Tag: NSC

  • Shippers Council warns against admitting ‘quacks’

    The Executive Secretary of the Nigeria Shippers Council(NSC), Mr Hassan Bello, has urged the Shippers Association of Lagos State (SALS) to stop admitting “charlatans” into the group.

    He said the Council had, over the years, protected the interest of the shippers.

    Bello urged the shippers’ associations to emulate SALS by coming together to work with the Shippers’ Council in advocating quality service delivery by service providers.

    Bello said: “We are very optimistic that the formation of the shippers associations will among other things, serve as an avenue for disseminating useful information on international trade transaction to members.

    “Since the inception of the Council in 1978, it has been playing a major role in protecting the interest of shippers by rendering tremendous assistance to shippers in negotiating for favourable freight rate.”

    The NSC, Bello said, had been at the vanguard of domesticating the international trade convention on carriage of goods, such as the Hamburg Rules in order to create a favourable trade balance for the country.

    SALS’s President Rev. Jonathan Nicole said the group would work with the NSC to reduce the challenges facing his colleagues, adding that Nigeria loses nearly N24billion yearly to vessels clearance delays at the port. This, according to him, can be clarified with the Union of African Shippers Council.

  • Dry ports coming, says Shippers’ Council

    Dry ports coming, says Shippers’ Council

    After years of uncertainty over the realisation of the Inland Container Depots (ICDs) also called dry ports, the project may take off this year, the Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) has said.

    Its Executive Secretary and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Hassan Bello, told The Nation that the necessary legislations have been pushed and sent to the Presidency, adding that the Minister of Transport will soon declare the ICDs as ports of origin and destination.

    According to Bello, the declaration means that cargo could be assigned to them from Liverpool in United Kingdom to Isiala Ngwa in Abia State or any other part of the country and the goods will be ferried to destination when they arrive at the seaport. He said two of these dry ports to be established, will become operational this year.

    He noted that the coming of ICDs, will save the country some primitive ways of doing business in the maritime sector as shippers need not be present to have their good delivered.

    Bello also explained that presence at the ports connotes underdevelopment and also means cash transaction, which defiles the system and supports corruption.

    According to him, ICDs will reduce cost, provide important linkages in the economy, ensure integration in West Africa, cure the infrastructure deficit, boost employment and reduce poverty, adding that the dry ports will have positive effect on the economy.

    He said: “Dry ports are the integral part of the economic drive to see that shipping is brought to the doorsteps of the people. The implication of this is that congestion will be eliminated. There will be no need to use the ports as storage for cargo or for cargo examination. Immediately the cargoes arrive, they will be taken to these inland ports. “Besides, most of the shippers are actually inland where these activities should be driven, Customs duties paid for export. So it is a two-way thing, instead of us having empty containers, we will have laden containers in and out. “The implementation of dry ports was delayed because they were the first set of infrastructure to be developed based on public private partnership (PPP), so they suffered financial backing by banks but now, I’m happy to announce that they have been designated as ports of origin and ports of destination.”

    , which means that cargo will be consigned from say Liverpool in United Kingdom to Isiala Ngwa in Abia State and the goods will be transported to Isiala Ngwa when they arrive at the seaport. “Therefore a shipper doesn’t need to come to the seaport in Lagos or Port Harcourt or Calabar in Cross River State to collect his goods. The ports are there, we have pushed through some legislation, and it has been sent to the President. The Minister will soon declare these ports as ports of origin and ports of destination so cargo could be assigned to them and we are going to have one or two of these operational and they will have positive effect on the economy and the way things are done. They will cure congestion at the ports and they will also provide areas for consolidation for export.”

     

  • 2014 National Sports Festival: Athletes appeal to NSC on inclusion of deaf sport

    2014 National Sports Festival: Athletes appeal to NSC on inclusion of deaf sport

    Some deaf athletes in Lagos on Thursday appealed to the National Sports Commission (NSC) to rescind its decision not to include deaf sports in the 2014 National Sports Festival (NSF).

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the 19th edition of the biennial festival, tagged: “Paradise Games” is to hold from Nov. 27 to Dec. 7 in Calabar, Cross River State.

    An Olympian, Nurudeen Badmus, said it was heart-breaking that deaf athletes had been excluded from the Paradise Games after putting much effort preparing.

    Badmus noted that he won three Gold, one Silver and two Bronze medals for Rivers at Eko 2012 and had been working towards performing better to clinch more medals in 2014.

    “I was at the London 2012 Olympics for 100m but unfortunately, I lost out in the semi finals. I’m hoping that the festival would be an avenue for me to evaluate myself. Excluding us from the festival makes us feel unwanted and not appreciated for what we’re doing and that is not encouraging. I’m a family man and it’s the reward I get at participating in competitions I use to cater for my family,’’ he said.

    Another deaf athlete, Uchenna Eze, said that the NSC’s decision could scare away talented aspiring deaf athletes.

    Eze said that deaf athletes should be allowed to enjoy the same treatment as their able-bodied counterparts.

    “They should stop giving preference to our able-bodied counterparts because it does not make us feel good. We practically do the same thing they do and should enjoy the same benefits at international competitions. We mostly perform better than they do,’’ he added.

    NAN recalls that deaf athletes featured at the 18th NSF, tagged: “Eko 2012” in Lagos.

    A Team Lagos gold medalist, Nofisat Alaba, who was at the 2012 festival, said the NSC should consider deaf athletes challenges and make them relevant.

    Alaba said that the festival was the only national competition that deaf athletes often had opportunity to compete in.

    “If we do not participate I don’t know when we would have another opportunity as deaf athletes to participate at any national competition. We need to put in practice what we have been learning after the last NSF in 2012 because it is when we compete that we can get better,’’ Alaba said.

  • Federation calls for inclusion of golf in National Sports Festival

    Federation calls for inclusion of golf in National Sports Festival

    The Nigeria Golf Federation (NGF) on Tuesday urged the National Sports Commission (NSC) to include the sport in the forthcoming 19th National Sports Festival (NSF) in Calabar.

    The federation’s Secretary, Clement Iyaluegbeghe, made the plea in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos. The National Sports Festival, tagged “Paradise Games”, will hold from November 23 to December 7. He said that golf being an Olympic sport should be given due consideration.

    “Golf is an optional sport in the National Sports Festival, and there is nothing we can do about that; it is only the NSC that can change the status. But, now that golf is an Olympic sport, we are hopeful that it will be given an appreciable consideration,’’ Iyaluegbeghe said.

    The secretary said amateur golfers were on the federation’s priority list in its bid to develop the sport at the grassroots.

    “Our duty is to develop golf at the amateur level. Our programme for the year shows that we have a lot to do in terms of the development of amateur golfers. We have to prepare them for the Africa Junior Play which will take place in Botswana sometime in May,’’ Iyaluegbeghe said.

     

  • Beat Mozambique, prove critics wrong

    Elegbeleye charges Eagles

    The Director General of the National Sports Commission (NSC), Honourable Gbenga Elegbeleye has thrown weight behind the Home Based Super Eagles to bounce back from their 2-1 defeat to Mali on Saturday to beat Mozambique in the second Group A match of the ongoing Africa Nations Championship in South Africa.

    The NSC top official who watched the Eagles versus Mali match on television argued that the Nigerian team woke up late in the match and could have at least ended the game 2-2 if they had put up the performance they did in the last quarter of the match.

    “What I perceived went wrong was the slow start of the team against the Malians but I still have absolute trust in this team and their technical crew to bounce back in tomorrow’s (today’s) match.

    I believe that they will play better against Mozambique.

    “The Nigeria Football Federation has been doing well as regards the support given to all the national teams and I believe they will do everything humanly possible to ensure the Eagles emerge victorious in the match against Mozambique. A victory in the second match will surely ginger the team and lift their morale in subsequent games”, Elegbeleye assured.

  • Wanted, quality train service

    Since he moved to Ijoko, in Ogun State two years ago, David Matthew, a job seeker, has been relying on train for his movement. For many living in Ijoko, Agbado Station, Iju Station, among others along the train route, the Nigeria Railway Corporation Mass Transit Shuttle Service (NRC-MTSS) is a cheap means of transportation, especially avoiding the chaotic traffic on Lagos roads.

    “By 5am, I must be at the train station at Ogba Iyo, the Nigeria Salt Company (NSC) area, in Ijoko, Ogun State, to get a seat in the train.

    “I never entered a train before I moved into this area, but now, it has become my surest way out of this sleepy village, because I spend only N150 to get to Ebute Meta,” he said.

    Because it is cheap, compared to a bus ride, commuters throng the station and before the train gets to Agbado Station, the 18-coach train usually deployed in the route by NRC is filled. Those who cannot get a seat either hang on the coaches or sit on the train’s rooftops.

    What the passengers gain in terms of cost, they lose in comfort and safety as many fatal accidents go unreported on the route which is serviced by worn out coaches, refurbished by the corporation for intra-city shuttle.

    “As early as 6am, you would see people tightly packed inside the coaches like sardine. The train whether morning, afternoon or night, is not the best option for women who cherished their endowment, or corporately dressed men going to work,” Matthew said.

    That the trains are moving at all, is a miracle by the Adeseyi Sijuwade-led NRC management.

    Since the shuttle started, it has not been able to attract the middle class who seem unimpressed with its service. It is patronised by artisans, traders, touts and the poor, who often hang on all available spaces and sit on cabin rooftops to avoid ticket charges.

    Sijuwade dismisses the middle class’ claim that the Corporation is inefficient, adding that statistics showed that over three million passengers used the train service between January and September last year.

    He added that the 3.2 million people who patronised the corporation’s services in the first nine months last year, were slightly lower than that of the same period in 2012, which was 4. 155 million passengers. He hopes passenger traffic will be five million in 2014.

    Marketing the railways potentials at a Public-Private Participation (PPP) forum in Abuja in October last year, Sijuwade said: “We have been able to record about 3, 179, 778 passengers between January and September. Last year, we had 4, 155, 988 passengers. In 2011, we had 3,493,443.”

    With a population of 170 million, five million passengers in the next 12 months, experts say is a lean projection. But they agreed that coming from the corporation’s background, the figure looks ambitious, while not doubting its capacity to achieve or outstrip the target.

    A source in NRC confirmed that the corporation serviced all its routes in the last four years with 29 locomotives, 250 wagons and 120 coaches, all in different stages of rot. Most of these rolling stocks, the source added, were refurbished and repaired by local engineers within the NRC, with no new stock added in the last decade.

    The source noted that about 550 wagons, 50 coaches and 55 locomotives are awaiting repairs, adding that when they come into use, they may affect the passenger response capacity.

    Had the corporation been operating maximally, it would have in its fleet, about 84 locomotives, 800 wagons, and 170 coaches. How this will translate into effectiveness with only the Western line working, and the Eastern line ensnared between politics and the general insecurity in some part of the North is better imagined.

    Sijuwade admits the corporation is over-working the available rolling fleet. At the PPP forum, he said the NRC ordered for the manufacturing of 11 air conditioned 68-seater coaches, adding that six of them would be delivered last December, and the rest expected before April 2014. The snag is, the corporation has yet to take delivery, and the management is not forthcoming with reasons for the delay, 13 days into another year.

    In a recent paper, an analyst, Mr Stephen Ojelana, said not much would be achieved with the tardiness in keeping to timelines and failure to ensure the construction of wider standard gauge upon which more modern coaches could run.

    Another expert, Mr Israel Akano, advocated tinkering with the Nigeria Railway Act 1955, which vested all powers concerning rail lines in the NRC. “The Presidency and the National Assembly should carry out fundamental amendment to that Act with the intention of expanding the space and permitting private sector players in the railway sub-sector of the transportation industry,” he said.

    The Minister for Transportation, Senator Idris Umar, confirmed that the government, in line with the advice of the National Council on Transportation, is carrying out far reaching reforms of the corporation, adding that more private players are being wooed into the railway sub-sector.

    Umar said the rehabilitated western rail line and the eastern rail line, as well as the modern standard gauge which would replace the existing narrow gauge are among infrastructure that would be concessioned to private operators on completion.

    Umar stated that for transparency and due diligence, the process would be embarked upon in partnership with the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC).

    According to the Minister, concessioning arrangement is to ensure that the railways would continue to function optimally and sustainably without funding and meddlesomeness associated with public utilities being a cog. He said the path to remedy the poor condition, and improve efficiency and profitability of the railways is for the government to privatise the NRC.

    Under the proposed privatisation plan, three separate concessions of 25–30 years would be granted to private companies to run railways in the western, central, and eastern parts of the country.

    The rail system has about 3,557 kilometres of 1,067mm (3ft 6in) narrow gauge tracks. There are two major rail lanes: one connects Lagos on the Bight of Benin to Nguru in Yobe State, known as the western lane; while the eastern lane begins from Port Harcourt in the Niger Delta and ends in Maiduguri, in Borno State, while the central lane appears untapped.

    Till date, the resuscitative measures of successive governments have not seen the light of day: none of the proposed new tracks have been completed, and the rehabilitation and refurbishing of tracks and coaches have almost always come short of expectations.

    The inefficiency and ineffectiveness of the railway have made it unable to serve as an effective means of transporting passengers and freight from the nation’s major commercial cities to the hinterland.

    A breakdown of the yearly budgetary allocations in the past four years since the government picked interest in reviving the sector, shows that in 2012, a total of N20.3 billion was approved for the NRC, out of which N16.3 billion was earmarked for capital expenditure. The sum was targeted at rehabilitating the Jebba-Kano, Port Harcourt-Makurdi-Kaduna, Kuru-Maidugiri and Zaria-Kaura-Namoda rail tracks, as well as to procure and rehabilitate rail wagons, coaches and tanker wagons.

    In 2011, N29.6 billion was budgeted for the construction and rehabilitation of most of the afore-mentioned rail tracks, out of which N5.5 billion was set aside for the construction of Ajaokuta-Warri rail line.

    Available statistics also showed a total of N31 billion ($207 million) was approved on a special request in the supplementary Appropriation Bill of 2010 for the construction of Lagos-Ibadan rail lines.

    In 2009, N23.3 billion was budgeted for rail transport, out of which N20.7 billion was reserved for capital projects that included the rehabilitation of 120 coaches and wagons, rehabilitation of the Ajaokuta-Warri rail line, which was also catered for in 2011 budget.

    According to industry analysts, the rail transport has huge potential in a country with a population of 170 million. In the highly populated cities like Abuja and Lagos alone, the rail transport has the immense opportunities such as daily business of moving over one million passengers in each city within the inter and intra city transportation, generating huge revenues, decongesting road traffic as well as reducing road accidents.

    The system ferries 8,000 passengers within Lagos and Ogun states and another 4,000 between Lagos and Ilorin line.

    Unfortunately, like all things Nigerian, even the NRC has been unwittingly caught in the political web, which may gravely affect its effectiveness and deflate the eagerness and progress so far made by the current management of the corporation.

    The NRC became the first major casualty of the ongoing schism within the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as NRC’s Chairman Alhaji Abubakar Kawu Baraje, who was appointed in April, last year led a group of aggrieved members to quit the party. Though his position was not touched by the Presidency, Baraje, citing political differences, voluntarily resigned.

    Bureaucrats and other experts said this would impact negatively on the NRC as critical decisions that ought to end on the table of its chairman would have to compete for attention from the Minister for Transportation. “This might be responsible for the lull in the activities of the corporation,” an observer noted.

    However, NRC’s Deputy Director Public Relations Mr. David Ndakotsu said the management is determined to carry on with the transformation initiatives of the present administration and make the railways the fulcrum of mass transportation in the country.

    In a statement issued after a management retreat held at Ada, in Osun State, the NRC, Ndakotsu said, came up with a strategic road map for 2014, and resolved among others to: “Achieve 30 per cent reduction in the journey time for the intercity train services, 10 per cent monthly reduction in the frequency and extent of train delays, 25 per cent monthly reduction on customer complaints, and not more than 10 minutes delay in scheduled departure time and 25 per cent monthly reduction in the number of accident.

    “The Managing Director, Adeseyi Sijuwade, said the corporation’s 2014 direction will be guided by the vision, mission and mandate of the corporation to provide a more efficient, reliable and safe rail transport service.”

    But how many passengers the corporation hopes to attract with a 30 per cent slash, which translates into about 50.4 hours travel time on its Lagos-Kano route (which takes 72 hours), among other sundry infractions even on its intracity routes by which the corporation intends only a 10 per cent monthly slash, is left to be seen.

    While the NRC battles with its problems of age-old neglect and tries the best way to wriggle out of them, the best option, according to experts, remains the liberalisation of the sector that would enable more participation by the private sector. Nothing short of competition could wake the NRC to the realities of the challenges ahead in providing for the needs of commuting Nigerians.

    Only then would Sijuwade’s statement that: “ The NRC as a strategic transport provider, must respond to the growing demand of its services by running regular and timely passenger trains with attractive ambience,” ring true.

  • Elegbeleye, Maigari sure of World Cup qualification

    Elegbeleye, Maigari sure of World Cup qualification

    The Director-General of the National Sports Commission (NSC), Gbenga Elegbeleye and the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) President Aminu Maigari are confident the Super Eagles would emerge victorious in the two legged play-off of the 2014 World Cup qualifiers against the Walyas Antelopes of Ethiopia already slated for October and November this year.

    “We at the National Sports Commission are confident that the Super Eagles team is a team with quality players and coach Stephen Keshi has really transformed the team to a formidable side so I believe we can get results in the two legs that will be enough for us to get the qualification ticket for next year’s World Cup in Brazil.

    “Like I said before the Eagles must and should take the Ethiopians very seriously but I don’t believe they can stop us the National Sports Commission as usual will ensure the Nigeria Football Federation is adequately supported to get this qualification ticket for the over 170 million Nigerians”, Elegbeleye told SportingLife at the weekend.

    The NFF boss is also expressing optimisms as regards Eagles last two matches in the ongoing 2014 World Cup qualifiers. He said the Federations has already put the machinery in motion to ensure Nigeria do not miss the chance to be among the teams that would represent Africa in the world’s biggest football competition.

    “We will ensure that the list of the players to prosecute the first leg of the qualifiers away to Ethiopia comes out early as a way of having enough time to prepare for the crucial match most especially the first match away to Ethiopia. We believe that good preparation is key to winning the match so that the return would not be too difficult to win. So the NFF is putting everything in place to ensure that Nigeria qualifies for the 2014 World Cup.

    “I am also using this opportunity to solicit for support and prayers for the team all Nigerians and most importantly we need full support of the Federal Government through the National Sports Commission for the task to be easier for us”, Maigari told SportingLife.

  • NSC plans retreat on Eaglets in Calabar Dec. 20

    NSC plans retreat on Eaglets in Calabar Dec. 20

    The National Sports Commission (NSC) is putting together a retreat on sustaining Nigeria’s performance at the FIFA Under-17 World Championship.

    According to a release signed by the Special Assistant on Media to the Honourable Minister of Sports, Julius Ogunro, yesterday, “The Cross River State Government will host the retreat, which will take place in Calabar, on December 20th, 2013.

    “lt will focus on providing the right orientation for the footballers of the victorious Under-17 side, the Golden Eaglets, on their career progress; drawing a blueprint for sustaining Nigeria’s performance at age-grade competitions, among others.

    “Participants will be drawn from the NSC, Nigerian Football Federation (NFF), business community, ex-footballers and other sports stakeholders.”

    Some issues/topics that will be discussed at the retreat will include Developing the Right Social Skills; the ABC of Football Contracts; the Attitude for Success; Image and Media Management; Financial Management and others.

    The Honourable Minister of Sports and Chairman of the NSC, Bolaji Abdullahi, said the retreat was essential in order to document the strategies that ensured our success at the FIFA Under 17 World Cup for future purpose. He also explained that it was necessary to properly guide the young players to make the right career decisions.

    “I am sure this is the first time we are having this kind of retreat after a successful outing at a major championship. We want to provide these young boys with the knowledge, which would help them make the right career choice,” he disclosed.

  • Abdullahi reveals best-kept secret:  ‘I want to be an Islamic  cleric after public service’

    Abdullahi reveals best-kept secret: ‘I want to be an Islamic cleric after public service’

    ALHAJI Bolaji Abdullahi, Minister for Sport and Chairman National Sports Commission (NSC), doesn’t do things by half measures. This is evident from the reforms carried out under his tenure as Education Commissioner in his home state, Kwara.

    With his performances at the youth development ministry and currently at the sport ministry, it is safe to conclude that the future holds so much promise for him. Speaking exclusively with The Nation Sport & Style at the InterContinental Hotel in Dubai, a very relaxed Abdullahi revealed his best-kept secret after he might have been done with public service.

    “I would like to preach after I’m through with public service and I’ve started preparing myself for that dream,” stated the 44-year-old erstwhile editor of Sunday ThisDay Newspaper, who is already working on a book titled Derailment.

    “I want to share some of the knowledge that God bequeathed on me especially with the youths because I have seen that so many people failed to realise their potentialities in life as a result of so many factors.

    “Of course, people often write on why people succeed but I have studied so many people and situations with the conclusion that many factors equally lead to derailment and I’m really enthusiastic about writing on derailment.

    “I’m not going to disclose much on the book but I have started putting my thoughts together and I hope very soon, the book will be ready,” said Abdullahi who is a mentor to many youths.

    Of course, writing comes naturally to Abdullahi with his background in journalism before entering public service, but he took it to another level when he wrote a 14-page letter to his daughter who is currently studying at Hull University in the UK. He noted that his idea about motivational speaking and preaching would be devoid of materialism with the sole objective of inculcating the right values into the coming generation of Nigerian youths and beyond.

    “Though I have gone to Umrah (lesser Hajj) before, I recently went to Makkah and it was a new experience for me and it reinforced my belief in God, as such I want to rededicate myself in the service of God and humanity,” said Abdullahi who is a bookworm. “Yes, I love reading books and I have read so much despite my tight schedule as a minister.

    “I’ve read lots of Islamic, Christian and Buddhist books and with the benefit of education, I know the best way to serve God. For instance, there is a marked difference between Islam and Christianity but the basis of religion is love towards God and your fellow human beings.

    “I have read so many Christian books, particularly that of C.S Lewis and I was fascinated about some of the things he wrote in Mere Christianity. I’m equally thrilled by Francis Collins’ books, especially The Language of God. Collins is an American physician-geneticist noted for his discoveries of disease genes and Human Genome Project (HGP) and I love his symmetry between science and religion and perspective that belief in Christianity can be reconciled with acceptance of evolution and science.

    “So, I’m more of a library person and I can be alone but not lonely because I always want to engage my thought-process thinking about complex situations.

    “You can call me a solar-powered person because I work at best during the day and I hate to work at night. Besides the exigencies of work at my previous duty post, as a newspaper editor where you needed to stay up for production, I don’t like working or waking up at night to do anything. I just love to sleep at night. God has given us the day to work and night to sleep; so I make sure I enjoy both worlds – work in the day and sleep at night.”

    Yet Abdullahi would be the first to admit that being a thorough-bred journalist and an erstwhile columnist to boot at ThisDay really prepared him well for the nitty-gritty of public life. Journalists are trained to ask questions and proffer solutions that could well help in the uplift of the society and he had to do some soul searching upon leaving the newsroom for the misty world of politics.

    “Of course, being a journalist before joining public service has really helped me in settling down to the tedious work as an administrator because both are two different worlds,” he declared. “As a journalist, I wrote probing articles; asking questions just to arrive at a point where we can make the society a better place, but I found out it was not as easy as that because here you are with the hard fact staring you in the face.

    “You are transposed from the world of idealism to reality and it challenges you to do your best and that has really become part of me. I strive to do my best in any circumstance knowing well that posterity would judge me for good or bad.”

    Yet Abdullahi has earned plaudits for the manner he has dealt with some thorny issues in sports administration. Prior to his tenure, there were a thousand and one cases against the legality of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) so much so that the beautiful game of soccer was being played in the courtrooms than on the turfs of football pitches. Nigerian football suffered opprobrium and Abdullahi was one of the unseen hands as the Super Eagles broke their duck by winning the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) after a19-year hiatus. He ‘roughshod’ the NFF to ensure that the right players were picked for age-grade competitions and he could rightly claim a slice of the glory following the Golden Eaglets’ record-breaking fourth title at the 2013 FIFA Under-17 World Cup in the UAE last month. It was not only in football that Abdullahi’s impact had been felt; for the records, Nigeria is the continental champions in both the Under-18 and senior athletics championships in Africa. Under his watch, President Goodluck Jonathan launched Rhythm N’ Play – a grassroots programme aimed at bringing two million additional kids into sports – football, volleyball, basketball, netball, judo, karate, and athletics – over the next two years.

    Said he: “The truth is that I love complex situations because it keeps my adrenalin pumping and I like to resolve problem which is one of the gifts that God gave to me.

    “Of course, I’m not a hyper-active person because one other thing I enjoy doing is to have a good sleep. I really thank God for this inner peace because I can still have my good 7-8 hours of good sleep daily and there is nothing as life’s elixir as a good sleep.

    “I like to be trim and fit and one of the things I don’t like to see is a protruding belly and that is why I love keeping fit. I love to look trim and fit though I was never a library person, sport-inclined during my days in school. I did some handball and some kick about in football too but I was more of a library person while growing up.”

    As a grown up, Abdullahi noted that he is now good at wearing the traditional agbada and it is most plausible that you would catch him in this traditional gear at the weekly Federal Executive meetings more often than not ‘because I’m very comfortable in it.”

    Though it’s been years now that he left journalism, he is still very much at home with his disarming tactics as the discourse almost ran its full course when pressed on his private life.

    “Asking why I’m a polygamist is like asking why you choose to be a monogamist,” he said with a measured voice. “But there is nothing wrong in being a polygamist judging by my own experience and I’m frank with whatever I’m saying about this.

    “ I have a very good and wonderful family and my children don’t speak about their mothers but our mothers because everyone in the family has a sense of belonging to the family. It goes without saying that being a polygamist gives you a great sense of fairness, justice and equity and I think a leader needs all of these to succeed. We are a closely-knit family and I really thank God for having such a wonderful family,” he stated.

  • FG hands over Nnamdi Azikiwe stadium to Enugu govt

    FG hands over Nnamdi Azikiwe stadium to Enugu govt

    The Federal Government has formally handed back the management of the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium to the Enugu State Government.

    At the handover ceremony held yesterday at the Government House, Enugu, the representative of the Federal Government and Director General of the National Sports Commission (NSC), Hon Gbenga Elegbeleye, said that the event followed the approval by President Goodluck Jonathan, of an application to that effect made by the Enugu State Government.

    He noted that the state had over the years collaborated with the Federal Government in maintaining and rehabilitating the Stadium saying it had made huge financial investments in the provision of vital facilities for the successful hosting of the FIFA U-17 World Cup in 2009.

    Hon. Elegbeleye added that “This act convinced the Federal Government that the Enugu State Government was capable of maintaining the Stadium in line with approved international standards”.

    Noting that Sports was a unifying factor and a tool for international diplomacy and creation of wealth, he enjoined other states in the country to emulate the Enugu State example in the development and maintenance of sports infrastructure. He further commended the reactivation of the School Sports by the State Government saying that it will greatly enhance the discovery of talents for the benefit of the country.

    Chime expressed delight at the return of the Stadium to the State assuring that it will be better managed under the state ministry of Sports and Youth Development.

    He said that his request for the return of the Stadium was prompted by the decision of the Federal Government to sell some of the facilities there adding that this had prompted anxiety in the State that the whole Stadium could be sold to outsiders.

    The governor commended President Jonathan for his prompt response to his request and assured that the Stadium will not only be well managed but will also be open to an accessible to all and sundry.

    “All we are interested in is just to promote sports. Take our assurances on this to the Federal Government and be rest assured that the standard will go up rather than go down”, Governor Chime said.