Tag: off

  • NBL kicks off 2017 Maltina Teacher of the Year award

    Nigerian Breweries Plc (NBL) on Tuesday opened entries for this year’s edition of the Maltina Teacher of the Year Award.

    At the unveiling at the Eko Hotel&Sutes, Victoria Island, Lagos  on Tuesday, the firm’s Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Mr. Nikolaas Vervelde, recalled that the initiative, which began in 2015, is to recognise and celebrate exceptional teachers nationwide.

    It remains part of the organisation’s continuous commitment to the development of education in the country, Vervelde further explained.

    Represented by the firm’s Corporate Affairs Adviser, Mr. Kufre Ekanem, Vervelde also stated that for the first time, the competition would be expanding its tentacles to accommodate teachers across private schools nationwide.

    According to him, the contest sponsored under the initiative of the Nigerian Breweries Felix Ohiwerel Education Trust Fund (NB-FO-ETF) intervention in the education sector, has brought about the construction of over 280 classrooms and 30 libraries in both primary and secondary schools across the 44 communities in Nigeria, in addition to impacting over 20, 000 students directly.

    He said the expansion of NB-FO-ETF birthed the Maltina teacher of the year, anchored on the fact that despite the sensitive role teachers play in moulding future leaders, they are often underestimated.

    According to him, collection of applications which opened on Tuesday, would last till Friday July 7, adding that interested teachers are to download application forms from the Maltina website -www.maltina-nigeria.com.

    Applications forms should be completed and uploaded to the website or sent by email to maltinateacheroftheyear@heineken.com or by post to P.M.B. 12632, Marina, Lagos.

    “As it was the case in the previous editions, all duly completed applications will be subjected to an intense selection and judging process. An external and independent panel of judges has been constituted to ensure transparency, credibility and objectivity of the initiative,” he added.

    He said the five-step evaluation process of entries received would result in 37 champions (one per state and the FCT), subject to entries meeting the threshold as set by the panel of judges. From among the states champions, the teacher of the year 2017 will emerge.

    He added that all state champions and winners would be rewarded at a grand ceremony on Thursday, October 12, to also commemorate the World Teachers’ Day.

    The Maltina Teacher of the Year Award has so far produced 42 state champions and two overall winners. The maiden winner was Mrs. Nkemdillim Obi of the Federal Government Girls College, Onitsha, Anambra State, while Mr. Imo Essien, a teacher at the Special Education Centre for Exceptional Children, Uyo, Akwa Ibom State who the subsequent edition.

  • Ooni: A chip off old block

    Ooni: A chip off old block

    In March last year, Ooni Ogunwusi caused some stir by choosing as his queen, a young cousin of mine-Sonia Otiti (Wuraola) Obanor. That decision and its consummation may well signal the beginning of a new fire that could possibly open a fresh page of history on the pile of the old Benin-Ife fraternal co-operation. But that is subject for another day.

    I remember every now and then this encounter with the Ooni’s father at both Benin City and Ife where the nuptial ceremonies took place. The amiable Ooni Ogunwusi Ojaja11 sent his father and other royal emissaries to fetch his bride. We obliged him and then joined him at the Royal Court of Ife the next day for the final public act.

    What struck me was an uncanny display of meekness and good breeding by the senior Ogunwusi who was flanked by his gorgeously attired and stately queen of a wife. Given our complicated world, together they put simplicity on a pedestal that only the discerning may be able to appreciate. The kind of richness of appearance that can be regarded as simple majesty!

    Baba Ogunwusi navigated through the fluffy end of the ceremony with a stand out comportment, humility and calmness and thoroughly enjoyed the rendition of the Igun eronmwon song at the home of the bride’s father. As soon as I introduced myself to him as a journalist and former Foreign Affairs Editor of the Guardian, he beamed with smile and said with glee and warmth “oh my colleague from the Fourth Estate of the Realm” And anytime we came near each other, he would initiate a handshake. He cut the picture of a man of frankness. I was told he had been a radio and television anchor and star presenter in the eighties and that he had also brought honour to the profession. But it is not every now and then that society witnesses an era of an Ooni with a father…

    Meeting important personalities locally and internationally is one of the things the journalistic trade freely grants. One has had cause to engage presidents, the very cream of the diplomatic, political, business and traditional personalities and to sustain such relationships beyond the confines of offices, summits, conferences and lounges.

    But prior to March last year, I’d had business at the Ile Oodua only once. I recall meeting the late Ooni Okunade Sijuade at his palace on a somewhat different setting from last March’s.

    It was sometime around 2002 when the Federal Government had already awarded the contract to make the Ife-Ibadan highway dual carriageway.

    As a journalist on tour of the western states with Chief Tony Anenih who was then Works Minister, we were at the Ooni’s palace and the very regale and excited Sijuwade pointed at Anenih just as the head of delegation approached his royal dais to take his seat beside him. He spoke some Yoruba and then was very effusive with praises and prayers.

    Something like: “Anenih, you made this possible? This is what we have been asking for, for years now. The Almighty would bless you, you will go far… and whatever you ask of him and us would be granted to you…” he said.

    In both Benin City and Ife, Senior Ogunwusi never sought to throw his weight around using any of the well-known Nigerian ‘big man’ tactic as the father of arguably the biggest traditional ruler in Yoruba land. After all, he has since made history as the first father of a living Ife king. I am convinced that the senior Ogunwusi’s breeding, has most certainly rubbed off on the Ooni leaving Nigeria with a remarkably humble royal personality.

    Back to Ife, the Ooni received everybody that came into his palace as persons related to his new queen and generally, the people who came in from Benin City. You could hold up his hand during a handshake and converse.

    For instance, you could say: Kabieyi, I look forward to meeting you again in Abuja, etc… and being born with grace, he would listen to you give a heartfelt response.

    When the Ooni left the reception hall with the usual ululation by praise singers and his band of gong-beating bards, it appeared as though he was retiring for the day. With his pose, he went round the rebuilt reception area to the left of his main residence where some other royal fathers were being feted, he greeted them one after the other before entering the mansion containing his inner chamber within the palace grounds-an imposing edifice completed in 1937 by the late Ooni Adesoji Aderemi. Here, as you would expect are on display some paraphernalia of royalty. The entire floor is white carpeted with the seal of the Ooni embossed on it.

    Remarkably, after about an hour and half, Ooni Ogunwusi came back into the reception Marquee upon learning that the big groove in honour of his wedding was still on. Oba or no Oba, the Ooni did not betray his constituency as he swung gracefully to the delight of the young men and women, including students of the Obafemi Awolowo University as they played Kabiyesi by Dr. Sid and Don Jazy.

    This Ooni Adeyeye Ogunwusi has the entire imperial swagger and then something more: A calm mien, ability to relate with people irrespective of caste/class permutations. That he could connect well, were all on display at Ife.

    You might argue that for a persona occupying the exalted Ife stool, the humility of king Adeyeye stems from the fact that he is a very young man. But he was not born last night either. That “young man’s” talks count for nothing in the circumstance when good breeding is on display.

    And never mind that before the wedding, there were some disturbing, maybe sinisterly sponsored media publications. The Ooni refused to join the throng who wanted to condemn what was revealed later to be a sacrosanct choice. He instead restored his Olori preferring to walk the lane of men of uncanny wisdom.

    What is on the diary is that the people of Ife, ‘migrants’ and visitors alike, had unlimited fun inside the Ooni’s reception marquee. And the way he is going, he would continue to win more friends. He will be disarming many with his humility and gracefulness beyond his handsome face and lotus eyes

    Surely, if as it is said that the Ooni does not measure the amount of olive oil in his salad, then a combination of factors: Good breeding, divine fortune, distinctive personality, a man at home with his people, and an obvious heart of gold marks him out as someone who would be loved and respected by the people of Ile-Ife. In the days to come, the people of Ife and those who lay claim to the Oduduwa House would regard the coming into history of Ooni Ojaja 11 as something to be especially cherished.

    With King Ogunwusi, Ife should never be the same again. Besides the mythic validation by predestination, his father prince Oluropo Ogunwusi must have been carefully chosen also as the vessel to nurse such an important personality for his people. Meaning, as the Ooni reigns, we must always remember his father. It has to be, that so much of the good breeding was imparted on the king by the patron father.

  • Siasia wants Nigeria league midweek matches off

    Siasia wants Nigeria league midweek matches off

    Coach Samson Siasia has said he wants Nigeria league midweek matches suspended for him to work fully with the home-based players from Monday.

    Siasia has called up 22 players from the domestic league for a training camp in Abuja beginning on Monday ahead of AFCON qualifiers against Egypt later this month.

    “I have spoken with the federation and I would want midweek league matches suspended, that will help with my preparation,” Siasia told reporters at a press briefing.

    The selected players from this training camp will move to Kaduna on March 21 to be joined by the foreign pros.

    Siasia also raised concerns over the sharply different weather conditions the country’s Europe-based stars will battle when they fly in the AFCON qualifiers.

    “It’s cold in Europe and it will be hot in Kaduna, so I am very concerned about this,” he admitted.

  • Kumuyi: God has not written Nigeria off

    Kumuyi: God has not written Nigeria off

    •‘2015 a year of turnaround’

    Nigeria is still in God’s plans for liberation from security challenges and economic reversals, the General Superintendent of the Deeper Life Bible Church, Pastor William Folorunsho Kumuyi, has said.

    He urged citizens not to be like the complaining, critical and murmuring Israelites in the Bible.

    They should magnify God’s promises and plans rather than focus on present and past crises, the cleric said.

    His words: “God has not written you off. God has not forgotten you. There is a glorious day awaiting you; things will turn around… the bright future is starting today. God has come to visit His people… nothing will stop you onward journey.”

    He spoke at the church’s 2014 December National Retreat and Miracle/Revival Programme with the theme: “Lifted up to Higher Ground and Enrichment through God’s visitation.”

    Addressing a mammoth crowd, Pastor Kumuyi declared that 2015 is the year of God’s visitation, adding that the Almighty would give His people a cause to celebrate in the New Year.

    He said: “God will visit you in the New Year. Everything holding you down, the Lord will break it. You will step into your Promised Land. Things will turn around in your life. It is not what you see yesterday; it is not what you see today; a brighter day is coming.

    “The coming days for you will be better than the good old days. The things of the past may be wonderful, the things of today and tomorrow will be more wonderful.”

    Pastor Kumuyi urged Christians to prepare for life beyond the immediate, as, according to him, the Lord’s return is imminent. Nigerians, he said, must not seek powers outside the confines of God’s word.

    “We do not need to kill ourselves to have worldly and ephemeral powers. This should moderate our conducts on earth,” he said.

    He emphasised that worldly attainments would fade away, while the word of God remains forever.

    According to him, Christians and saints must, therefore, constantly feed themselves on the word of God.

    The cleric stressed that it was pointless to fight for things that would not last beyond 60 to 70 years “when we can strive for the ideal of righteous and unblemished life through the grace of God, and through a life that is well-pleasing to God, to eventually attain a life that has no end, which is as blissful as it is glorious.”

    He blessed the people and urged them to be satisfied with God’s goodness and kindness, which he said were more than sufficient to take care of them both here and in the hereafter.

    Kumuyi added that God, at all times, must be their pillar of strength and corner stone and abiding refuge for every situation.

    The programme also featured seminars under which several topics were considered. The miracle/revival segment featured power ministrations and healings by Pastor Kumuyi.

    There were also orchestra and song performances by the church choir.

    The programme provided opportunities for people to share their testimonies.

    For instance, a woman named Toyin Adeyemi, who had been married for 19 years without a child, climbed the stage to tell her story of how God took away her reproach.

    Samuel Olubiyi from Isolo area of Lagos told how he and his wife were blessed with a baby after four consecutive years of miscarriages. He also testified to his divine promotion after seven years of working without recognition.

    It was the same for Mr. and Mrs. John Chijioke. After several years of miscarriages, the woman conceived. When she was due to put to bed, all efforts by the medical team for her to have a normal delivery failed. After 13 hours of labour, she was wheeled into the theatre for an operation.

  • Referees call off strike

    Referees call off strike

    The Association of Nigeria Referees (NRA) have called off their two weeks industrial action which grounded all football activities in the country.

    The NRA went on strike unhappy with the happenings in the Nigeria football circle, claiming they were neglected in the episode despite being an active body in Nigeria football.

    However, after normalcy was restored this week the League Management company(LMC), earlier dissolved by the Chris Giwa-led faction of the NFF, said it was waiting for the NRA to communicate, as they are willing to continue with the league.

    However SL10.ng can confirm the NRA has officially written to the various league bodies, signaling their desire to commence full league action.

    Expectedly, league action will resume across various levels of Nigeria Football this week.

  • How we put off Glass House fire

    How we put off Glass House fire

    Deputy Controller of the FCT fire service (operations), Opetunsin Julius has spoken of how they put out the Glass House fire.

    He said:“Wea got the call a few minutes past 10am and we got here as quickly as we could and thankfully we were able to put out the fire before it got worse.”

    He, however, posited that it might be too early to determine if it was arson or an accident.”

    “It is too early for us to say because we have to launch an investigation and then we can determine what the cause of the fire really was,” he said.

    The NFF have been in crisis lately, with Aminu Maigari only returning to office as president on Monday, with a faction led by Mike Umeh insisting that Maigari remains impeached.

  • PDP plotting unfair rerun in Offa, ex-chair alleges

    A former Chairman of Offa Local Government Area of Kwara State, Prince Saheed Popoola, yesterday alleged that the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) was planning to railroad the state Independent Electoral Commission (KWASIEC) into holding a fresh election into the council without following due process.

    He said the plot is to exclude the opposition from contesting in the poll, thereby making the rerun a walkover for the PDP.

    In a statement in Offa, Popoola also dismissed as futile the alleged plot to disqualify him from contesting in the election on the grounds that the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), under which he contested, is defunct.

    The statement reads: “Our attention has been drawn to a meeting Senator Bukola Saraki held with PDP stakeholders, including PDP chieftains from Offa at the weekend, where they resolved to railroad the KWASIEC into holding a rerun into Offa Local Government any moment from now.

    “While we remain confident that the people of Offa will mete out the appropriate punishment to people who see Kwara as their fiefdom and make no pretence about their intention to lord it over all of us, we wish to remind the PDP and, of course KWASIEC, that the law governing KWASIEC is that a notice of 150 days shall be given for an election into a local government. This is not retroactive! We hope the PDP will bear this in mind as its plots to impose itself on the people of Offa by all crooked means…”

    The Kwara State PDP yesterday denied the allegation.

    In a statement in Ilorin by its Director of Publicity, Mash’ud Adebimpe, the party said: “The Kwara State PDP was aware of the false allegation being spread about by the former Offa Local Governmet Chairman, Mr Saheed Popoola, to the effect that there was an alleged plot to deprive him from participating in the forthcoming rerun.

    “The PDP wishes to state that the allegation is an outright falsehood with no substance. Our party is law-bidding and would follow the law to the letter.

    “Our leader, at no time, held any meeting where such matter was discussed or mentioned.

    “The removed council boss should go back and sort himself out with his party. As far as his candidature is concerned to us in the PDP, it does not pose any threat, as the people of Offa would decide who will lead them.

    “Saheed should not whip up unfounded sentiments all in the name of seeking public sympathy. The PDP would support any process that is in tandem with the law guiding the electoral exercise.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • AFCON: Writing Super Eagles off

    AFCON: Writing Super Eagles off

    In their effort to qualify for the quarterfinals of the Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) competition taking place in South Africa, the Super Eagles of Nigeria kept Nigerians so much on edge that when they finally booked a place, everyone shrugged, including their compatriots. It was therefore no surprise that in their not-so-comprehensive defeat of the Ethiopian team, Nigerians gave their lacklustre team grudging plaudits, uneasy about what embarrassment the more technically solid Cote d’Ivoire team could cause us in a few days to come. If this unease is whispered in Nigerians’ living rooms, football commentators from elsewhere are less bashful. One of them, FIFA man and former publisher of African Football magazine, Emmanuel Maradas, spoke so candidly about the Eagles’ shortcomings that it left many proud Nigerians shamefaced and desperate. According to the Vanguard newspaper, Maradas believed the Eagles stood no chance of going anywhere in the on-going soccer fiesta. In the next round, he was quoted to have said specifically, “Cote d’Ivoire will beat Nigeria because you have no chance. You’ll struggle.”

    Hear his unsparing analysis: “Your team is not solid, and it has no star player. It is just an ordinary team. I feel sad to see Nigeria which used to be a powerhouse present a mediocre squad. They have played poorly and only managed to escape the disgrace of being beaten in the first round. I feel sad because this is the same country that had star players like Kanu, Babayaro, Oliseh, Okocha, and the list is endless.” Maradas was so stunned by the decline in Nigerian football that he asked rhetorically what had become of the great footballing country. And that precisely is the most important question of the last few decades.

    Maradas might have been prompted by football to wonder what came over us. But considering the way he asked the weighty question, he seemed to also imply that the problem with Nigeria transcended football or sports generally. Again, hear his distressed complaint: “What is the problem with Nigeria? Are you saying that out of the millions of people in Nigeria, you cannot get up to seven star players? What is the problem with Nigeria? This is a country that I love so much, a country of the greats in African football. Nigeria should not struggle in any group in African football…Eagles have fallen. A country with so much and millions of people cannot raise a dreaded squad; no, it is a shame.”

    It is clear Maradas’ reflections on Nigerian football go beyond football. The way he mourned our decline, and, according to the newspaper, the way he gestured, he seemed to indicate the world expected so much more from Nigeria in all fields. By limiting his comments to football, Maradas was apparently simply being diplomatic. He wanted Nigeria to provide leadership, especially with its endowment and population, but he is deeply mortified it is unable to rise to any level of acclaim. But if it is any comfort to Maradas, he must be told that most Nigerians, minus those in government, also ask the same question: What has become of us? And so far, there has been no consensus on what went wrong. However, there is consensus on the physical manifestations of those things that are wrong with us – the incompetence, the waste, the mediocrity, the nepotism, the lack of passion for the country etc.

    In any case, whatever the outcome of the match between Nigeria and Cote d’Ivoire on Sunday, Mr Maradas’ question will still be valid. For the problems we confront as a nation are so weighty and pernicious that except we confront them boldly and intelligently, the morass will persist, and both the country and its leaders will continue to make an ass of themselves internationally.