Tag: Nigerian Newspapers

  • 2019 ITTF Africa Cup: Quadri, Meshref to defend titles

    ARUNA Quadri and Dina Meshref will defend their titles with the African Table Tennis Federation (ATTF), which will confirm 15 countries for the 2019 ITTF Africa Cup, a qualifier for the ITTF World Cup.

    In less than one week, the best players from 15 African countries will converge in Lagos for the 2019 ITTF Africa Cup, which serves off on August 3 at the Molade Okoya-Thomas Hall of Teslim Balogun Stadium.

    Nigeria’s Aruna Quadri and Egypt’s Dina Meshref are defending champions of the tournament and they are expected to battle other players for their places in the 2019 ITTF World Cups.

    Aside host – Nigeria, other countries expected in Lagos for the three-day championship include Algeria, Benin Republic, Burkina Faso, Cameroun, Congo Brazzaville, Congo DRC, Egypt, Ghana, Guinea, Rwanda, Senegal, South Africa, Togo and Tunisia.

    Since establishing himself as Algeria’s best male player, Sami Kherouf has been making frantic efforts to halt the dominance of Aruna Quadri and Egypt’s Omar Assar (EGY) in Africa. But all his efforts have been in vain.

    Again, the Algerian star will be heading to Lagos, in his bid to fulfil his dream of becoming the first Algerian to conquer the continent. However, Kherouf admitted that it will take an extra-ordinary performance to rule the continent.

    Read Also: Aruna Quadri rises to 21 in latest ITTF ranking

    “At present, we are training together as a team in Algiers to use the Africa Cup in Lagos as good preparation for the All African Games,” he said.

    On the possibility of dethroning the defending champion – Aruna Quadri, he said: “To win the title is super hard with the presence of the best African players like Omar Assar and Aruna Quadri as well as other good players too.

    “I must admit that to win the title will require a lot of work and at the moment it seems hard to win. It is hard because you have to compete with top players, who ply their trade in big leagues and who devote most of their time to the game as their main job,” he added.

    He added: “I cannot wait to come to Nigeria because I have never visited the country before. I know it is a country that loves sport and especially table tennis. I aim to win a bronze medal and I would love to become the first Algerian to qualify for the World Cup but it is very hard for everyone except Omar Assar and Aruna Quadri.”

     

  • Okereke scores on league debut for Brugge

    David Okereke has not wasted time to justify his record transfer to Club Brugge when he scored on his league debut for the Belgian club to win 3-1 at Waasland-Beveren.

    Okereke started Saturday’s game and gave his side a 2-1 lead in the 48th minute when he fired in from close range, from a rebound after the goalkeeper dropped a shot.

    The Nigeria U23 striker, who cost Club Brugge a record 8million Euros, said the coach told him what he wanted at the interval.

    “During the break, the coach told me that I had to attack the ball more in the first post. That’s where the passes came,” he said.

    “I am happy with my goal and the victory for the team is great. Whether this is a relief? No, not really. With one goal you can’t be relieved, you have to do more than that.

    “I only arrived in Bruges not too long and I still have tactical work, but things are going well.

    “The coach works hard every day to make us play beautiful football. You saw that back a bit in the game.”

     

  • Kano Pillars are Aiteo Cup winners

    KANO Pillars made history at the Ahmadu Bello Stadium in Kaduna on Sunday when they recorded a first-ever FA Cup triumph by beating Niger Tornadoes 4-3 on penalties after game ended goalless in regulation time.

    Skipper Rabiu Ali, Bature Yaro, Victor Dennis and Emmanuel Anyanwu converted the penalties for Pillars, while Ayo Adetola of Niger Tornadoes missed the decisive kick in sudden death.

    This triumph will make up for the Kano team’s last year loss when they surrendered a three-goal lead in the cup final to Enugu Rangers, who went on to win on penalties.

    Read Also: Kano Pillars confirm Udoji’s death

    Pillars dominated Sunday’s cup final but poor finishing, resolute defending by Niger Tornadoes and the brilliance of goalkeeper and captain Mustapha Aliko combined to ensure no goals were scored after 90 minutes of action.

    Four-time Nigeria champions Pillars, who were runners-up in the NPFL this past season, will represent the country in the 2020 CAF Champions League.

    Beaten cup finalists Tornadoes will thus feature in the CAF Confederation Cup as a result.

  • Uzoho: I’ll bounce back this season

    NIGERIA international goalkeeper Francis Uzoho is hoping for a positive return to Cyprus when he starts a loan spell with Omonia Nicosia from Spanish side Deportivo La Coruna.

    The 20-year-old endured a torrid time earlier this year after a loan spell at Cypriot rivals Anorthosis Famagusta was cut short due to irregularities in his registration.

    On the pitch, it was also difficult after he was sent off for the first time in his career in April.

    A lack of top-flight football cost him his place as Nigeria’s first-choice keeper ahead of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations, becoming the third choice behind Daniel Akpeyi and Ikechukwu Ezenwa.

    “I learned a lot from last season’s experience. Hopefully, it will serve as a motivation to do well,” Uzoho, who joins Omonia on a season-long loan, told BBC Sport.

    Read Also: AFCON 2019: Eagles will be ready for Bafana, says Uzoho

    “I can say last season is in the past now and I hope to write a good chapter with Omonia by God’s grace and hard work.

    “To move forward you can’t keep looking back, so I just want to remain focused on what lies ahead.”

    Capped 14 times by Nigeria, he played all three matches as the Super Eagles exited the 2018 World Cup in the group stage.

    But he made a solitary appearance at the just-concluded Nation Cup against Tunisia as the Super Eagles sealed a third-place finish in Egypt.

    “I was very happy to play for my county at the Nations Cup and to be able to do that in a match that got us a medal was incredible,” added Uzoho.

    “I’ve started pre-season with the club on a positive note and I feel good about it. I just hope to kick off with positivity and help Omonia Nicosia achieve the club’s target this season.”

    In October 2017, Uzoho became the youngest foreign goalkeeper to ever play in La Liga and marked a memorable Deportivo La Coruna debut with a clean sheet.

    Uzoho was part of the victorious Nigeria squad at the 2013 Under-17 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates, albeit without playing a single minute at the tournament.

    He arrived at Deportivo from Qatar’s Aspire Academy in January 2017.

  • Leveraging e-payments, digital innovation for trade, financial inclusion

    There is no doubt that technology has revolutionised the banking industry, particularly mobile and the Internet, as bank customers continue to embrace electronic payment for financial transactions.

    Indeed, individuals and businesses now crave e-payment platforms mainly due to the immense economic benefits they derive from them, which include convenience, affordability, availability, and customer retention.

    For instance, a recent report of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on “Selected Banking Sector Data: Sectoral Breakdown of Credit, ePayment Channels and Staff Strength” for first quarter, shows that a total of 557,083,712 electronic payment transactions valued at N34.02 trillion were recorded in selected banks across the country.

    The e-payment channels include: the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System Instant Payments (NIP), Automated Teller Machine (ATM), Point of Sale (PoS), electronic cheque truncation, mobile cash, electronic bills pay, web and mobile payment, among others.

    Statistics indicate that cash and cheque use are declining as the world is swiftly becoming the age of digital payments, push payments and instant payments.

    Analysts say the rise of different e-payment channels continues to have a direct impact on local economies, especially Nigeria.

    In 2016, a report by Moody’s Analytics commissioned by Visa Incorporated showed that increased use of electronic payment products, including credit, debit and prepaid cards, added 296 billion dollars to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), while raising household consumption of goods and services by an average of 0.18 per cent per year.

    The report: “The Impact of Electronic Payments on Economic Growth” was conducted in 70 countries between 2011 and 2015.

    The report also showed that e-payments added 640 million dollars to Nigeria’s GDP and an average of 16,880 jobs per year within the review period.

    The benefits of e-payment to Nigeria’s economy are unquantifiable as it is evolving into a cashless society, deepening financial inclusion, reducing poverty and contributing to the effectiveness and stability of the financial system.

    Sam Okojere, Director, Payments System Management, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), said the Nigerian Payments System had evolved over the years from primitive barter system to the use of cowries, metals, notes and to the present electronic payments system.

    Okojere disclosed that CBN, as the regulator of the Payments System, had been implementing various policies and initiatives towards the development of the Nigerian Payments System.

    According to Okojere, the strategic objective of the payments system is to migrate Nigeria from cash-based economy to an electronic payments inclined market. Thus, the bank’s strategic priorities have been to achieve a credible, reliable and efficient payments system.

    Okojere disclosed this during a recent Joint Seminar for Banking and Telecom Regulators from the Sub-Saharan Africa Locations on Digital Products and Payment Systems in Lagos.

    The seminar which had the theme: “Advancing ePayment and digital innovations in Africa – Evolution of Nigeria’s payment systems” was to promote financial inclusion through digital innovations in sub-Saharan Africa.

    The seminar was organised to provide key officers of regulatory authorities in African Markets – notably locations with FirstBank subsidiaries; Ghana, Senegal, DRC, Gambia, Sierra Leone and Guinea – a platform to get familiar with developments in the Nigerian Payment Systems and Digital Products Industry.

    Thereon replicating and adopting the knowledge from the seminar with a view to bolster the finance industry in their respective countries.

    Speaking on how other countries can learn from the Nigerian experience, Okojere emphasised the need for strong collaboration, especially in the areas of intelligence gathering and information exchange to fight fraud.

    “The Nigeria Electronic Fraud Forum is working on extending its partnership to other African countries.

    “Also, periodic exchange of staff to learn on the job is very crucial to the development of competence,” Okojere said.

    Notably, he stressed the need to start organising Intra-African Conferences with themes that reflected local challenges.

    Specifically, he said the CBN continued to demonstrate its resolve to shape a more trusted and efficient payments landscape in Nigeria through its strong commitment to collaboration and stakeholder engagement.

    Speaking on FirstBank’s leading role in promoting digital banking and financial inclusion across the country, Adesola Adeduntan, CEO, First Bank of Nigeria Ltd., said the bank had been a success story as far as digital banking was concerned.

    “Today, we have more than 8.5 million people on our USSD *894# banking platform, more than three million people on our Firstmobile platform.

    “We are the only Bank in Nigeria that has issued cards in excess of 10 million in Nigeria.

    “When you are looking at that institution that has achieved a lot in terms of digital payment, it is First Bank. More than 80 per cent of our transactions are carried out on our digital channels,” Adeduntan said.

    He restated that economic growth and development of host communities was important to the bank, and that assisting Nigeria and the continent at large address poverty was imperative and reason for financial inclusion being at the core of its business strategy.

    He said First Bank was also committed to financial inclusion and would continue to improve the lives of Nigerians through the provision of innovative financial services.

    Also, Mr Chuma Ezirim, Group Executive, e-Business & Retail Products, First Bank, noted that the bank was pursuing sustainable financial inclusion by leveraging its unparalleled experience in serving the low income segments.

    “Our agent banking offering with focus on serving financially excluded individuals and small businesses in rural areas is experiencing exponential growth with significant revenue and social impact,” he said.

    Ezirim disclosed that First Bank had over 28, 000 agent banking network located in 754 local government areas, processing N240 billion worth of transactions monthly.

    “The agent banking asides creating employment has made banking easier and closer to people, and the testimony of the people is that their communities has been turned to city,” he said.

    He highlighted the challenges faced by the agents as poor infrastructure, trust, lack of awareness, low income/literacy level and identity management, among others.

    Corroborating the First Bank boss, Mr Mike Ogbalu, Chief Executive Officer, Verve International, said Nigeria’s payments system had evolved over the last 20 years with amazing impact on the economy, industries and the lives of Nigerians.

    Ogbalu said the August 2005 banking sector recapitalisation redefined competition within the industry and set off a technology ‘arms race,’ which positively impacted the growth of the industry.

    Also, Premier Oiwoh, Managing Director, Nigeria InterBank Settlement System (NIBSS), disclosed that Nigeria was one of the few countries in Africa and the world to have deployed an Instant Payment platform solution.

    According to Oiwoh, the NIBSS Instant Payment (NIP) is the first and only point-to-point funds transfer service that guarantees instant value to the beneficiary.

    He disclosed that the NIP experienced exponential growth value from N3.9 trillion in 2012 to N39.9 trillion as at June 2018.
    Oiwoh noted that benefits of improved payment system would facilitate the entry of new players into the financial industry, faster turnaround time with inter-bank transactions, convenient banking and improved innovations from mobile and internet banking.

    Others include: next day settlement of merchants for Point of Sale (POS) transactions, availability and uniform functionality of the terminals and uniformed card acceptability across the network.

    However, he itemised fear of fraud and security issues, infrastructural challenges and low level of card usage on POS as some of the impediments to Nigeria’s electronic payment system.

    Furthermore, Mr Agada Apochi, Managing Director, Unified Payment Services Ltd., urged operators in the payment system to evolve a scheme whereby various African currencies would be acceptable both as transaction, settlement and billing currencies.

    “Otherwise, we would continue to depend on the dollars or pounds; because there is no national currency in African today that is allowed as a global currency for settlements or billing,” he said.

    He also advised telecoms companies to reduce their roaming rates in Africa to deepen digitalisation, thus allow more businesses utilise their USSD for transactions during trips. He added that present roaming rates of telecoms companies in Africa was prohibitive. (NAN)

  • Ondo communities give herders 21 days quit notice

    Residents of four communities in Idoani, Idogun, Imeri and Afo in Ose Local Government Area of Ondo State have issued a 21-day ultimatum to herdsmen to vacate their farmlands.

    The countdown begin on 22.

    The Alani of Idoani, Oba Olufemi Olutoye, the Onidogun Oba Moses Bakare, Onimeri Oba Babatunde Adeniran and the Alafo was Oba Adegoke Egunjobi, in a communiqué they jointly signed, said their people could no longer tolerate the spate of kidnapping, killing and rape and daughters by the herders.

    The monarchs expressed concern over the possibility of violent clashes and reprisals between the farmers and herders following the incessant destruction of cash crops by the herdsmen.

    They added that the ultimatum remained the last option to avoid the breakdown of law and order, with the herdsmen allegedly rebuffing all entreaties to be law abiding.

    According to the five-paragraph communiqué, the fear of frequent unprovoked attacks by the herdsmen has forced many farmers to abandon their means of livelihood, leading to economic meltdown in the area.

    Read Also: Snake sacks Ondo lawmakers during plenary

    Describing the plan by the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria to set up vigilante group in Ondo State as an affront to Yoruba race, the four royal fathers vowed not to allow any part of the area to be used for RUGA  in whatever guise.

    They, therefore, called on the residents of the area to be vigilant and report any suspicious movement to the law enforcement agencies for appropriate action.

     

  • Living in fear harmful to economy, says Ogun governor

    Ogun State Governor Dapo Abiodun, at the weekend, said that the economy of a country or a state would be adversely affected when citizens live in fear.

    He was speaking with State House correspondents after the Presidential Policy Retreat at the State House, Abuja.

    The governor said: “The minute people begin to leave in fear, the minute people begin to have that foreboding fear that something may happen their way, it would kill the economy of the state and the country.

    “I mentioned to them (at the retreat) that only last night (Wednesday) there was a kidnap situation on Lagos-Ibadan expressway, and in the morning of Thursday on my way to this conference, there was an attempt to kidnap four people, they kidnapped two and two escaped.

    “That Lagos-Ibadan expressway is the busiest highway in this country; not only that, it is so important to the economy of my state, Lagos State and the entire country.

    “How do we say we are creating an enabling environment for a public-private partnership when people cannot move freely from Lagos-to Ogun hinterland without the fear of being kidnapped?” he queried.

    The governor noted that there was need to provide adequate security on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, which, he said, is the busiest highway in the country and very important to the economy of the country.

    He said: “So, we spent a lot of time on security because security is very important and I recall that I mentioned the fact that for me and Lagos, Ogun stands to benefit from everything that Lagos cannot provide.

    Read Also: Amosun wins the race in Ogun

    “We are there to provide what Lagos cannot afford to have and that is why we are called the Gateway State. We are gateway to at least four states and we are also border to another country.”

    He added: “We spoke about road infrastructure, different funding mechanism in agriculture and we spoke about healthcare. There was the emphasis that states should take ownership of healthcare and agriculture.

    “The former Prime Minister of Ethiopia, Hailemariam Desalegn Boshe, shared with us the Ethiopian’s model, which to us was a complete contrast of the Brazilian model.

    “The Brazilian’s model encouraged farm settlements but the Ethiopian model was a complete contrast to the Brazilian mode. The Ethiopian model was more like the Asian model where you encourage small farmers, youth and graduates, give them ownership of farms and you have what is called farmers’ trainees.

    “It was such an insightful opportunity. I think that the conclusions of the last 48 hours should be adopted. I don’t see any reason why it should not be adopted, because the President recapped everything and gave out commitment to ensuring the implementation.”

     

     

  • We won’t stop producing quality doctors, says EKSU provost

    THE Medical College of Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti has said the institution will not rest on its oars in producing good medical doctors in view of its state-of-the art training facilities and quality manpower.

    The institution recently graduated the first set of medical students after 10 years of study due to delayed accreditation.

    Provost of the college, Prof. Kehinde Oluwadiya, said lack of funding which had been the reason for lack of accreditation for the college in the past, was now a thing of the past.

    Oluwadiya, who spoke in Ado-Ekiti at a news conference heralding the induction of the 43 pioneer doctors produced by the college, assured that there would not be a hitch in accreditation from the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) again.

    Read Also: ‘We’ll take EKSUTH to greater heights’

    According to him, all the medical students that sat for final MBBS had “very good result as the students had 100 per cent passes and a distinction in surgery in the final examination. Overall, there were seven distinctions recorded by the graduating students in all the four professional examinations they sat for in the college”.

    According to the provost, the college curriculum ensured good quality medical doctors and the admission system is competitive, saying: “For instance, last year, over 700 candidates jostled for the 50 slots in the college.”

    He said Emeritus Professor of Pathology, Professor Williams Odesanmi, would on Monday deliver the induction lecture entitled: “Legal and ethical issues in medical practice” while the induction proper would take place later that day.

  • Akeredolu orders probe into Assembly snake incident

    The controversy over the purported invasion of the Ondo State House of Assembly complex by a snake has assumed another dimension with Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu on Sunday ordering the probe of the appearance of the reptile.

    The governor, who expressed dismay on the snake scare at the state parliament, inspected the facilities at the State House of Assembly.

    He said his government would investigate what brought the snake into the law chamber while the lawmakers were in session.

    The lawmakers had on Thursday scampered for safety when a snake dropped from the roof and landed on the hallow chamber during the plenary.

    It led to hasty suspension of  proceedings as directed by the Speaker, Bamidele Oleyelogun.

    Akeredolu, however, blamed the lawmakers, alleging blackmail in such a circumstance.

    He said his inspection of facilities at the premises of the House did not suggest that snakes could penetrate into the chamber.

    The governor alleged that members of the House of Assembly diverted the money earmarked for maintenance of the facilities in the Assembly complex to other things.

    Read Also: Okowa felicitates with Akeredolu at 63

    Although he admitted that the facilities at the Assembly complex need renovation, the governor said he could not believe that a live snake could jump from the roof into the chamber.

    But the Speaker said there was no iota of lie in the story, stressing that the matter was painted more than the actual incidence in the social media.

    According to him, the House had requested for fund for the total renovation of structures and facilities at the Assembly’s complex before the incident.

     

     

  • Lagos to partner UAE in traffic management, security

    LAGOS State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu has said his administration will partner with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in the areas of traffic management and security.

    The governor spoke at the weekend  when he received the Consul-General of the UAE Consulate in Nigeria, Dr. Abdulla Al-Mandoos, at the Lagos House, Alausa, Ikeja.

    He noted that in the last decade,  UAE had become a destination of choice for Nigerian tourists and businessmen.

    This, the governor said, should deepen the existing bilateral agreements between Nigeria and UAE.

    “As a government, we have several things to learn from the story of UAE’s transformation. Dubai, which is the country’s commercial hub, shares so many similarities with Lagos. This is why I am elated to receive Dr. Al-mandoos and we welcome him.

    Read Also: Lagos Speaker seeks better ties between Nigeria and China

    “Let me disclose that Lagos is ready to deepen the relationship between the two countries and we are working on collaborations in traffic management and security,” Sanwo-Olu said.

    He added that there would also be collaborations in harnessing Lagos cultural potential to expand local tourism business,  expressing optimism that the envoy’s visit would deepen trade and yield positive results for both countries.

    “We are hoping that during your tenure, we shall further expand and grow the relationship between the two countries,” the governor said.

    Dr. Al-mandoos said the aim of his visit was to get cooperation and support of Lagos government on various areas of interest between Lagos and UAE.

    The diplomat promised there would be collaborations in the areas of security and education, noting that the partnership would assist the state to improve its tourism potential.

    Al-mandoos used the meeting to push the consulate’s land request to the governor for the building of its office and a cultural centre.