Tag: Nigerian

  • Nigerian league worth N3bn, says Irabor

    Nigerian league worth N3bn, says Irabor

    • Clubs need N300m to participate

    Clubs will need to provide a N300million guarantee to participate in the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) when the League Management Company (LMC) completes the process of fashioning out an ideal league for the country.

    Chairman of the Interim Management Committee now upgraded to League Management Company, (LMC) Hon. Nduka Irabor, who revealed this at a media round table held yesterday at the National Stadium, Lagos, also put the worth of the Nigerian league at N3billion.

    “I am not looking for a job neither am I looking for an appointment. Everything we are doing is all aimed at repositioning the league for the good of all. When we finish, clubs would need to guarantee N300million to be able to participate in the kind of league we evisage for the country,” he said.

    Irabor, who described the state of the league prior to the new attempt at giving it a new direction as disgraceful, said it would be out of place to have a league that is neither enterprising nor beneficial to players and soccer lovers alike.

    “We do not need a league where players are not paid, where clubs are unable to honour their matches, where results cannot be trusted because referees get payment from clubs, among other vices,” he added.

    On the rational behind changing the interim body to a limited liability company, the former media guru, said it became glaring from the level of anomalies on ground that the league can neither move forward nor do business with serious-minded outfits.

    “Nobody was ready to do business with the Nigeria football league. Those who wanted to be partners in progress wanted a company they could trust, so there was need to provide a new platform that can help the committee achieve the needed goal,” Irabor submitted.

  • Insecurity: Jonathan urges Nigerians not to be deterred

    Insecurity: Jonathan urges Nigerians not to be deterred

    … Presidents wants citizens to be hopeful

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Saturday urged Nigerians not to be deterred or be weary in spirit as the Federal Government was partnering with security agencies to overcome the evil confronting the nation.

    Jonathan gave the charge at a Presidential National Breakfast Prayer held at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    “Nigerians must be hopeful, focused and watchful to overcome all that is evil confronting the nation.

    “Today as we pray, our thoughts no doubt will be dominated by the challenges facing our nation, particularly that of security.

    “Providence has placed us all at our various posts at this particular time in our nation’s journey to greatness, therefore, we must not be deterred or be weary in spirit at this time.

    `We should remember the saying of the scriptures that with men, it is impossible but with God all things are possible.”

    The president noted that the breakfast prayer was coming after the Easter, a period when every Christian was expected to be focused, rededicated and reborn.

    He, therefore, enjoined all Nigerians to always pray to God for divine guidance in battling all forces of evil who were bent on causing social disaffection among the peace loving people of this nation.

    “In the book of Jeremiah, God said if you seek me with all your heart, you will find me.

    “May we seek him with all our hearts, empower us to overcome all the evil forces trying to derail this nation, may we seek him with all our hearts to let his light shine over our nation and to guide us in leading our great nation to its destined goal.”

    Jonathan, who described the breakfast prayer as a way ordained to link up with “our creator’’, challenged Nigerians to always do the right thing, individually or collectively to move the nation forward.

    “This breakfast has become one forum to establish link at the Presidential Villa.

    “The first time I addressed a prayer breakfast at this villa was in 2010 and on that occasion, it was a time of thanksgiving and deep reflection over God’s goodness and faithfulness to us.

    “I believe that all of us, if we begin to do what is right individually and collectively, surely we will take our country to the destination we expect.

    “We pray that God should use all of us Nigerians who know the right thing to do, to use all of us as change agents because if all of us do what is right, this country will continue to be a great nation,” he said.

    In his remarks, the Chaplain of the Aso Villa Chapel, Venerable Obioma Onwuzurumba said the prayer programme was to celebrate the resurrection of the Lord with the president and to also thank God for his mercy.

    According to him, the Jonathan-led administration has gone through rough times but God is in control.

    “Just like the children of Israel, it was thought that they will not get to the Promised Land, but God has been faithful and He will lead us through.

    “God did not take us this far to take us back but to the Promised Land. God has been faithful and he will not abandon us, we will not fail we will not fear the giants,” he said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), reports that Pastor Emmanual Kure of the Throne Church, Kafanchan, led the prayer for Nigeria.

    He was joined by Jonathan, the Chaplain of Aso Villa Chapel and other clergies at the prayer session.

    The Israeli Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Moshe Ram, read the first lesson from the book of Deuteronomy 28: 1-10, while the former Head of the Interim National Government (ING), Chief Ernest Shonekan took the second reading from Romans 8: 18-27.

    In his exhortation, Pastor Afolabi Falola from a Kano-based Church said that God had great plans for any country that would serve him diligently.

    While referring to the book of Deuteronomy, Chapter 28, Falola said that God was ready to bless and lift up a nation that would obey him and do his will.

    He also said that all adversaries of Nigeria would fall with payers.

    Rev. Fr. Ralph Madu, the Secretary General of the Catholic Church also offered prayers for the President and the nation

  • Nigerian entertainment conference beckons

    Nigerian entertainment conference beckons

    PUBLISHERS of Nigerian Entertainment Today, NET Newspapers LTD, have announced the inauguration of an annual umbrella conference for the Nigerian entertainment industry with the theme: ‘building the industry of our dreams’.

    The conference, which will debut on Friday April 26, 2012, ”is an invaluable initiative needed at this critical time in our industry, to steer the different sectors and associated elements, in the appropriate direction,” according to NET founder, Ayeni Adekunle.

    Nigerian entertainment conference, Ayeni says, will cover all the sectors associated with the entertainment industry. These include Fashion, Music, Movies/Films, and Media. Others are Sports, Arts, IT, Comedy and Events.

    “The conversation has been on for years, conversation about the way forward for the art and business of entertainment in Nigeria. And, since NET was established three years ago, we’ve been at the forefront of efforts to get the conversation going. Now, it’s time to bring everyone together so we can begin an active process of re-organisation,” Ayeni added.

    Set to hold at the Eko Hotel and Suites, the first-of-its-kind conference, Ayeni says, will feature sessions on Nollywood, Music, Media, and more, as well as the inaugural NET Honours to reward distinguished practitioners.

    Confirmed speakers include Kennis founder and CEO, Keke Ogungbe, iconic writer and director Amaka Igwe, GM Consumer Marketing, MTN Nigeria, Kola Oyeyemi, and Charterhouse Ghana founder, Iyiola Ayoade; while the likes of star actress Nse Ikpe-Etim, Headies founder, Ayo Animashaun, filmmaker Kunle Afolayan, comedian Tee A, singer-songwriter Darey, advertising wizkid, Steve Babaeko, recording artiste, Weird MC, the iconic DJ Jimmy Jatt, National Mirror MD, Steve Ayorinde, new media expert, Elo Umeh, writer Tolu Ogunlesi, AGN president, Ibinabo Fiberesima and Chocolate City president, Audu Maikori, will serve on different panels. More speakers and panelists will be announced.

  • A Nigerian girl  helps US police  catch robbers  by being smart

    A Nigerian girl helps US police catch robbers by being smart

    DOYIN Oladipupo was on the phone with a police dispatcher, hiding in a closet when she heard the door open.

    Three intruders, who had set off the home security alarm, came into the walk-in closet in her parents’ bedroom, apparently looking for items to steal from the Chula Vista, California, home.

    The 15-year-old was cowering in a corner next to some shelves. She thought her bright toe nail polish would give her away.

    “I was so scared. I could see them,” she told CNN affiliate KGTV. “I thought they would see me.”

    The 911 operator heard one of the intruders hollering at the others and told the girl, who was home alone, not to talk.

    The dispatcher then asked her to tap once on the cordless handset to indicate she understood not to open the closet door.

    She remained silent and still, Oladipupo told KGTV, while the intruders came in and took jewelry off a shelf, she said.

    Police said in a statement that when officers arrived, the three intruders were loading items from the home into a car on the street. Two of the suspects are 17 years old, and the third is 18.

    The car had been stolen a week before the attempted burglary, which happened Tuesday afternoon. There were items from other burglaries in the car, police said.

    “I don’t know how I did it, honestly,” Oladipupo said. “Because when I think about it now, my heart just starts beating.”

  • Nigerian, Ghanaian actors dazzle in Playing Safe

    Nigerian, Ghanaian actors dazzle in Playing Safe

    MOVIE freaks and fans of Nigerian and Ghanaian thespians have a chance to see their stars dazzle in a soon to be released movie titled Playing Safe. Fresh from the stable of Diamond Groove Pictures, the movie is a romantic thriller that features some of the industry’s leading actors such as Jibola Dabo and Ghanaian actress, Martha Ankomah, as well as IK Ogbonna and Johannes Meyer.

    Shot in Lagos, Dubai, London and Ghana the movie which also stars Ini Edo and Tonto Dike is a story of young ladies who draw lessons from past failed relationships. Observers say that the combination of Tonto, who earned her cinema debut in Uche Jombo’s My Life My Damage and Uyo-born actress, Ini Edo, will sure provide the watching audience with a breathtaking experience.

    Playing Safe was shot in various exotic locations and it is due to be released in cinemas this Easter. The movie is directed and produced by Elvis Chucks.

  • A Nigerian can Succeed anywhere  in the  World —Chris Aire

    A Nigerian can Succeed anywhere in the World —Chris Aire

    His name still probably will not ring a bell among many Nigerians, but in America, in the dizzyingly fast – paced, glitzy world of Hollywood and the bigger fashion scene around the world, he is a superstar. The jeweller and exotic watch maker, artist and designer is friend to the biggest names in American music, film, fashion, entertainment and sports worlds. He is called ‘The Iceman’ on account of his trading in diamonds and other precious stones with which he has bedecked many of his superstar friends.

    In a world where the bold, big, flashy, loud and even outrageous are a fashion statement, this Nigerian kid has created a niche for himself in the risky jewellery business and, in the process, made a fortune for himself.

    The sixth son from a polygamous family, Aire left the shores of Nigeria in pursuit of the proverbial Golden Fleece at just over 17 years old. Today fate has smiled on him and he has, indeed, hit gold.

     

    WHAT does the Aire in your name mean? Is it Nigerian?

    Yes it is Nigerian, a derivative of my Ishan name. The full name, Airemiokhai, is a derivative of two Ishan words, “Aire,” which means “drawing close” and “Okhai,” meaning “greatness.” So it means “drawing close to greatness.” I decided to adopt my middle name and cut of the second half first as a mark of my independence at that time and, since I was going abroad then, to make it easier for people to pronounce.

    Were you born Chris Aire?

    I was born Christopher Airemiokhai Iluobe.

    You were so young and ran such a big company?

    I was, but I was able to run the company efficiently. Our head office was on Sapele Road in Benin and we had haulage trucks all over the country. We had about 100 trucks that transported diesel and petrol all over the country.

    Not many people know the name Iluobe. Can you tell us a little more about your father?

    My father was a very successful businessman. He was into oil and building materials. He had a factory that produced galvanised roofing sheets. He was also into farming, exporting cocoa and palm kernel. He actually gave me my first lessons in business.

    So if you were doing so well, why did you decide to go abroad?

    My father and I were very close growing up and he challenged me several times. But there was this particular time he did that and I decided that it was time to take him up on the challenge which is why I took the decision to be far away from home and his assistance and to use my middle name as my surname.

    What exactly was the challenge?

    The challenge was that I couldn’t make it without him and his name. And looking back if I had remained with him then, I believe that I would not have made it without him.

    So was America what you expected it to be?

    No it wasn’t as I had imagined when I arrived, partly because I went to Memphis in Tennessee.

    So how did you survive?

    It was hard. I started by flipping burgers to put myself through college. One of the things that were ingrained in me back in Nigeria was the need to be educated. So in America, I struggled to get a bachelor’s degree. That was my first goal.

    I met other Nigerians there who told me that the best job a Nigerian could get was to be either a security guard or work in a fast food restaurant. That was how I started working in a fast food restaurant. But I soon decided it was not for me and that I could do better.

    So how did you get into the jewelry business?

    I always had a love for jewelry and knew that jewelry was also a profitable business and wanted to ultimately invest in it. So I had hoped to create a successful career in the entertainment industry in the USA and invest the money I made into the jewelry business.

    How did you start your own company?

    I worked for him for six years and I had been able to save $5,000. That amount in starting a jewelry company is absolutely nothing. But what happened in those six years was that I met a lot of high net worth individuals within the jewelry community. The jewelry business is a very small community. We all go to the same shows, hang out together. So, working for him gave me a platform which catapulted me into the game. Unknown to me, people had watched me for six years and got an insight into my character. They knew I could be trusted and that I was a serious-minded person, this made it easier for them to take a chance on me.

    So how did you start with $5,000?

    The $5,000 was just enough for me to rent a small office space where I was my own secretary, designer, salesman, manufacturer and everything rolled in together. I started in 1996 with that small amount of money but the goodwill I had built was what pushed me over the edge.

    What exactly did you have to do?

    I did all the designs and since I had befriended so many people in the business, I approached somebody with a manufacturing facility that would help me with the gold and other raw materials to extend me credit terms. I then produced the pieces, put them in my bag and hawked them to the people I thought would buy them. I was given about 30 days to sell and pay off my creditor. I would sell the pieces and repeat the process.

    Which was your real break in the business?

    The turning point for me was when I met Gary Paton. He used to play for the Seattle Supersonics. That year they were playing the Los Angeles Lakers in the playoffs. I knew Gary was going to be staying at the Ritz Carlton Hotel, Marina Del Rey, so I went early and waited for him to show up. I waited for a few hours and when he finally showed up, I walked up and talked to him in the middle of press frenzy. I will never forget how gracious he was. I had never met him before. I just walked up to him and introduced myself and my business. He put his arms around me and pointed to his body guard and asked me to talk to him and exchange addresses and phone numbers. I stayed in touch with them after the playoffs. In the summer they were in Miami and invited me over to show them the stuff I had and I went over. When I got there he gave me an order for $50,000.

    What exactly did you sell to him?

    A bunch of gold and diamond basketball pendants. He bought for himself and his friends. It was a big order at the time. The interesting thing is that I had maxed out my credit card making that trip and if he hadn’t bought anything it would have been difficult for me to go back home. But it was worth the risk. Apart from him, I met a number of other people on the trip with whom I later did business.

    We read about you and so many Hollywood stars. Who would you say are your biggest customers ever?

    I try to respect people’s privacy because most of my clients are private people. So I can only talk about the ones we are allowed to talk about. But our clientele cuts across business, entertainment, sports and so on. When I first started it was mostly entertainers.

    How does it feel? Do you ever get carried away being a small boy from Nigeria making it big and hobnobbing with superstars?

    Sometimes I still pinch myself because I have been very fortunate. I consider myself lucky. Everything I have done I can only say is by the grace of the Almighty God.

    You were away from Nigeria for a long time. What made you come back?

    When I left Nigeria the idea was to go and study, better myself and then come back, but the people who came back returned and told us how horrible it was. So coming back home was the last thing on my mind at the time. Also, the pieces I was getting lots of notoriety for in the USA were not your standard run-of-the-mill designs. They were cutting edge and a lot of people did not understand it. They used to say who would wear a clock. I could never have come home at that time with the pieces I was making. When I left, Nigeria was a conservative place. We were used to small flat wrist watches. So I never thought there would be a market for what I was doing in Nigeria. As I got older, I started rethinking because most of the raw materials I use come from the African continent and most Africans are exploited and never really given the opportunity to add value to our raw materials. I decided it would be good to come back and set up something that would start to change that. So I started thinking of coming to set up here and contribute in my own way and share the knowledge I have accumulated in the United States. But I didn’t come to Nigeria right away. I went to Sierra Leone and Guinea Conakry and then gradually started coming to Nigeria. We were then invited by Nduka Obaigbena to participate in the Thisday Arise show. After the show many people showed interest in our products which inspired me to set up the jewelry shop at Transcorp Hilton.

    Where and how do you source you raw materials from, particularly diamonds?

    From all over the world. Some we get through our diamond network but we deal only in blood -free diamonds. Some of the raw materials like semi – precious stones and precious stones we get in Nigeria. We have investment interest in some mines outside Nigeria and we get some of our gold and others materials from there.

    There has been a great outcry against blood diamonds from Sierra Leone and other places. How do you ensure that you do not deal in them?

    Blood diamonds are diamonds that fund wars and conflicts. Sierra Leone has been peaceful for quite some time, but there are diamonds in Canada, and there is no war in Canada. There are beautiful diamonds in Australia and there is no war there. Most of the yellow diamonds are from Australia. Some of the best diamonds are from Africa; South Africa, Botswana, Angola, Sierra Leone and many other places.

    Apart from jewelry you also went into wrist watches and other products. Can you tell us more about your businesses?

    When I started I didn’t have much money so I started with what I felt most comfortable with which was bridals designing bridal rings and accessories and expanded into other areas later. But I felt restricted and I couldn’t express myself much. I wanted to serve a clientele of artists, actors, celebrities and people like that who had a different taste, certainly not conservative. So I started creating these pieces my peers called “crazy designs”. But I always went out and sold them. By the time I had built up a big clientele I realised that they were looking up to me for direction in terms of the design of their jewelry and so I started recommending other brands to them. One day I woke up and said I was going to create something that was mine and present it to them. I created my own brand of watches and put it out and it sold out within two weeks and people were sending me their Rolex watches to trade it in for the Chris Aire brand.

    How much was it?

    When we first came out with the watch, the Aire Traveller, the basic model was $4,600. Then we had the diamond model that was $6,000 to $7,500. Some were $22,000 each and the most expensive one at the time $50,000. But today we have watches go sell in million dollar range.

    Looking at some of the stuff you have done, it takes an utterly crazy person to do them

    You call me crazy? (Laughs). Yeah, I get called that sometimes.

    Some of the big stars in entertainment and sports you do business with and who wear your jewelry at concerts, in musical videos, how do you relate with them?

    Most of my clients are my friends now. When you are in the public eye you become extremely suspicious of people. Most celebrities are guarded. I misread this when I was starting out. I didn’t know it was a protective shield. I thought they were just being jerks because I would walk up to some of them and they would look down on me like I was a thief or something. As a Nigerian, I have an innate sense of pride but I had to swallow that pride because I had to eat. And that is why I say I was lucky. Imagine if the first 100 people I walked up to had told me to go to hell. It would have been a different story today. But with time they saw I was somebody they could trust. In hanging out with celebrities, going to their homes and so on you become privy to a lot of things but you cannot talk about them elsewhere. What they want to know first is can they trust you and do you care about them? The business comes later.

    Has being a Nigerian ever worked against you abroad?

    My belief is that if you do not feel comfortable or confident in your own skin, everything will work against you no matter where you are from. Yes I am a Nigerian, a black man and I am proud of it. What my story has shown is that a Nigerian can make it anywhere in the world. Nigerians are great people. We are hardworking and immensely blessed by God that is why Nigerians excel wherever they go.

    It is a high risk business. And you have been in the US for a long time. Have you ever been scammed? And have you also ever had any problems with the law?

    I have been in America for 30 years now. And I have been in a business of trust. But I have never had any run in with the law and I have not had any problem with anybody. You know the jewelry industry is replete with stories about quack jewelers. We have been very fortunate and have not been involved in any controversies, thank God. I would prevaricate if I tell you that I am not aware of the International community’s perception of the Nigerian brand. I know most people think that a lot of use cannot be trusted and there is a strong argument in favor of that. My take on that is that you cannot indict a whole group of people based on the actions of a select few. This is why I always let people know that I am a Nigerian, because even though some people have given us a bad name not every Nigerian is a conman. As far as being scammed, I wouldn’t say I have been scammed in the US but I have lost money in Sierra Leone and Guinea. I have not had any problems in Nigeria.

    Having made it outside this shores, there are many young Nigerians who would look up to you as a role model. In what way are you giving back to society, in building up our youths, for example?

    I think it is a privilege to be in my position and I do not take the responsibility of giving back lightly. But on a serious note, that is one aspect of my life that I do not make too much noise about. But what I can talk about is I have tried to do is give some of our young ones the kind of opportunity and exposure that I have enjoyed. I was the one who introduced D’banj to Snoop Dogg and orchestrated the collaboration. I have also worked with Duncan Mighty and a host of other guys helping to strengthen the Nigerian entertainment community. And none of it was business. I never got a dime from helping any of them.

    You said you had invested in mines in Sierra Leone. Do you have similar investments in Nigeria?

    Yes we have some investments in Nigeria as well. We support small scale miners in the country from whom we source some of our raw materials used in some of our products in our Transcorp Hilton Hotel Boutique.

    Do you have a factory here?

    No not yet. We are working on it but we need to get our electricity and other things sorted out first.

    That is a disincentive to investing in Nigeria isn’t it?

    I think it is a very important one. I am told that the government is working around the clock to fix it. There are other discouraging factors. I have been extremely encouraged by the support that we have received from majority of Nigerians in our efforts here, but there are a few people who are grounded in negativity that they believe the only way to excel is by bringing others down.

    If you are talking about the allegations that trailed your foray into oil business, it was simply alleged that you won a major oil lifting license with a briefcase company which had no address, no staff. And that you got the license because you had a relationship with the oil minister. Why won’t you address that?

    The truth is whatever you give attention grows bigger. I did not feel the need to address any of those gutter articles because I did not want to give them credence. But I will say this; you are sitting in my Abuja office today and conducting this interview. Are you sitting in a briefcase? We had this office before the publication of the lies. I am a public figure and therefore entitled to certain precautionary measures as a result of my exposure. Did anybody I do business with tell you they couldn’t find me? Did NNPC tell you that we needed to pay a bill and they didn’t know where to find my company? We are in Africa and specifically Nigeria to do business. We have interest in various parastatals. As a Nigerian, It is my birth right and as a businessman it is my challenge to continue to expand our business interest wherever they may lie just like any other successful business person.

    So what is your relationship with the oil minister? How did you meet her and do you have any business relationship?

    I am a very good friends with her and her entire family. I am extremely proud of all her accomplishments and how I have seen her represent the country both at home and abroad.

    The Honourable Minister approached my company a few years ago, having followed up on our success in America and wanting to increase the awareness of Nigerian’s vast wealth of Solid Minerals to the world. We brainstormed and decided that Hollywood would be the best place to put on such an exhibition. But since the ministry could not afford to finance the event, our company offered to provide fifty per cent of the funding while the other fifty per cent were acquired from sponsorships from four major Nigerian banks. The event was first of its kind by any ministry in Nigeria. It was an amazing success. It was broadcast to over three billion viewers world- wide and massively covered by domestic and international news agencies. This one event has since transformed the perception of Nigeria’s Ministry of Mines and Steel and the type of investment that it is currently attracting. But instead of giving her credit for her vision, dedication and fortitude, some mischief makers decided to bastardise the experience and twist into something that it wasn’t. Ironically, this story can also be pulled up by any one curious enough or remotely interested in the truth. All they needed to do was “Google”

    There were also allegations that you front for the minister and that you gave her loads of diamonds in return for an oil lifting license

    (Bursts out laughing) It is false. The funny thing is that the event that they wrote about (Hollywood Glamour Collection featuring Nigerian Gold and Gemstones) was a very public event put on for the good of all Nigerians.), it was strictly for publicity. It was broadcast on AIT, Channels and NTA and Thisday, Leadership, The Nation, Punch all wrote about it.

    The event where you partnered with her in America?

    Yes. It was not a personal partnership with her, but a partnership between our company and the Nigerian government. It was an official event, this is where they said I paid her in diamonds. I think they should applaud her for having the vision to partner with a successful Nigerian abroad to showcase Nigerian’s solid minerals and attract international investment into Nigeria. I thought it was ingenious and that most other parastatals could benefit from similar creative gestures. This kind of mentality discourages creativity, enterprise and investment.

    Just for the records, do you have an oil-lifting license? Or what type of oil business do you do?

    I am a Nigerian and a businessman and just like every other Nigerian we have various interests and investments in Nigeria and other countries across the relevant parastatals. We compete and bid like every other businessman.

  • Pepsi, Nigerian Idol, a partnership that works

    Pepsi, Nigerian Idol, a partnership that works

    It made its debut three years ago and since then the popular TV reality show, Nigerian Idol has been sponsored by Pepsi. The show has not only empowered young, talented and creative Nigerians, it has also helped to develop the entertainment industry. As the Season 3 of the reality show opens this week, WALE ALABI chronicles the impact of the Pepsi brand on its evolution and how it connects with its consumers through the show.

    With honed talents blended with hard work and encouragement from brands like Pepsi, not many talented graduates and undergraduates will go in search of white collar jobs after their graduation but rather most of them will live on their God given talents like Pop Crooner Iyanya, Tiwa Savage, Whiz Kid who are making waves in the entertainment industry.

    It was perhaps for this reason that the soft drink giant, Pepsi pledged to continue to provide a platform to harness the abundant talents that abound in Nigeria in the areas of sports and entertainment.

    Mr Norden Thurston, Head of Marketing Seven-Up Bottling Company Plc, said this at a gala night in Lagos during the weekend to unveil the final 12 contestants at the Nigerian Idol, Season 3. Pepsi has for over three years been as associate sponsor of the show.

    Said Thurston: “Pepsi as an international brand has always been associated with music as it has over the years signed such music icons as Michael Jackson, Britney Spears, Beyonce and recently Nicky Minaj.”

    Thurston said the expectation of Pepsi is that the winners of Nigerian Idol will make it big in their music career. Highlights of the event include the meet and greet session of the 12 contestants with Pepsi music ambassadors Tiwa Savage and Lynxnx and the electrifying performance by the duo to the admiration of the audience at the Civic Centre, Victoria Island, Lagos, venue of the event.

    Before last weekend, the Nigerian Idol train was in Abuja where students of the University of Abuja had the fun of their lives through Pepsi, the official beverage of the Nigerian Idol. The train had stormed the mini-campus at Gwagwadala last October as part of the awareness campaign for the Abuja auditioning and selection process for the musical talent hunt programme in Lagos later in the year.

    The sound of Iyanya’s Kurukere wafted from the convocation arena and like ants stirred, the students followed the direction of the sound as if in search of an oasis in a desert.

    From different road tributaries, the students moved to the convocation ground to catch fun and begin the weekend on an exciting note. As MC Tony was inviting the students, two young ladies stepped forward, strutting their stuff; waist shaking and sexy dance steps. They were joined by other effervescent youngsters as Omawunmi’s Botton Belle hit them hard.

    Comedians also had their day thrilling the students who had gathered under the surrounding trees and pavilion.

    There were lots of free Pepsi drinks and other products of Seven-Up Bottling Company Plc.

    Fantastic prizes were given to best dancers, comedians at the UniAbuja show.

    Marketing Manager, Key Accounts, Seven-Up Bottling Company Plc, Mrs. Patricia Iletogun said Pepsi is encouraged by the abundant talents in Nigeria to sponsor the Nigerian Idol as a way of harnessing these talents and helping the young ones to Voice Their Dream and refresh their world.

    Hundreds of talented youngsters stormed the auditioning venue at Rock View Hotel, Abuja for the two-day selection process.

    Those who were selected and given tickets to come to Lagos for the grand final also received special gift packs from Pepsi, the official beverage of the Nigerian Idol.

    The auditioning and selection process for the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja and surrounding states took place at the Rock View Hotel on October 13 and October 14. Those selected will join other contestants from other regions in Lagos for the commencement of the Nigerian Idol Season Three.

    For Yeka Onka, winner of the maiden edition of the Nigerian Idol, a music reality TV show, it was glorious homecoming when she embarked on a three-day visit to her home state, Abia courtesy of Pepsi.

    The visit saw her meeting with ‘Who-Is-Who’ in Abia State including Governor Chief Theodore Orji, the Speaker of the House of Assembly and a host of other highly influential citizens. Yeka also paid a visit to Girls High School, Ogbor Hill, Aba, her alma mata and some select schools in the State including Girls Senior Secondary School, Abayi, Umuochim, Amuzukwu Girls Senior Secondary School, Umuahia and the Seventh Day Adventist Motherless Home, Aba.

    Yeka was full of praise for Pepsi for facilitating the visit adding that the visit really afforded her the opportunity to canvass for the need for productive ventures in all human endeavours by the youths in the country.

    Her words: “It is a big privilege for me to be honoured in my state by my own people. I appreciate the fact that my people are rejoicing with me for emerging the winner of the very first edition of Nigerian Idol. I must however add that Nigerian youth should live their lives to the fullest by ensuring that their talents do not die with them.

    “Nigerians are very talented people and the best can be gotten from them with the right platform and exposure. The private and public sector should further unite to further help get the best out of them,” she said.

    She charged the students of the visited schools to strive to be relevant in the society saying “the society is looking for strong people who can change the world for the better. Your steps to this starts now. So, you have to be very obedient to your teachers and learn the rules of obedience because it pays at the end”

    At her alma mata, students were very much happy to see Yeka, who incidentally composed the school’s anthem. The Principal, Mrs. Igbetu Kalu Uduka also showered praise on Yeka who was also Miss Abia 2006.

    “When we remember your choice of Girls’ High School Aba, in your tour of the state and reflect on the love you have for your alma mata as your benefactor, we can then see in the judges’ eyes, the wisdom of ranking you the best among equals,” Mrs Udaku said.

  • If Pope Benedict were to be a Nigerian

    If Pope Benedict were to be a Nigerian

    When I got the news flash on my BBM that the Pope Benedict XVI plans to quit the post of Bishop of Rome and spiritual head of the 1.2 billion catholic faithful around the globe by the end of February, my mind immediately pointed at fraudsters at work. What won’t this 419 people do, I asked?

    With more than six weeks to April 1, the world acclaimed “Fools Day” I was in no doubt that this was no April fool and mischief makers are somewhere trying to pull our legs or planning to make money out of the Catholic Church. So, I ignored the message and moved on even though the sender of message is well known to me as a credible source.

    The reporter in me told me to suspect the information first but go ahead to verify which I did some few hours later when I went on the net and was confronted with details of Pope Benedicts decision to quit the highest office in the Catholic church.

    Whaaat! I screamed. This has never happened before, I told myself, but upon further research I discovered that in the year 1294, Pope Celestine V resigned because he could not cope with the physical demands of that office and wanted a simpler life. And as recent as 1415 Pope Gregory XII left office to save the Church from disgrace as there were two Cardinals laying claim to the papacy. So Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger as he was before he became Pope Benedict in April 2005 at age 78 was after all not doing what no Pope had done before, as I had thought, just that he was the first in about 600 to quit the papacy.

    So, why the decision to quit? I am sure you know the rest of the story but for the sake of emphasis and to quell all conspiracy theories, the Pope said his failing health at 85 would not allow him to, in good conscience, discharge his papal duties as he ought to and so he would be stepping down later this month, in time for a new Pope to be chosen and consecrated before Easter.

    On reflection, I asked myself if this Pope were to be a Nigerian would he offer to quit such an exalted office even if he is unable to discharge his duties to God and the Church. An office in which he is expected to remain for life?

    Well, without casting aspersions on the integrity of the Catholic Church in Nigeria and the Cardinals that have emerged from among the faithful here, this is a very difficult question to answer even by Nigerian Catholics. And the reason is not far fetched. Leaders find it very difficult here to quit office even when they are on tenured appointment. They look for one excuse or another to extend their tenure and the Church is no exception. And I am sure if one digs deep enough, one could find some Islamic leaders who would rather die in office instead of relinquishing their positions even when they are no longer up to it.

    The argument here is not even about any sit tight religious leader but rather our political leaders who would want to hold on to their positions even when it was apparent their health was not good enough to continue in office. We all know the story of our late President, Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. Governor Chime of Enugu State just came back home after several months outside the country to treat what we now know to be cancer of the nose. While he was on hospital bed wherever he went to seek cure for his ailment, Chime refused to hand over the reins of power as if it were a personal property. It took a lot of efforts and months to get the Taraba House of Assembly to empower the Deputy Governor of the State to act in the absence of Governor Suntai who is on a sick bed somewhere in Germany receiving treatment for injuries he sustained in a plane crash. A badly injured Governor Idris Wada of Kogi State had to be rushed back to office even when he had not fully recovered from the injuries he sustained in an auto crash, just to prevent his deputy from acting as governor, as the Nigerian constitution demands, while he treats his injuries. Nobody seems to be talking again about the long absence of Governor Liyel Imoke of Cross River State from office. The man has been away for some time now to treat himself of yet to be disclosed ailment and he is still holding on to power. Why did the constitution make provision for a deputy Governor or vice President if the boss so to speak, could hold on to power even when he is dying? You might want to ask. Even if the deputy is a ‘spare tyre’ as we are wont to say here, why would the driver continue with a punctured or flat tyre when the spare tyre is ok? The ride will definitely not be smooth. So why put everybody in the car through that horrible ride when the spare tyre could have come in handy?

    For too long Nigeria has been unlucky to produce selfish leaders who see and parade themselves as messiahs. Obasanjo believed he is the only one that could lead this country well and onto the Promised Land such that even after eight years in office, he wanted to manipulate the constitution to get another term. Yar’Adua and his handlers including wife, Turai saw Nigeria as their personal property and could do as they wished. When the President was evidently dying they still held on to power until the man could no longer be sustained by life machine at a Saudi hospital. They tried to hoodwink us into believing that the ailing President had signed that year’s appropriation bill even when sources told us the man could hardly recognize anybody not even his wife. Nigerians were deceived for months and taken for a ride for so long until Yar’Adua died.

    Pope Benedict and/or his handlers/close associates could have chosen to deceive the Catholic Church by manipulating the health certificate of the ailing Pontiff presenting to the faithful a picture of a healthy Pope, as Yar’Adua people did to us, and remain in office and enjoy the pecks of office until death takes their man away. But out of fear of God and love for the Church they chose not to. This is the way honourable people and people of conscience behave. Do we have such people in Nigeria?

    Maybe the Catholic Church is lucky as their priests are not allowed to indulge in the affairs of the flesh, so the Pope has no wife to influence his decision or biological children to think of before acting. No wife or children that would want him to remain in office till death even when he is weak, tired and unable to continue, just to have access to the enormous wealth of the church and the privileges attached to the office.

    We have seen most Pentecostal churches in Nigeria turned into a family business where the GO and his wife are sole signatories to the Church’s account and the wife taking over on the death of her husband. Was this the way Christ intended his Church?

    Away from the Church, we have seen Presidents and their wives running the country as a family business, where the wife as First Lady assumes the powers of her husband the Commander-In-Chief and go about terrorizing the rest of us; spending state’s money on anything that catches their fancy. The same scenario is replicated at the state and even local government levels. With our leaders invested with so much power, power of life and death, unlimited access to loot our treasury and with impunity, none of them would want to leave office even if they are dying. None of them has the heart and conviction of Pope Benedict. The beautiful ones are not yet born.

     

  • CBAAC DG stresses need for Nigerian history

    IF Nigerian youths must be prepared for the challenges of the present and the future, the study of History and culture must be made compulsory at all levels of the education system, says Prof Tunde Babawale.

    Babawale, who is the Director-General, Centre for Black and African Arts and Civilisation (CBAAC), spoke at a seminar organised by the Lagos First Generation Colleges Association (LAFGECA) which was held at King’s College, Lagos, last Tuesday. In his lecture entitled: History, youths and Nigeria’s transformation, Babawale said the importance of history cannot be underestimated in the nation’s development.

    “History and culture are the basis of development; we can’t develop without history. The nature of youths is such that they can only be successfully weaned on the nutritious diet of history. A society that ignores history is like a river that ignores its source, it will dry up,” he said.

    He lamented the removal of the subject from the curriculum and appealed to authorities involved to ensure its re-inclusion.

    He said: “We have to advocate for the return of History to the curriculum by talking to decision makers who were responsible for the removal in the first place. By taking out history, they have taken our source of knowledge. The youths deserve all the attention we can give them because they represent the continuity, linking today with tomorrow and the future.”

    He urged parents to promote their cultural values, and the youth to shun vices that can hamper Nigeria’s development.

    “There is need to restore and promote interest in cultural values which are being progressively undermined by the effects of westernisation, urbanisation and globalisation. As a result of rapid urbanisation and changing economic situation, parents and the elderly no longer have the time to impact African cultural values in our young people. These situations have hampered their ability to understand and appreciate the beauty of African culture. Our young people, because of lack of attention, are now dangerously exposed to Western values transmitted through the media,” he said.

     

     

     

  • A Nigerian Spring – Long Overdue

    A Nigerian Spring – Long Overdue

    I was a visiting professor in Paris last fall and it was the first day of class. I was making copies for my 10:30 class at the faculty lounge where two female professors were kibitzing by the coffee machine.

    “Oh, yeah,” one said. “Soon as I learned he’s Nigerian, I discounted everything he’d said as fraud.”

    “Smart move,” agreed the other, nodding, “nothing good’s ever come out of that country. …”

    I cringed, held my breath and skedaddled on to my classroom, where my students wanted to know my nationality. I’m American. “Bot Professa,” an African student’s hand flew up, “ware you from originally? I hear the voice of Africa.”

    I inhaled deeply, chuckled but ignored that question.

    When I left Nigeria for the United States in 1980, the plan was to earn an M.B.A., a doctorate in economics, and then return. It was my moral obligation to help develop my country, whose oil wealth financed my education. An M.B.A., a Ph.D. and 32 years later, I’m still here, abroad. In 1992, when I applied for a position at my alma mater, the University of Ibadan, the dean replied, “Why on earth would you want to return when everybody’s trying to escape?” No one’s been paid for over three months, he explained, and universities are on strike half the time.

    Twenty years later, Nigeria can still bring the crazy.

    In 1980, the naira had a very favorable exchange rate against the dollar. En route to the United States, I stopped over in London. All along King’s Road, the shopkeepers beckoned: “Nigerian? Welcome. Come inside.” I was proud to be from Nigeria and was offended when the country was confused with Niger. But, today, if I can pass for someone from Niger — sadly, I would be glad.

    Is there a person on the planet who remains unfamiliar with the Nigerian e-mail scam? As a Nigerian living abroad, I’ve become embarrassed — indeed scared — after learning that in February 2003 a Czech victim of an Internet fraud murdered an innocent Nigerian in Prague.

    That isn’t the scariest narrative — not by a long shot. In recent years, Nigerians abroad have been warned: “Don’t come home. Just send money.” But if one must, say, attend a wedding, a funeral or take a chieftaincy title, it is necessary to hire prearranged police protection from the moment you land at the airport until the moment you depart.

    Last summer, my ailing 87-year-old mother, worried that her days are numbered, called a family reunion for Christmas. My three U.S.-based siblings and I made plans to return home with all our kids. At the last minute, my brother sent an e-mail canceling the reunion. “What?” my daughter said, her glass of iced tea slipping out of her hands and shattering on the tile floor. Uncle Tony can’t guarantee our safety in Nigeria, I explained.

    “What about hired armed security like the last time?” she inquired. I showed her the link to the news report my brother had sent headlined, “Gunmen Kill U.S. Returnee in Enugu,” his hometown in Nigeria.

    Ogbo Edoga had returned from the United States to attend the meeting of an organisation of Nigerian professionals in the United States to raise funds for an ultramodern medical diagnostic center in his ancestral village. On his way, he was robbed and shot and killed with an AK-47. He had hired police protection, as had many Nigerians who visited our motherland only to be robbed and murdered. The lucky ones got kidnapped and released after their families paid a huge ransom. And now, Mom’s joined the choir: “Don’t come home.”

    Here’s what is shameful: This is the Nigeria that has been one of the world’s top 10 oil exporters for decades; the presumed “Giant of Africa” when I was leaving in 1980. But three decades later, despite a half-century of billions of petrodollar inflow, in March 2011, at a World Bank-O.E.C.D. conference in Paris, I found myself sliding down my chair to hide my face behind my laptop as a fellow economist explained why Nigeria was excluded in a comparative study thusly: Since Nigeria (with South Africa) dominates the Sub-Saharan African economy and since Nigeria does so poorly at wealth creation, if included, it would render Sub-Saharan Africa’s genuine savings dwarfish vis-à-vis East Asia and Latin America.

    Here’s the thing: One doesn’t need a Ph.D. in economics to understand the correlation between poverty and today’s high crime rate in Nigeria. When corrupt politicians persistently embezzle public funds rather than produce proper policies, the result is a stagnant economy and its attendant human misery — high unemployment and massive poverty. Marginalised youths resort to Internet scams, kidnapping, or join Boko Haram. When the police go unpaid for months, the citizens become the logical prey.

    That’s where Nigeria is today. It will not change until we, the people, join in a mass outrage against corruption, demand transparent accounting of our oil revenues and economic justice. Only then will an honest leadership emerge to invest a fair share of the oil revenues in capital in such a way as to permanently raise the consumption level of the masses. Otherwise we Nigerian expatriates — the most educated immigrant group in the United States — will remain in exile, and Nigeria will remain a breeding ground for terrorism.

    Is there an Honest Ernest among Nigerians who is able to galvanise us? Can something that good come out of Nigeria? That’s a palm reader’s guess.