Tag: Nigerian

  • BoI: Killing the dream of Nigerian youths?

    SIR Contrary to the notion of job creation through capacity building and funding of enterprising ideas, the Youth Entrepreneurship and Support Programme (YES Programme), through the Bank of Industry is gradually derailing from its classical foundation of helping young aspiring entrepreneurs. Whereas the government came up with the very beautiful programme to support jobless Nigerian youth, the Bank of Industry has turned it to something else. More than a year down the line, there has not been any significant achievement for a programme designed to create about 36,000 jobs annually. The manner and approach by which the bank is handling the programme is parallel to its set objectives. My experience bears this out.

    I applied for the BOI YES Programme and became one of the successful applicants. I participated in the three months online training with the African Management Initiative and was finally selected to advance to the next phase of the programme which was in-class training. I was posted to Kano for the training which lasted for five days. I spent my life’s savings in the course transporting myself from Abuja to Kano and paid for my five-day hotel accommodation as well as dinner as breakfast and lunch were regularly served throughout the training.

    During the in-class training, officials of BOI advised us to among other conditions, to register our businesses with Corporate Affairs Commission as an enterprise and secure a business premises as equity contribution.

    I secured a business premises at the sum of N 140,000.00/year on November 16, 2016 immediately after the in-class training as advised by BOI officials during the training. The tenure of the rent is about to elapse in the next two months. The premises have since been inspected by the staff of the Bank of Industry. I also registered and obtained a certificate of business name with the Corporate Affairs Commission on December 14, 2016 at the rate of N15, 000.00. This is also part of the conditions set out by the bank.

    I was asked to submit a copy of my National Identity Card or Driver’s License or International Passport as part of the conditions precedent to disbursement. As at that time I had only one means of identification; temporary national identity card which could not be accepted by the bank. I quickly rushed to obtain an International Passport which cost me N30, 000.00.

    The Bank after fulfilling the above requirements demanded one percent appraisal fee which is mandatory and non-refundable. I paid the N26, 800.00 at a time I was exhausted and virtually left with nothing to sell-off to pay for the prescribed amount. I decided to approach my neighbour to borrow the N26, 800.00 which I promised to pay back immediately after disbursement of the loan.

    In the end, I got my application rejected. The disqualification was based on the submission of my final statement of results (bachelor degree) not certificate which was still not ready. This was in spite of explanation rendered to the BOI by the Registrar of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria in a letter dated August 29 which confirmed that the original certificate of my degree is still in process and would be released as soon as it is ready. The Registrar implored the Bank to treat my case in view of the certification. Meanwhile, the bank categorically posted on its official website (http://www.boi.ng/yes/) that it accepts alternatives to degree/HND certificates such as final statement of results or other verifiable evidence of course completion.

    Now that I have been made to spend the money I saved during my national service to start business immediately after the service, and being a jobless graduate with no any source of income, I am now left with no idea of what to do next than to wait until I get a job. I am now battling to pay back the money I borrowed from a neighbour which I paid to the bank as appraisal fee.

    I call on the federal government, the National Assembly and other relevant authorities to look closely into the activities of the Bank of Industry to ensure that it does not take advantage of hapless youths. Currently, there are allegations that the N10billion released to the bank by the federal government for the purpose of the programme has been mismanaged.

     

    • Al-Amin Usman Funtua,

    Katsina State

  • Navy okays 40 Nigerian, Ghanaian soldiers for special services

    Navy okays 40 Nigerian, Ghanaian soldiers for special services

    Forty out of 79 military personnel drawn from the Nigerian Army (NA), Nigerian Navy (NN), Ghanian Navy (GN) have been certified fit for special and rigorous military assignments.

    Their certification was sequel to their completion of a 24-week intensive training tagged “Basic Operating Capability Course 14” by the NN’s Special Boats Services (SBS) designed to develop men with strongest characters, who would give their all to accomplish an assigned mission.

    The operatives were tested on tactical riverine operations, conventional, desert and mountain warfare, assymentric warfare and air assaults, exercises that 39 of the entrants could not withstand.

    Speaking at the graduation ceremony yesterday, Flag Officer Commanding  (FOC) Naval Training Command (NAVTRAC) Rear Admiral Obi Ofodile said he was confident the graduands could individually withstand and undertake challenges that 100 regular personnel would.

    He said the SBS was borne out of the country’s need to tackle issues of militancy and piracy, adding that

    “When the police are overwhelmed, the military, which is a stronger force is invited. You also discover discover that where we have serious internal security challenges as was in the case of the Niger Delta, special forces are usually deployed.

    “The importance of the SBS cannot be overstated when it comes to areas with such threats. No, we are not deploying SBS to the Southeast because there is no need for it. The SBS is beyond normal warfare. They are deployed for Guerrilla warfare and very serious cases, where it is difficult to demarcate between the enemies and the friends. It might interest you to know that at the beginning of Boko Haram, no commander could go out without SBS operatives embedded.

    “They are deployed according to needs. As we identify areas where special forces are needed, we deploy them accordingly. One SBS is equal to a thousand troops because of what that SBS man is trained to do.

    “The training here is of the best quality.  Foreign military and even the Nigerian Army have been sending their personnel to the SBS for training because they know what is obtainable here.

  • Nigerian businesses on Shell entrepreneurship innovation prize list

    Three Nigerian entrepreneurs have been shortlisted for Shell LiveWIRE ‘Top Ten Innovators’, a global competition, which highlights and rewards LiveWIRE businesses that demonstrate excellence in innovation.

    The Nigerians have come up with creative ideas on energy efficiency and access to chemical and paint products, and join 22 entrepreneurs from nine countries to vie for the prestigious prize. A public vote of the shortlisted businesses takes place September 1 – 8, 2017, with the results helping to determine the winners.

    “We are pleased at the opportunity for the Nigerians to showcase their talent on the global stage using Shell’s flagship entrepreneurship development programme,” said Igo Weli, General Manager, External Relations, Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC).

    “SPDC launched the LiveWIRE programme in Nigeria in 2003, providing training, business development services and start-up capital for youth-owned businesses. Our ambassadors have benefited from this support to make their mark and we call on Nigerians to encourage them by voting for their ideas,” he added.

    ‘Top Ten Innovators’ is a worldwide competition open to the alumni of Shell LiveWIRE, a Royal Dutch Shell Social Investment Programme, operating in 15 countries, which enables young people to start their own business and create employment.  The shortlisted entrepreneurs have the chance to win a top prize of $15,000, three Runner-up prizes of $10,000 or six Merit awards of $5,000. The programme aims to create role models for other young entrepreneurs, and demonstrate that introducing innovation supports growth and job creation.

    Shell’s Vice President Social Performance, Joanna Cochrane, said: “Shell LiveWIRE is very important to us because when we help local entrepreneurs to set up businesses, they create long term sources of income for communities, they create jobs and they help to find innovative solutions to social and economic problems.”

    The businesses shortlisted are Nigeria De-rahbs Energy Services, which produces, installs, services and repairs solar energy equipment, and also provides training to future engineers and energy entrepreneurs.

    Others include Nigeria Emobella Engineering Nigeria Limited, which provides engineering services with a USP of 24hours availability and high-quality customer service, and Nigeria Fendwall Paint and Chemical Products, which produces and retails household and commercial paint products via a business model supporting low-income customers to access their products.

    You can vote for the organisation you want to win on the website: http://topteninnovators.shell-livewire.com.

    Since its introduction in Nigeria in 2003, the LiveWIRE programme has trained 6,550 Niger Delta youths in enterprise development and management, and provided business start-up grants to 3,313, Shell spokesperson, Nigeria, Bamidele Odugbesan said.

  • Buhari seeks Nigerian elites’ sacrifices for nation’s unity

    Buhari seeks Nigerian elites’ sacrifices for nation’s unity

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Sunday charged the elite in the country to make meaningful sacrifices that will engender unity and progress of Nigeria.

    He made the call while hosting Muslim faithfuls to a lunch as part of events to mark the Eid-Adha (Sallah) celebration at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Buhari, who was represented by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, said that the Federal Government was committed to the promotion of the country’s unity and will do everything to ensure that Nigeria remains one indivisible nation.

    He said “Our nation’s elite must recognize that we must all make sacrifice for the country to move forward and united. We will make the enviable black country in the country.

    “God has planned that we remain one indivisible nation strongly united. All the noise we here today is part of the building process of Nigeria.

    “All we are hearing today are the noises of that great nation that God is about to give birth to,”.

    “Mr president is unable to attend because he is celebrating Sallah at home in Daura. He has not been in Daura ‎for over a year now. So, this is an important home going for him.

    “The significance of this celebration is the willingness Abraham to make the great sacrifice ‎of possibly the dearest thing to him, his son Isaac.

    “Obviously, anyone who knows anything at all about the kinds of things that…..it is a willingness to ‎make a great sacrifice. And Abraham (Ibrahim) was able to make that sacrifice. And he made it in order to be able to fulfill his own destiny and the destiny of his people,” he said

    He added “The message today is that our nation’s elite, Muslims, Christians and all ethnicity must recognize that we also must make sacrifices, the sacrifices that are necessary ‎to attain the destiny that God has brought unto our people.

    “I am one of those who is extremely confident that our nation ‎will remain united. Because I am convinced that God’s plans and purpose for Nigeria is that we would be the preeminent black nation in the world.

    “This is the type of country that God has ordained. ‎Where we have diversity of opinions, diversity of ideas. People saying their own things here and there. But, He has also planned that this country will remain together, and that we’ll be a nation that is gifted just as we have the oil, the gas, and the most arable lands than most continents.

    “This is a country that has all of what other countries will travel and spend money ‎looking for the sort of resources that we have. All of the tourism resources that we have people will travel everywhere looking for it.

    “Is a nation of men and women so creative and prosperous. That we will feed the entire continent and create opportunities ‎for the world.

    “All the different ethnic groups are important in that arrangement. On every ethnicity, incredible minds, brilliant and creative people doing all manner of things.

    “Our energies and resources shouldn’t be spent again on debate about division. Our manifest destiny is to be a great nation, not to be a nation where we are talking about division.

    “We must focus out time, our energies and our resources on being that great nation that God has called us to be. I think we have started building that country already.

    “Despite all the noise that we hear, all that noise is part of the building. Everybody knows that you cannot have birth without noise. No woman delivers a baby without some noise and without some pains.” he stated

    The President also explained that the noise currently being heard in some sections of the country we eventually lead to birth a great nation.

    “What we are hearing today are the ‎noises and the pains of that great nation that God is about to give birth to.,” he added.

    Present at the event were the minister of Interior Abdulraman Danbazau who represented the wife of the President, Aisha Buhari, Senior Special Assistant on National Assembly (Senate),  Senator Ita Enang, Senator Osita Ozunaso and Chief Segun Oni who represented the chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), John Odigie-Oyegun among others.

  • No Nigerian died in Texas hurricane – NIDO

    No Nigerian died in Texas hurricane – NIDO

    No Nigerian life is lost to the Hurricane Harvey-ravaged Texas as the disaster has claimed dozens of lives so far, the Nigerian in Diaspora Organization (NIDO) Americas, has said.

    Dr Akin Awofolaju, a NIDO official told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Sunday that the organisation had reached out to Nigerians in the area.

    NAN reports that the devastating hurricane made landfall in the state a week ago and has been blamed for at least 47 deaths.

    No fewer than 43,000 people are currently housed in shelters while 156,000 homes are reportedly affected.

    “So far, we don’t have any Nigerian who has lost his or her life in the hurricane. We’ve reached out to them and they are safe.

    “We’ve spoken and have been speaking with Nigerians there; we have been reaching out to them and so far, no death has been recorded among Nigerians,” he said.

    NAN gathered that many Nigerians in Texas whose areas are not affected by the hurricane are accommodating Nigerians that are affected, pending when the floods recede and government relief assistance.

    Awofolaju noted that for more than three months, relevant authorities have been telling people to evacuate, saying many people actually evacuated.

    “Many people listened and heeded the warnings; those who defied the warnings are most affected.

    “But one good thing about the U.S. is that insurance will cover most of the damages,” he said.

    NAN reports that President Donald Trump on Saturday returned to Houston in company of First Lady Melania, praising the relief response on his second visit to Texas.

    The president also declared Sunday a “National Day of Prayer” for victims of Hurricane Harvey.

    Trump had asked Congress for 7.9 billion dollars as an initial payment to help with recovery efforts following the flooding in both Texas and Louisiana. (NAN)

  • A case can and ought to be made for a relatively strong center for Nigerian federalism – but only if…

    A case can and ought to be made for a relatively strong center for Nigerian federalism – but only if…

    [For Raufu Mustapha, R.I.P.]

    Only if the deployment and manipulation of the center for looting galore, for squandermania on a colossal scale, and for a wastefulness of national assets and resources that is without equal anywhere else in the world are all either eradicated or substantially reduced in our country. These are the preconditions, the premises on which the case for a relatively strong center can, at this point in time, not only be made, but successfully “sold” to the majority of Nigerians everywhere in the land, North and South, East and West. Moreover, I believe that this case cannot only be made but ought, as a matter of fact and necessity, be made.

    Probably, nearly everyone reading this is aware that what I am urging here is unpopular both in our country and in the world at large. In Nigeria, everyone knows that restructuring governance away from concentration of power and sovereignty at the center has been the single most dominant and persistent issue in our national public sphere for a long time now. And as I myself noted again and again in the series on IPOB in this column last month, the secessionist and devolutionary movements and organizations in Nigeria seem to be completely in accord with the tendencies around the world, not the least in Europe and indeed most of the Western world. Thus, it is most definitely not a particularly auspicious or opportune historical moment to argue for a relatively strong center for federalism in our country and our world today.

    Indeed, both politically and ethically, to argue for a strong federalist position in Nigeria today is to find oneself in lockstep with strange, unsavory fellow travelers. This is because with perhaps the single exception of those who fought to keep Nigeria one during the Nigeria-Biafra war and are extremely sentimental about the unity of the country, nearly all of the groups and individuals that are arguing for a strong center of authority and sovereignty for our country come from the ranks of those who derive extensive economic, political and symbolic benefits from the strong center that they wish to maintain in Abuja, in the presidency as well as in all the organs and institutions of federal power in our country.

    Concretely speaking, which retired general, air marshal, admiral or former senator that has been given an “oil block” does not want a strong center of federalism in our country, now and for as long as possible? Which well-connected Nigerian elite hoping for an ambassadorial appointment, possibly in London, Washington, DC or Berlin, wants to see an end to the hegemonic concentration of power and patronage at the center of governance in Nigeria? What of the thousands of contracts, appointments to plum, sinecure posts, and nomination for honorific titles and awards that come from the federal might in Abuja? Are the “patriotic” Nigerians who are hoping, indeed struggling for these perquisites and honors not powered by the knowledge that only as long as a strong center subsists and lasts in Abuja will their dreams and aspirations come true? Finally, isn’t it troubling that the loudest and most insistent voices for a strong center in Abuja as a basis for Nigerian unity come from vigorously conservative groups and individuals like the Arewa Consultative Forum, (ACF), Ango Abdullahi and Tanko Yakasai (who, by the way, used to be in the ranks of “progressives”)?

    At this point in the discussion, I should perhaps point out to the reader that the very fact that I have very carefully and indeed rather meticulously gone over these important caveats against the case for a strong center of federalism in our country means that I have in no way forgotten them nor am I ignoring them. Indeed, to the contrary, my point, my frame of reference in this piece is to argue vigorously against the kind of strong federalism represented by the named groups and individuals. In other words, my central point in this piece is that the case for a relatively – as opposed to an absolutely – strong center of a kind that is totally different from what groups like the ACF is pushing can and ought to be made. Here is another way of putting my position on this issue across: I think hard, very hard, and I ask myself: How would genuinely progressive and patriotic Nigerians like Eddie Madunagu, Bene Madunagu, Col Abubakar Umar (rtd.), Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, Balarabe Musa, Dipo Fasina, Attahiru Jega, Issa Fage, and Kayode Komolafe make the case for a relatively strong center for federalism in Nigeria? I do not speak for any of these comrades and compatriots, but I am certainly thinking of them as I write the following second segment of this piece.

    At the risk of oversimplification, here’s the central plank of my argument for a relatively strong center for Nigerian federalism at this moment in both local and global history: in all the post-tribal societies of the world, nations and regions that have strong and competitive markets are incalculably better suited for the challenges and vagaries of capitalist modernity than those that have weak and dispersed markets; moreover, strong markets for the most part work best with and in nations and regions with relatively strong centers of political governance. Seen in this light, a large, multiethnic and culturally diverse country like Nigeria with a relatively strong center of federalism is like a common market in which borders are easily crossed; people, goods and services are easily exchanged without prohibitive and protectionist regulations and protocols; and security of life, property and personal possessions are guaranteed both within and well beyond one’s cultural and linguistic locality. In case the point I am making here is (still) not clear, permit me to make it clearer through a brief but harrowing elaboration on this metaphor of our nation as a “common market”.

    As a nation, Nigeria at the present time – and with its enormous actual and potential reserves of wealth and resources – is a grotesque caricature of a common market. The “common market” is there but it operates at a level far below the standards of most of the common markets of this world – precisely because the center does not operate even minimally in the interests of the constituent members. The most telling manifestation of this tragic and absurd situation is the seeming utter helplessness of the Buhari administration in particular and all post-1999 governments in general in ending or even substantially curbing the savage killings and massive population displacements produced by the herdsmen’ and farming communities’ standoff. Axiomatically, a “common market” protects not only property but also producers, the peoples who buy and sell and live out their allotted time in this world either as migrants or as settlers. Buhari’s administration is doing neither – protecting the “properties” and/or the lives of those killed in this almost nationwide standoff.

    If we look both closer and wider at it, we find that the herdsmen and farmers’ savage standoff is a microcosm of the terrifying failures and crises of Nigeria as a national “common market”. The manifestations are legion. There is, for one instance, the use of central institutions of the Nigerian state like the legislature and the judiciary to prevent the operation of the rule of law in the administration of justice where corruption, the nation’s number one moral and material cancer, is concerned. For another instance of the same seemingly unending crisis, there is the fact that like emergency businessmen and contractors that spend more of their operating capital on luxury consumer goods than on the business itself, all the administrations of the country, federal, state and local government, spend far more on recurrent expenditure than on capital projects. And for yet another manifestation of this pervasive and defining “anti-common market” ethic of Buhari’s and APC’s Nigeria, small and medium enterprises (SME’s), the backbone of the national economy, get far less of available investment capital from both the government itself and the financial services industry, the most profitable sector of the national economy. Perhaps the single most frightening specter of all, at least in my humble opinion, is this: all the projections of Nigeria’s population growth indicate that in about another two to three decades, Nigeria will move from the seventh to the third largest nation in the world. This, by the way, will take place whether or not we remain one united, federal nation with or without a relatively strong center. The horrors to come in the wake of this looming demographic explosion if a relatively strong center does not emerge soon to manage our chaotic internal “common market” are better imagined than prophetically spelt out in detail!

    For those who might think that my use of the metaphor or trope of the “common market” in this piece falls into the trap of an endorsement of capitalism mutatis mutandis, permit me to briefly make a clarification. Just as money, as capital, existed long before modern capitalism, so too did markets. And to say the least, it does not appear as if markets are about to disappear into the oblivion of history. What has been happening since the advent of modern capitalism is the growing and ever-expanding critique of markets, especially in their tendency to place profits and consumption far above humanity and the values that sustain both its material and non-material needs. In other words, increasingly, markets and market forces are being made subject to regulation and correction, unlike what used to obtain in both the distant and recent past when markets were pretty much unregulatable. And in this connection, let us note, compatriots, that Nigeria, Buhari’s and the APC’s Nigeria, is one of the last holdouts of unregulated and unregulatable national markets in the world.

    I find the metaphor of the national “common market” useful in making the case for a relatively strong center for Nigerian federalism because those who, in my opinion, have been making the most eloquent and persuasive case for restructuring have not deemed it obligatory or even necessary to indicate just how “strong” or “weak” the center will be in their “restructured” Nigeria. Reading between the lines, between the implicit and unspoken hints in their analyses and prognostications, I do find that some of them do want a relatively strong center in place of the current absolutely strong, bloated presidency and the associated executive and legislature. Specifically, I have not read anyone calling for the armed forces to be broken up into state or ethnic militias. I have not read anyone calling for the judiciary and the administration of justice to begin and end at state or regional borders. I have not read that each state or region should send its ambassadors to the nations of the earth and/or play separate, exclusive hosts to foreign ambassadors accredited to our country. I have read of pundits or activists asking for state police formations to replace the current national force, but as I am against this, I do not wish to comment on it here beyond noting that at one stage in this country that coincided with my early youth, we had local constabularies and the experience was almost entirely negative.

    I bring the observations and reflections in this piece to a close with the following point: just as it is necessary to note that restructuring is not secession, not a repudiation of the country’s unity and corporate existence, so is it necessary to ask of all advocates of restructuring to indicate clearly what will remain of the center in their “restructured” Nigeria. Reading between the lines, I get it that what most of these thinkers and pundits have in mind can be called a polycentric federal Nigeria. Very well. But even polycentrism has a center, no matter how small, how vestigial and so what, compatriots, would remain in the “center” in this visionary polycentric federalism of the “restructurenistas”?

     

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

  • Wizkid calls Nigerian government a ‘joke’

    Wizkid calls Nigerian government a ‘joke’

    Hip hop artiste Wizkid has dissed the Nigerian government. And considering the interest whicch some music stars who have attained fame take in politics, Wizkid has said he is not ‘interested’ in politics.

    Wizkid who has transformed to an international star made this assertion on Twitter on Tuesday, while responding to a fan who asked if he would join politics.

    First, the ‘Ojuelegba’ crooner lambasted government in the country as a ‘joke.’

    “Government for my country na joke,” he tweeted in pidgin English, adding the laughing emoticon as he followed it up with another tweet, “God help us.”

    He then concluded his tirade by tweeting; “Hmmmm not really.. Just funny what i see and read sometimes.”

    Nigerian artistes like 9ice, Kate Henshaw, Julius Agwu, Bob Manuel Udokwu, and Kenny St. Brown tried their hands in politics in the recent past while Desmond Elliot is currently serving as a lawmaker in the Lagos State House of Assembly.

    And presently, ‘Limpopo’ act, KCee, has signified interest in joining the Anambra State gubernatorial race.

  • Buhari: every Nigerian has the right to live anywhere

    Buhari: every Nigerian has the right to live anywhere

    President to fight Boko Haram, kidnapping, herdsmen/farmers clashes

    To those issuing ultimatum to other ethnic groups living in their community, President Muhammadu Buhari this morning issued a stern warning.

    Every Nigerian has a right to live anywhere in the country.

    The President, who returned from 103-day medical vacation in London on Saturday, told Nigerians in a broadcast that Nigeria’s unity is not negotiable.

    While he was away, a group of Arewa youths issued an October 1 ultimatum to southeasterners living in the North to quit or face eviction.

    The President said this morning: “Every Nigerian has the right to live and pursue his business anywhere in Nigeria without let or hindrance.

    “I believe the very vast majority of Nigerians share this view.

    “Nigeria’s unity is settled and not negotiable. We shall not allow irresponsible elements to start trouble and when things get bad they run away and saddle others with the responsibility of bringing back order, if necessary with their blood.”

    He added: “This is not to deny that there are legitimate concerns. Every group has a grievance. But the beauty and attraction of a federation is that it allows different groups to air their grievances and work out a mode of co-existence.”

    The President said: “The National Assembly and the National Council of State are the legitimate and appropriate bodies for national discourse.

    “The national consensus is that, it is better to live together than to live apart.”

    He recalled his encounter with the leader of the failed Biafra Republic, the late Chief Emeka Odumegwu Ojukwu in 2003.   “After I joined partisan politics, the late Chief Emeka Ojukwu came and stayed as my guest in my hometown Daura. Over two days we discussed in great depth till late into the night and analysed the problems of Nigeria. We both came to the conclusion that the country must remain one and united.”

    Buhari went on: “I am charging the security agencies not to let the successes achieved in the last 18 months be a sign to relax.

    “Terrorists and criminals must be fought and destroyed relentlessly so that the majority of us can live in peace and safety.

    “Therefore we are going to reinforce and reinvigorate the fight not only against;

    “Elements of Boko Haram which are attempting a new series of attacks on soft targets

    “.Kidnappings, farmers versus herdsmen clashes, in addition to ethnic violence fuelled by political mischief makers. We shall tackle them all.

    “Finally, dear Nigerians, our collective interest now is to eschew petty differences and come together to face common challenges of; economic security, political evolution and integration as well as lasting peace among all Nigerians.

    “I remain resolutely committed to ensuring that these goals are achieved and maintained. I am so glad to be home.”

    The President thanked Nigerians for the support and prayers.

    “I am very grateful to God and to all Nigerians for their prayers. I am pleased to be back on home soil among my brothers and sisters.

    “In the course of my stay in the United Kingdom, I have been kept in daily touch with events at home. Nigerians are robust and lively in discussing their affairs, but I was distressed to notice that some of the comments, especially in the social media have crossed our national red lines by daring to question our collective existence as a nation. This is a step too far.”

  • NMA to Buhari: Equip Nigerian hospitals like UK’s before 2019

    NMA to Buhari: Equip Nigerian hospitals like UK’s before 2019

    The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) has risen from its August 2017 National Executive Council (NEC) meeting, asking President Muhammadu Buhari to replicate medical equipment he had seen in London, United Kingdom in Nigerian hospitals before the end of his tenure.

    The umbrella body of medical practitioners in the country said Doctors in the country would have been able to handle the President’s health challenge if the health sector had been properly equipped and funded.

    NMA in its communique issued and jointly signed by its National President and Secretary General, Professor Mike Ozovehe Ogirima and Dr. Yusuf Tanko Sununu respectively after their just concluded National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Kaduna said it has “resolved to call on the President to utilize his positive experience in the health systems of other climes to impact on the health care system in Nigeria.”

    Reading the communiqué to newsmen Professor Ogirima said, Nigerian doctors are competent to handle any form of ailment if enabling environment and good working tools are on ground, adding that the President may have sought for medical attention outside the shores of this country perhaps as a result of ill-equipped hospitals in the country.

    According to him, “the nature of the President’s ailment is not known to NMA, and even if it is known to us, we have to respect our oath of secrecy. The President like every other citizen of this country has the right to seek second opinion, that is part of medical practice. However, the Doctors in Nigeria are capable of handling any ailment if optimal working conditions are provided.

    “We have read and heard on BBC that, the President does not believe in the Nigerian health system. What was wrong by the President going outside? It is a fact that our hospitals are not optimally equipped. Am sure that, the President after spending 100 days in London has first hand experience of what we have been shouting, equip! Equip! Upgrade our hospitals.

    “We are happy that the President is back. Based on his experience, we are saying he should come and replicate what he has seen in London, at least to take care of the masses. So, we expect him to replicate such within the next two years.”
    According to the communique, “the NEC observed with dismay the continuous low budgetary allocation to health leading to declining health care service delivery in the country.

    “The the NEC observed with dismay the worsening availability, distribution, development and utilization of human resources for health within Nigeria’s health system and the increasing trend of brain drain especially affecting the already weakened man power base in the country.

    “NEC calls on government to implement the Abuja Declaration of at least 15 percent budgetary allocation to health and ensure timely release of funds with effect from 2018 budget and appealed to the National Assembly to fast track the passage of the bill on Residency Training Program (RTP) in Nigeria.

    “NEC calls for the improvement in Epidemic control, preparedness and establishment of more Infectious Disease Hospitals (IDH) through out the country, and that the government to intensify efforts to improve funding on immunization services and further strengthen the collaboration between government and non governmental agencies,” NMA stated.

  • UK-based Nigerian artistes sing for unity

    UK-based Nigerian artistes sing for unity

    UK-based Nigerian artists led by multitalented composer Adeyinka Akinwande will come together come October 1, at the imposing St Paul’s Church of England, Herne Hill London for a day of music, poem and prayer fiesta in a show of spiritual uplifting for the country and its ailing President, Muhammadu Buhari. Akinwande, a poet and songwriter, who lives in London, is the originator of the project, which is born out of the religious cum political violence and killings in Nigeria and the health status of the President notforgetting the economic recession that the country is facing.    According to the graduate of Mass-Communication, “I live in the UnitedKingdom (U.K), but I have seen that going by obvious happenings in thecountry, Nigerians need to be reminded of the way we used to live in peace in the past. And in collaboration with the Church of England in London, I am putting up a series of musical and prayer sessions to bring Nigerians in the U.K together and to further unify us as one Nation.” The next event, he noted would come up on Nigeria’s Independence Day, which is October 1, 2017. Thousands of Nigerians will come from all over U.K dressed in traditional attires, singing, praying, and dining together.  Akinwande noted: “It is all about bringing all Nigerian ethnic groups together in prayer and having fun. I grew up in a united Nigeria, a Nigeria that after the war decided to put the past behind them and move forward, a Nigeria that, on a Muslim festival would celebrate with Muslims, on a Christmas day, masquerade would come out and entertainpeople, that’s the Nigeria we had. That is what Nigeria should be. My

    nanny was an Hausa person, she was our tenant, the wife of a soldier, weloved them, they loved us, in our house we had Igbo tenants, my dad hadother wives, he was a Christian, my step mother was a Muslim, we had no problems, in fact I learnt some Arabic at the local community mosque, our parents wouldn’t stop us going there with our tenants children. That unity is where I am coming now. That is what people should teach each other, and their children. These days everyone is crying separations, religious hatred, tribal hatred, name calling, they should stop! In addition, unite, and chase out the thieves not kill the innocents. At the Church of England in Herne Hill, we are going to sing, dance, and pray. We will pray for Nigeria, we will pray for the sick president, we will pray for progress and unity in our country. Then we will dine together as one Nigerians not minding differences in tribe and languages. We are also inviting other nationals to join us in prayer and dinner.”Akinwande, who started singing from the church as a choirboy began hisforay into the entertainment world from Igbobi College as a member of the school drama troupe. “After secondary school, I joined the Anansa Playhouse Group at the National Theatre, we stage-played King Emene, Lion and the Jewel. I later joined Afrodisia Studio as assistant production engineer, I learnt a lot there, as I worked with legends-Lanrewaju Adepoju, the great Yoruba poet, Sikiru Ayinde Barrister, Wasiu Ayinde, Shina Peters, late Orlando Owoh, King Sunny Ade, Ebenezer Obey Commander, and Comfort Omoge. In fact, I was part of the production crews that produced the first albums of Lagbaja and Wasiu Alabi Pasuma. Akinwande, who has authored and performed poems like Eko, Lonely Old Lady, Khadija Saye: The storm just threw away the water in our heathen pot is an Ode in memory of Khadija, an Ode in memory of

    Khadija, an upcoming photographer that died in the London Grenfell Tower fire. “I performed for the elderly people during the Queen Elizabeth 90th birthday in 2016. I did the African talking drum dance and poems, I brought other nationals together, and we had a fusion of Nigerian dance music with others. I also performed at the Nigerian Independence Day celebrations last year at Hammersmith and Fulham town halls. “Akinwande added that many Nigerians artistes are doing well in the U.Kin spite of the challenges. “Femi Oguns owns one of the best drama schools in the UK. John Boyega, who acted in Star Wars, graduated from there. Chiwetel Ejiofor, who acted in Twelve Years a Slave is also doing well. Some are struggling though and it is due to colour of the skinissue and race. Accent is another thing, some indigenes would not understand your accent if you don’t speak slowly. It can be quite challenging sometimes. Many artists need to do other jobs to pay the bills, productions doesn’t come every day.”