave, at least for the purposes of planning. Here, we plan in a vacuum and because we fail to plan, or because we plan blindly, we keep experiencing a situation whereby we march forward to the past. Do we want Britain to become the way we are? A jungle where everything goes?

    If you like, you may brand me an unpatriotic citizen for taking this position; I have no apologies for that. But, before those who might want to cast the first stone at me do, they should sincerely ask themselves whether we would have been where we are today if successive governments in the country had been patriotic. When I was a child, I had relatives who travelled to Britain then and they never went with the intention of staying there permanently. They either went to study or they went on holiday; and they were always eager to return to Nigeria. I remember some of our musicians sang about the cold in London and about how and why our students who went there must face their studies in spite of the cold. One of such songs was ‘Ilu Oyinbo dara, ore mi o dun pupo’, etc.,(UK is good, my friend it is a sweet place, etc). Sweet as the UK was then, our people never went there with the intention of staying. As a matter of fact, even if they wanted to stay put there, there was another song to remind them about home, sweet home, where there is never a place like (Ile o labo sinmi oko)’.

    So, what is it that is now making Nigerians flee from their country to go stay and die abroad? In the good old days that I am talking about, the University of Ibadan, for instance, was recognised as a standard university worldwide. Our most sought-after universities can no longer find space among the first 1,600 in the world, according to the January 2012 report of Webometrics, a world tertiary education ranking institutions organisation, Those who ran the universities and other institutions aground are the ones now shouting that Britain should not ‘discriminate’ against Nigerians, even when that country has made it clear that Nigeria is one of the countries with. “the most significant risk of abuse” of British immigration laws. And this is a thing we all know.

    If you are in doubt, listen to Ambassador Patrick Olusola Onadipe, Deputy Chief of Mission in the Nigerian Embassy in China: “But I hope we will not be overwhelmed because a lot of Nigerians coming here have no business here, if I have to be very frank. This is because when they come they are misinformed.

    “A lot of them probably think they will get jobs here. But when they get here, there is no job. So, they don’t want to return home.

    “Less than 10 per cent of them have visible means of income; others don’t. So, they resort to anti-social activities, like pushing drugs, doing 419, yahoo-yahoo, Internet fraud, armed robbery, rape and even murder.” That is straight from the horse’s mouth and that is the way it is all over the world. Nigerian prostitutes are now hot cakes in Russia. That is how bad things have gone in the country.

    Rather than wish other countries should descend to our depth, we should aspire to their heights. If Nigeria feels sufficiently strong about the proposed British measure, it should reciprocate measure-for-measure when it takes off because I do not think the British should back down on this since it touches on their very soul. Let the legislators crying foul legislate truly for good governance; let the judiciary adjudicate professionally and let the government govern responsibly, such that 16 would not be greater than 19 in a simple arithmetic. When we all do our bit, Nigerians would find little cause to travel abroad in search of greener pasture. And whatever the British do with their immigration laws would not be our headache.

  • Weird, wild world of Dan Gbana girls

    Weird, wild world of Dan Gbana girls

    To what length can the youth be trusted with the salvation of the nation’s bleak future? The question has become pertinent in the light of findings that a great number of the nation’s youths are turning into hard drug addicts.

    The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mallam Sanusi Lamido, might have seen through this when he recently proposed that any Nigerian seeking to occupy a public office should first be subjected to drug tests.

    In the past, consumption of hard drugs, particularly Indian hemp, was done in hiding. In those days, those who indulged in the act moved far away from the prying eyes of security agents and family members to avoid arrest or rejection by the society, which generally resented the habit. Parents and family members made conscious efforts to dissuade their children from engaging in such acts for fear of the stigma it would bring on them.

    Today, the story has changed. At motor parks, brothels, streets and institutions of higher learning where future leaders are expected to emerge, hard drugs have become like regular meals without which there would be no life.

    Checks at a community, a lecherous environment along Lagos/Badagry Expressway, showed that some young people, male and female, live on hard drugs. A visitor to the area does not need to be told the kind of business that the residents engage in; their appearance says it all. They look dingy, brutal and frightening. The females wear all kinds of tattoo on their bodies while the males happily expose sizeable scars on their bodies.

    From every corner of the area ooze all kinds of unpleasant smells, with smokes from thickly wrapped Indian hemp pervading the air. It is simply a way of life for many of the young and the old residents of the area.

    A set of commercial sex workers in the area, called Dan Gbana (daughters of hard drug), specialise in taking heroin and go about their business without having their bath for days. A trader named Angela in the area said the Dan Gbana girls could sleep with any man for as little as N100 if they lack the resources to buy drugs.

    She said: “This is another world entirely. It is not possible for a child to be brought up here and he would not take hard drugs, which come in different forms. The area is predominantly populated by people from a particular state in the North. It is home to many people of questionable character because they come to patronise the commercial sex workers that operate here.

    “Here, both the old and the young are involved in prostitution and also indulge in all kinds of hard drugs that are sold here. It is also a common sight to find a nursing mother hustling for ‘customers’ without minding what happens to her baby. They often do all this under the influence of hard drugs and liquors. They take hard drugs and wash them down with strange liquor drinks.

    “The prostitutes are of different categories, but the deadliest of them is the Dan Gbana group. They are brutal and often dispossess men who sleep with them of their valuables. They are called dan gbana because they consume a lot of gbana, the Yoruba word for hard drugs. They consume it as if their lives depend on it and would not even have their bath for days.

    “They become restless if they stay for some time without taking hard drugs. If they become so broke that they do not have a dime to buy drugs, they could sleep with anybody for as low as N100 in order to get money to buy the drugs.”

    Findings revealed that the population of drug addicts is growing in geometric proportion as hard drug business continues to thrive. Indeed, the consumption of Indian hemp and skunk is fast becoming a status symbol at motor parks and among street children. It was gathered that some of addicts even go into contests to determine the best consumers of hard drugs among them.

    A bus conductor, who gave his name simply as Tairu, says it is impossible for most of his colleagues to do without hard drugs because of the harassment they face in the course of duty.

    He said: “It is difficult to do transport business without the help of hard drugs. We face a lot of harassment from passengers, security men, LASTMA and agbero (touts). You can’t deal with these people without being tipsy. In fact, you need to be high in order to tackle them without fear.

    “Once they see that your eyes are very thin and red, they would not need anybody to tell them that you are operating on a different planet. The drugs, particularly Indian hemp, also help our voices because it is not easy to shout from morning till night without being aided by drugs.”

    Although he admitted that many of his colleagues have suffered health (mental) challenges as a result of hard drugs, he was quick to blame such situations on poor diets.

    He said: “Many of our people have become kolomental (mad) after taking some of these hard drugs. The reason is that they don’t eat well before taking them. If you don’t eat well before taking them, you will be adversely affected.”

    Asked if some of his colleagues also take hard drugs in order to commit crime, he said: “ I don’t know about that. I have simply told you why I take them. Everybody has his reasons for doing what he does.”

    Findings showed that the consumption of hard drugs has also become a sort of competition among addicts in some areas like Ikorodu, Lagos, where a whole building is said to be dedicated to the sale and consumption of hard drugs.

    Alhaji Jimoh, a resident of the area, lamented that the residents’ complaints to security agents had yielded no fruits. “I wonder what the future of this country would be with the rate at which the youth are now addicted to hard drugs. Here at Ojogbe in Ikorodu, there is a whole building devoted to the sale and consumption of all manner of hard drugs. I learnt that its users are ranked according to how much hard drug they are capable of consuming, and they are always competing to be the best. This is dangerous.

    “We have complained to security agents, made radio announcements and taken all necessary measures, but it all seems fruitless. Their number seems to be growing every day in spite of our complaints. Unfortunately, females are also part of this unholy lifestyle. Something needs to be done because it contributes to the incidence of criminal activities in the country and also casts a thick cloud on the future of the nation.

    Residents of Ipodo, a part of Ikeja reputed for a thriving hard drug market, also expressed concern that the lives of many promising young people, including those of girls, were being destroyed by their addiction to hard drugs.

    A resident of Awolowo Way, Ikeja, Lagos, who identified himself simply as Jimmy, observed that many young people in the area had sacrificed their future on the altar of drug addiction.

    Jimmy said: “The future of many young people in this area has been destroyed by drugs. Many of them have become junkies. They often call it elubo (the Yoruba word for yam flour). So, when you hear young men say they want to go and buy elubo, they are talking about hard drugs and not yam or cassava flour.

    “Do you know who junkies are? They are guys who have almost become crazy because of their incurable addiction to hard drugs. They cannot do without it in a day. When some of them have no money to buy the drugs, they deposit their phones, laptops and other valuables to get them on credit. There are times that some of them go there in expensive shoes but end up returning home in bathroom slippers, having used their shoes to take hard drugs on credit.

    “The dealers always make sure that the value of whatever item they deposit is more than the amount of drugs they take, because most of them would prefer to continue to use it to take more hard drugs until they exhaust it. That is one of the reasons there is a steady rise in crime.

    “In spite of this, many young people are getting hooked on it every day. They celebrate it as if it is a good thing.

    “There is a wealthy and renowned publisher of a popular romance magazine in this country who has almost gone bankrupt because of his addiction to hard drug. He is always here to consume drugs. He has sold so many of his landed properties as a result of this. There was a time he had to vacate his house to live in a hotel for a long time, after which he could not pay the bills. It became a serious issue between him and the owners of the hotel.

    “When his addiction to hard drug started taking a serious toll on him, he began to look very unkempt.”

    Confirming the publisher’s story, another resident, who gave his name as Ben, lamented the harm that hard drugs have done to many young people in the area. He feared that if nothing urgent was done to discourage the youth from taking drugs, the future of the country could be the worse for it.

    He said: “The story of the publisher is true. I know him very well. I was one of the people he took abroad for relaxation when his magazine was making waves. He is not the only person that has been destroyed by addiction to hard drugs in this area. There are uncountable youths who have had their promising future destroyed by their addiction to hard drugs. One of them is a young man whose father was a popular car dealer before he died.

    “After his father’s demise, he was lured into taking hard drugs. Today, he has become a junkie. He washes cars for people to get money to buy hard drugs. After toiling all day to get money, he goes to the drug joints to lavish it. How many of them would you count?”

    He recalled that hard drug business found its way into Ikeja area a few decades ago through a late retired soldier. He said: “I don’t know how hard drugs business started in other parts of Lagos, but I know how it started here in Ikeja. It was one late soldier (name withheld) who started the business. He succeeded in training many people who joined his children in continuing the business after his death.

    “Their operational base is still here in Ipodo. Some of his boys have continued to move to other parts of Ikeja to expand the business. That is why hard drug business has extended to other parts of Ikeja. This portends serious danger to the future of the country, because when the youth, who are supposed to be the leaders of tomorrow, now take pleasure in drug addiction, the level of criminal activities in the society will multiply and the country would be worse for it.”

    A visit to Akerele, another drug market in Agege area, revealed that the business was still thriving in spite of a recent raid of the area by men of National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA). One of the young traders told our correspondent that it is not possible for anyone to stop the business in the area.

    He said: “Cats (security agents) are always coming to raid us rats. But no matter how much they try, they can never stop us from doing our business. The people behind this business are not poor people; they are rich and highly connected people. But they use people like us to market it. I have been arrested and released several times.

    “It is an international business and Nigeria is a re-routing nation for them. The dealers from countries like Colombia, Mexico, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and so on, bring the drugs to their agents here for re-routing to other parts of the world. They exploit the porous nature of our security system to smuggle these drugs into the country. Have you asked yourself how these hard drugs that we don’t produce in the country are everywhere like common edibles in spite of all the security bodies at the airports, sea ports and the borders?

    “Apart from serving as a re-routing ground, they also intend to make Nigeria a big market because we have a large population that can serve as a big market for these hard drugs. They are succeeding because some boys are consuming them like food. It is not the headache of a dealer that anybody becomes junkie, because nobody is forced to take drugs. You can only be lured and it is left for you to accept or reject them.

    “At times, some guys use their valuables as deposit to get hard drugs on credit. Was it the dealer that asked such guys to do so? It is about using what you have to get what you want.”

    The Public Relations Officer of NDLEA, Mr Jarikre Ofoyeju, said the agency had not rested on its oars in its bid to check the menace of hard drugs in the country. He said: “As a result of training, exchange of intelligence with our international collaborators and years of accumulated experience on the field, the agency has been able to uncover several new modes of drug concealment adopted by drug barons.

    “The first seizures of heroin, hidden in tiny threadlike manner and woven in woollen rug carpets, were made in 2012. The consignment, which was intercepted at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA) Lagos was sent from Pakistan as unaccompanied cargo.

    “Another seizure of heroin from Pakistan, which was intercepted at the Lagos Airport, was hidden inside cartons of football. The weight of both seizures was 29.260kg. The largest seizure of heroin in 2012 was hidden in heavy steel moulding machines, which were cut open by industrial welders to access the drugs.

    “This illicit shipment also came from Pakistan through the Tin Can Island Port, Lagos. There was the case of a 48-year-old widow who concealed 66 wraps of methamphetamine weighing one kilogramme in her private part. It is the largest drug concealment in private part in the country. She was to board a Kenyan Airways flight to Nairobi when she was apprehended.

    “The agency detected 2.472kg of cocaine industrially concealed inside ear rings, buttons, necklaces, bangles as well as in female belts imported from Brazil. The agency detected 2.665kg of cocaine hidden inside prepared chicken imported from Brazil. A South African lady was found with 5.5kg of methamphetamine industrially packed in sardines. In addition, a 65-year-old grandmother concealed 1.740kg of cocaine in herbal syrups on her way to London. These are several methods used by drug traffickers in smuggling drugs, which the agency promptly detected.

    “In 2012, the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) adopted various measures that led to the destruction of 1,404.27 hectares of cannabis farms. This is to prevent the supply of cannabis to dealers and drug addicts. A total of 8,052 suspected drug traffickers were arrested and invited for interrogation. These comprised 7,510 males and 542 females.

    “We successfully intercepted a total of 233,699.875kg of narcotics. The seizures include 228,794.13kg of cannabis, 3,905.447kg of psychotropic substances, 461.15kg of ephedrine, 211.325kg of heroin, 176.55kg of methamphetamine, 131.888kg of cocaine and 19.385kg of amphetamine.

    “The emerging threat of clandestine laboratories is an area where the NDLEA has demonstrated its resolve to dismantle drug trafficking syndicates. In the past two years, the agency has worked very hard to prevent drug barons from using the country in illegal drug production. This has led to the discovery and closure of five clandestine laboratories used for the production of methamphetamine.

    “Methamphetamine is a class ‘A’ psychotropic substance in the category of Amphetamine Type Stimulants (ATS). Four of these illicit drug production factories were discovered in Lagos, while the fifth laboratory was detected in Nanka village, Anambra State. Some of the seizures made during our raid operations include 461.15kg of ephedrine, 176.55kg of methamphetamine and 19.385kg of amphetamine.

    “The agency apprehended a suspected Colombian drug kingpin who was invited to establish clandestine laboratories in the country. He was placed on $38,000 per week salary by a local drug cartel. This is an indication that amphetamine production is indeed a big threat to the country. The target of the NDLEA is to have a society free from drugs, crime and insecurity. No effort will be spared in actualising these objectives.”

    He, however, said that the fight against hard drugs by the Agency had not been without challenges.

    He said: “Drug control, like other human endeavours, is not free from challenges. There are challenges of inadequate funding. We need operational vehicles and more logistic support. Narcotic and money laundering investigation is expensive. There is also the challenge of inadequate drug enlightenment. This is also capital intensive.

    “We are assessing the various geo-political zones and to develop suitable preventive enlightenment. Some people see drug trafficking as a business and not a crime. This is a misconception that needs to be corrected. There is also an erroneous notion of get rich quick irrespective of the means. Besides, there is the problem of moral decadence that places emphasis on materialism.

    “We shall continue to promote public interest and protect the country from the activities of drug barons. The regular arrests and seizures at the airports, seaports, land borders and within towns are sufficient proof of our determination and commitment towards a drug-free society. We shall continue to frustrate the activities of drug cartels through similar efforts.”

     

  • How to start a small scale business in Nigeria

    How to start a small scale business in Nigeria

    YOU know starting a business is not easy due to a lot of factors, and even when you have succeeded in starting one, it takes proper planning to keep it going until it is really up and running. So it is better you have a proper plan and understanding for one before you start.

    Are you interested in starting your own business? Below are 13 steps to take before you launch that your dream business.

    1. Get the business idea

    You have to have an idea of the kind of business you want to do. Is it a product you want to be making or a service you want to render to people that needs it, you need to have an idea of what you want to do. It’s good to have more than one idea, and then you can finally narrow it down to one.

    2. Set your target

    You need to set a target for the business. Are you in it to achieve financial freedom? Or you want small business that will sustain you and give you steady income? It is good you set your target early enough before you start the business.

    3. Define your team

    You have to decide how you want the business to be run. Are you going to run the business alone or you will get someone to assist you, this bring a lot of synergy to the table, because two heads are better than one, as people bounce ideas off each other.

    4. Determine the legal structure of the business

    Decide what type of business you would like it to be. A sole proprietorship, a partnership, etc. This is important for tax purposes and for attracting investors.

    5. Get a business name and register it

    By now you should have name you want to use for the business, get a lawyer to assist you to register your business name, before someone else use the name. Your business name should be unique to you.

    6. Finance your business

    How are you going to finance the business? Will you take a loan from the bank co-operative or you will use your personal savings? And remember to have reserve cash for the funding of things until the business is really up and running.

    7. Consider the competition

    Consider the competition around. The people that are into the same business around, how much are they selling? What can you do to make your product better than theirs and with a better price?

    8. Create a business plan

    For your business to succeed you need to have a business plan, because it helps you in the running of the business. And it is what investors, bankers and other interested parties will use when deciding whether to invest in your business.

  • Nigeria to sell 10  gas-powered plants

    Nigeria to sell 10 gas-powered plants

    The Nigerian government has confirmed its intention to privatise 10 power stations across the country as part of its effort to guarantee an effective and sustainable power supply in the country.

    This unique investment opportunity was announced yesterday at an investor relations event held at The Sofitel Hotel, New York City.

    The power stations are located in Abia State (450MW), Edo State (451MW), Cross River State (562MW), Imo State (338MW), Bayelsa State (225MW), Kogi State (434MW), Delta State (451MW), Ogun State (676MW), Rivers State (225MW) and Ondo State (451MW).

    James Abiodun Olutu, Managing Director and CEO of Niger Delta Power Holding Company (NDPHC), said: “80% of shares in the 10 power plants are to be sold to investors’ providing an opportunity for growth as demand far outstrips current supply.”

    Speaking at the event, the Minister of Power, Professor Chinedu Nebo, said: “This New York event is the last stage of the international investment drive for the divestment of government stakes in the generation assets of the NDPHC.

    “To provide you some background as to how we got here, two important tools that led to the reforms of the sector, the Nigerian Electric Power Policy (2001) and the subsequent Electric Power Sector Reform Act 2005 were products of about five years’ work by sterling experts in the field of electricity and utility reforms. The Act was a necessary foundation for charting a new course for a sector that had delivered far below the most liberal expectations of Nigerians.

    “Privatization of all public generation and distribution companies is one of the pillars of the efforts of the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) to reform the power sector. The recent privatization of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria successor electricity distribution and generation companies is a testament to the commitment of the FGN to the reform process.”

    He added that this privatisation offered international investors an opportunity to be a part of a great economic revolution comparable to that of the telecommunications sector in Nigeria, Africa’s second-biggest economy.

    In answer to questions about transparency and security, the Chairman, Senate Committee on Privatisation, Senator Gbenga Obadara, said: “We will provide security for your investment in Nigeria and we are giving enough assurance of opportunities to investors in the country.

    “Investors have been expressing interest in the 10 gas-fired power plants with a combined design capacity in excess of 5,453 megawatt. 53 per cent of the NDPHC plants is owned by states and the local governments, while the Federal Government owns the remaining 47 per cent.”

    The determination to ensure sale of the power plants has led to a series of policy reforms and incentives such as tax holiday and exemptions, pioneer status, reparation of profits, research and development as well as low value added tax which is the lowest in the world. The panel of speakers gave assurances that the process of sales would be transparent and open and would support the people of Nigeria.

    Niger Delta Power Holding Company (NDPHC), owners of the National Integrated Power Project (NIPP), currently has about 1,025MW of electricity in three NIPP power stations across the country waiting to be exported into the national grid.

  • Nigeria’s maternal deaths reduction  by 2015 feasible, say experts

    Nigeria’s maternal deaths reduction by 2015 feasible, say experts

    Experts have expressed hope that Nigeria can still achieve Millennium Development Goal (MDG) five – reduction of maternal death by 75 percent by 2015.

    According to the Chairman, Society for Obstetrician and Gynaecologists (SOGON), Prof Olurotimi Akinola, there should be more awareness on how to identify danger signs in expectant mothers to reduce maternal deaths.

    He spoke at this year’s Ordinary General Meeting (OGM)/ Scientific Conference and Continuing Medical Education (CME), organised by the Medical Guild, which is the association of Lagos State government employed medical doctors. The theme was ‘Maternal mortality: Race to 2015, how far?’

    Akinola, who was keynote speaker, said the country had wasted seven years without getting results, adding that there should be policies utilisation.

    “In 2002, maternal mortality ratio of India is higher than Nigeria but today the latter is 10 while the latter 41 in the world,” he added.

    He said the yearly health allocation was less than seven per cent, even though the government promised to increase it to 15 per cent.

    Chairman, Medical Guild, Lagos State Branch, Dr Olumuyiwa Odusote identified hemorrhage as a major killer of mothers and children, stressing that it was responsible for most deaths.

    He said having functional primary health care (PHC) centres across the country would help reduce maternal deaths.

    Odusote said there should be awareness, stressing that women of child bearing age must be educated on danger signs so that they can access treatment promptly.

  • New chapter for tourism as Nigeria unveils tourism brand

    New chapter for tourism as Nigeria unveils tourism brand

    The tourism industry is peculiar in the sense that it is an industry where a person pays for product even without seeing it. The experiencing the product comes after. Because of this, many tourism destinations put together enticing packages to lure tourists into booking for visits to come and spend their money. One way of doing this is building tourism brand that is capable of attracting tourists.

    Most viewers of cable television have fallen in love with destinations like Malaysia and India with their enticing catch phrases “Malaysia truly Asia,” “Incredible India” and “South Africa, it is possible”.

    These tourism slogans help in building positive image of the country even before seeing them. The importance of creating positive image becomes very important since income from tourism has become a major source of revenue for these countries. It not only helps to boost the GDP (Gross Domestic Product) of countries, it also solves the unemployment problems of various countries.

    Almost every country of the world has its own unique kind of marketing slogan and logo to promote their tourism industry. They help attract tourists to come to these countries.

    Promoting tourism products successfully requires a context that allows your audience to appreciate what your country has to offer to visitors. That context is the overall image, or brand of your country.

    Nigeria, by adopting the new identity of Fascinating Nigeria, is creating a new tourism profile for the country.A few years ago, the Otunba Segun Runsewe-led Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation came with the slogan “Tourism is Life”. That was the catch phrase for Nigeria within the tourism circle for many years before this new initiative.

    Nigeria, from next week, would build a new tourism profile for the country predicated on the catch-Fascinating Nigeria. The question many would ask is that what is fascinating about Nigeria? Does the word fascinating actually capture Nigeria’s tourism endowments?

    For anybody who has had the privilege of travelling round the country and visiting tourist sites, attending cultural festivals and generally mingling with the people, there is much to fascinate any tourist, even if the person decides to embark on a year-long trip round the country.

    However, it is very important that it does not just end with the ceremony of Thursday next week, but the unveiling of the tourism brand opens up a new chapter in the tourism development of the country.

    Most in-bound tourists who have had the privilege of visiting Nigeria always say that the image the country has outside was much different from the reality and experience of Nigeria. “Fascinating Nigeria” becomes effective if it will not only showcase Nigeria’s rich tourism endowments, but help in furnishing the battered image of Nigeria. It is only then the new brand identity would be worth it. Any thing short of that would be a waste of public funds.

  • Nigeria’s Seven Natural Wonders

    Nigeria’s Seven Natural Wonders

    That Nigeria is blessed with rich tourism endowments is a trite saying within the tourism circle. The efforts to market promote and develop Nigeria’s tourism for both local and in-bound tourists to visit are predicated on the knowledge that the Nigeria’s tourism assets would not fail to fascinate and entice any designing tourist.

    Despite this, packaging these tourist endowments into a product that could be sold to both local and in-bound tourists has always been a problem. Although this ordinarily ought to rest squarely on the shoulders of both the tourism ministry and its ancillary agencies, this is currently being done through a private sector initiative. These efforts are spearheaded by Ikechi Ukoh, the publisher of the African Travel Quarterly (ATQ), a print and online publication solely devoted to tourism and travel trade. The group also organizes the foremost West African travel market, Akwaaba and the Bantaba in Abuja. The Bantaba, a one-day speed-dating travel event will hold on July 7 and on that day, Nigeria’s Seven Natural Wonders will be officially revealed. Last year, the Nigeria’s Seven Man-made wonders were unveiled by the same group after a painstaking search. Now, Nigeria can now boast of both Seven Wonders (man-made) and another set of wonders that are natural. So, which tourist attractions made the Naija Seven Natura Wonders? Below is the full list:

     

    Ikogosi Warm Spring

    Ekiti State, the home of Ikogosi Warm Spring, is blessed with some of the most picturesque country side views made up of huge dense forest and undulating hills. It is within tourism friendly ambience we find the Ikogosi Warm Spring . It is a unique natural phenomenon where warm water pushes out from the belly of the ground, and flows down a small hill. A little further from where the warm water springs out, there is also a spot where the cold water is gushing out. Side by side with the warm water, the water flows down foaming a small stream in the process.

    According to experts, it is a geological wonder to have such occurrence out of the same rock formation and this Ekiti flagship tourist destination is said to be the only one of its kind discovered anywhere in the world. The warm and cold springs of Ikogosi originate from a close proximity, come to a meeting point and flow onward together with each spring retaining its thermal identity. It represents another uniqueness and is the first of such occurrence in the world. The warm spring has a temperature of up to 70oC at the source and 37oC after meeting the cold spring. The meeting point of the warm and cold springs is a unique attraction to tourists.

     

    Ogbunike Cave

    Ogbunike Caves in the Oyi Council Area of Anambra State, according to the tradition of the people, was discovered by a hunter called Ukwa. It is situated in Ogba Hills in Ogbunike. The main cave consists of a massive structure with a big open chamber of about 5m high, 10m wide and 30m long at the entrance. There are many tunnels at the main chamber, leading to different directions. Within the tunnels are big chambers and other tunnels of varying lengths, some of which are interconnected. The caves are occupied by a large colony of bats of various sizes. There are streams and body of water at various places. A stream flows out from one of the tunnels into a rapid flowing river.

    The immediate environment of the caves up to about 200 metres radius is a thick tropical rainforest type of vegetation. Among the fauna of the site are deer, antelope, grass cutter, porcupine, rabbit, alligator, snakes and frogs. Others are fish, crabs and birds.

     

    Mambilla Plateau

    The Mambilla Plateau is one attraction in Nigeria that the magnificence leaves one in search adequate words to capture. Having experienced the beauty of the place, there is always the desire for a second visit. Where does one start in capturing the place? Is it the sheer immensity of the rock formation or the twists and turns as one drives to the top the Plateau.

    Climbing the hill is not for the faint-hearted because of the twists and turns as the road meandered upward. But a trip to Mambilla without this experience would not be complete. It is just like being suspended on the sky, held only by a tread tied to one’s ankle, looking down on valley, one could just come crashing down on deep, sharp valley.

    The first point of call is Hawa Biu Da Sisi, meaning two and half shilling hill, the tour guides explained that in the olden days before the road was carved out of the rock, there were load carriers who normally carried loads from the bottom of the plateau to the top. A trip normally takes two weeks from the foot to the top of the hill. The cost par trip is initially two shillings, but having negotiated that amount, on getting to the steep sharp corner, the load carriers would demand for an extra half a shilling, hence the name.

    The first corner is Kwanan Gomna said to be the point where the former Governor of Northern Nigeria, Sir Kassim Ibrahim, reached before deciding to go back.

    Other key points are Tungar Gorah, Kwanan Drum, Tungar Ahmedu. Tungar Ahmadu is close to the top of the hill. This point was said to be the point where the former premier of the North, Sir Ahmadu Bello, decided to reach before deciding to go back. According to the indigenes of Gembu, it was in recognition of the effort of Sir Ahmadu Bello that the whole of the local government area was named Sardauna council area, in honour of the former premier who was also the Sardauna of Sokoto.

    One of the signs that one was getting to the top of the mountain range is the cooler nature of the weather and then the presence of well-fed cattle who lazily shamble along the treacherous road unmindful of coming vehicles. A vehicle has to horn repeatedly before the cattle will leave the road. Gradually the climbing ended and what one could see was a stretch of prowling ranches and undulating ranges of hills. However, before entering the town, one stopped at a sprin1g stream that a pip has been places at the mouth to channel the water out. The tour guides explained that every visitor coming to the town is expected to drink form the water before proceeding. The water was cold and refreshing, just what is expected of a spring water.

    The tragedy of Mambilla Plateau is that successive governments both at the state and federal levels are yet to come up with the idea of how this endowment will benefit mankind.

     

    Yankari Game

    Reserve

    Situated in Bauchi State, Yankari National Park is one of the most endowed wildlife parks in the country. The park is said to contain the largest surviving elephant population in Nigeria, and one of the largest remaining in West Africa. Estimated at 350 individuals, this population of elephants is perhaps the only viable population remaining in Nigeria. In addition, Yankari Game Reserve also supports important populations of lion, buffalo, hippo, roan and hartebeest. The reserve covers a total area of 2,244 km² and is covered mainly by Sudan savanna vegetation. Originally created as a game reserve in 1956, Yankari was upgraded to a national park in 1991 and managed by the National Parks Service until 2006 when responsibility for the management of the reserve was handed back to Bauchi State Government. Yankari is a popular tourism destination in the country.

     

    Owu Waterfall

    Owu Fall is found in Owakajola in the Ifelodun Council Area of Kwara State. It is very high and spectacular. The waterfall is 120m above water level and cascades 330 feet down an escarpment with rocky out crops to a pool of ice cold water below. The water fall is surrounded with a beautiful natural ambience and hills which make sightseeing a memorable experience. It has a cold beautiful rocky part and walkways and evergreen surrounding.

     

    Confluence of River Niger and Benue

    Lokoja, the capital of Kogi State has both historical and eco-tourist endowments. Chief among these is the Confluence of River Niger and Benue. It is the point in which nature makes a Y-shape division of Nigeria into three natural regions and the process creating masterpiece of nature.

    However, the confluence is just about the touristic value, the water serves as a major link before the North and South . It is, therefore, not a surprise the town played a major role in the history of Nigeria. From being a major milestone for adventurous colonialists to serving as both an administrative and military outpost for the colonialists. Some of these relics of past exploits that the city have witnessed are still there.

     

    Farin Ruwa Fall

    The waterfall is located in the Wamba Council Area of Nasarawa State. From Wamba , there is hardly any vehicle plying the route to the fall due to the terrible nature of the road. The best option is to charter a commercial motorcyclist. From Wamba, one could get a cyclist to take one for between N800 and N1000. Heading towards the fall, one could take the Maraba route or Sisibaki. However, for a better view of nature, detouring through the Maraba route is best.

    The road is a little isolated. Only one or two farmers could be seen coming back from their farms. Along this route is a rather simple bridge built with wood. That might just be the obstacle to those who may be making the trip in their own car. Although the width of the bridge is relatively safe, it could be scary since there is no safety rail by the sides, and the river below is quite active. After that one would then burst on the main untarred road, passing through villages like Marhai, Mama and Kulere.

    The Wamba landscape is wonderful, especially in this rainy season that the surrounding is lush with green plants. This is accentuated by the rolling hilly landscape. From more than 10 kilometres, one could see the Farin Ruwa Fall like a white gash on a dark background. There is this tendency to be deluded by the sight of the fall from such a distance to believe that it is just behind the next tree. But one had to ride through bumps, slippery surfaces, waterlogged road. And this is actually the tragedy of such a beautiful gift of nature.

    The Farin Ruwa Waterfall environment is an alluring area. The vegetation is more of forest than savanna, the common vegetation in the north. Added to that is that the land is fertile as could be seen in lush crops on the farms.

    There are so many things to draw one to the place. The rocky landscape is ethereal. On the area where the fall gushes out, on this particular day, there is snowy top as if a steam is coming out of the rocks.

     

  • Spanish Navy re-visits Nigeria

    Spanish Navy re-visits Nigeria

    A Spanish Navy Ship, MV RAYO, is scheduled to visit the Western Naval Command of the Nigeria Navy from June 30 to July 3.

    This was contained in a statement signed by the Command’s Information Officer, Lt.-Cdr. Jerry Omodara, and made available to journalists on Friday in Lagos.

    According to the statement, the ship will be received on arrival at midstream by Nigeria Navy Ship NNS ANDONI, and she will escort her to berth at the Naval Base Apapa– NNS Beecroft.

    The statement said that while in Nigeria, the ship company would conduct training onboard with personnel of the Nigerian Navy, on damage control.

    “Other activities include courtesy calls by the Commanding Officer of the Ship to the Oba of Lagos, the Flag Officers Commanding Western Naval Command and Naval Training Command,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the Navy spokesman as saying in the statement.

    The statement said the Spanish and Nigerian Navies would also have a joint press briefing and sporting activities.