Tag: path

  • Plying the precise path to the peak (2)

    Plying the precise path to the peak (2)

    Last week, we said it is imperative to aspire to be at the peak of your career or business. We added that for you to achieve this feat, you must have the mentality that the sky is the beginning not the limit of your potential for success. We X-rayed some of the factors critical to success. This week, we will add more.

    Strong belief

    To be able to get to the highest rung of the achievement ladder, you need strong belief. Belief is an attitude, the way you think about something. Your belief is your destiny and once you are committed, success will surely come your way. You form attitude through knowledge and experiences and you can change your attitude if you motivate yourself to do so. Irrespective of whom you are, your education or location in life, your attitude can be totally positive if you believe in yourself.

     

    Failure and self-challenge

    You also need to embrace failure and challenge so as successfully ply the path to the peak. No matter what happens in the course of your journey towards success, never label yourself a failure. One of the greatest problems people have with failure is that they are too quick to judge isolated situations in their lives and label them as failures. But you need to keep the bigger picture in mind. To get to the top in life, you need to really challenge yourself. It is a reality that most people can do more than they think they can.

     

    Best people

    You need to surround yourself with the best people if you must to rise to the top. When you surround yourself with the right kind of people, you enter into the God-given power of agreement. You should not measure your success by what others have and have not, and today is the day to get through what you have been going through.If you think you are doing better than the average person, then you are an average person yourself.

     

    Corporate culture

    Any organisation that wants to get to the peak needs to have a strong corporate culture. Research shows that corporate culture accounts for 20 to 30 per cent of the corporate performance in the midst of competition. Some of the elements making up a great corporate culture are a vision or mission statement, values, people, etc. A great corporate culture begins with a vision or mission statement which we discussed last week. Values also constitute the core of a great corporate culture. While a vision articulates a company’s purpose, values offer a set of guidelines on the behaviour and mindsets needed to achieve that vision. Employees are another part of a great corporate culture. This is so because a corporate organisation cannot establish an acceptable culture without people who either share its core values or are willing to embrace those values.

    Management and board composition

     Any organisation that wants to succeed and get to the peak in these days of cut-throat competition must be effectively managed.  Credibility of the people constituting the board of an organisation also determines how far an organisation can go in terms or achievement. Credibility of the board either boosts or erodes confidence of the public and investors, and influences the confidence that employees repose in such an organisation.

     

    Final note

    Are you now set to ply your precise path to the peak? If it is so, then discard performance of mediocrity and move to where you really belong at the top. There is consistent demand for mediocrity but you should turn down the offer and cuddle peak performance.

    PS: For those making inquiries about our Public Speaking, Business Presentation and Professional Writing Skills programme, please visit the website indicated on this page for details.

     

    • GOKE ILESANMI, Managing Consultant/CEO of Gokmar Communication Consulting, is an International Platinum Columnist, Professional Public Speaker/MC, Communication Specialist, Motivational Speaker and Career Management Coach. He is also a Book Reviewer, Biographer and Editorial Consultant.

    Tel: 08055068773; 08187499425

    Email: gokeiles2010@gmail.com

    Website: www.gokeilesanmi.com

  • Path to democratic growth, by Swedish envoy

    Path to democratic growth, by Swedish envoy

    Swedish Ambassador to Ghana and Nigeria Mr. Svante Kilander has said democracy would thrive when those elected work and meet the yearnings of the citizens.

    Kilander spoke while delivering the 50th anniversary lecture of the Department of Sociology, University of Ibadan, titled: “Breakthrough of Democracy in Sweden: A Perspective.”

    He noted that elections provide people with the opportunity to replace public officers, who failed to serve them, urging Nigerians to learn from his country.

    Kilander explained that democracy would succeed, where democratic institutions are put in place and manned by trusted people, who meet the needs of the people.

    The envoy said people should wait for those who did not meet their expectations and vote them out at elections.

    According to him, elections provide a platform to deepen democratic ethics and ethos by allowing people to rearrange and replace public office holders, who failed to meet their expectations.

    He stressed the need for those occupying public offices to work for their people.

    Kilander congratulated Nigeria for successfully containing the dreaded Ebola Virus.

    He said the Federal Government and the medical teams did “a great job” to deliver the country from the Ebola spread through well coordinated response teams.

    Head, Sociology Department, University of Ibadan, Prof. Samuel Ayodele Jegede, said the world needs knowledge from Sociology to provide cross-cultural understanding of issues as well as provide new paradigms that could address challenges confronting Nigeria and the world.

    According to the university don, there was the need to annex the skills of experts in sociology to provide a holistic understanding of human society and proffer solutions to problems confronting it.

    The Vice Chancellor, University of Ibadan, Professor Isaac Adewole, said the institution was ready to partner with University of Upsalla, Sweden to establish Ulf Himmestrand Institute of International Development (HIID) to foster intellectual exchanges between Nigeria and Sweden.

    Emeritus Professor Ulf Himmestrand was the first Head of Department of Sociology, Ibadan in 1964.

    The vice chancellor, who noted that that UI was ready to make available part of the money for the establishment of the institute, said the institute will focus on peace-building, international relations and other courses.

  • Same old path?

    Same old path?

    We can only hope that report that indicted firms are still inporting fuel is not true

    The report by an international newswire, Reuters, that a number of companies indicted in the fuel subsidy scam over the past three years have been re-listed for fuel importation by the government is shocking. The Minister for Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Allison-Madueke has however denied that. But if the allegation is correct, we condemn such travesty against the Nigerian people.

    The Federal Government claimed to have paid over one trillion naira in fuel subsidy, amounting to about 20 percent of the national budget, last year. More than half of this sum was allegedly paid to suppliers who either diverted the products they imported or merely got paid subsidies for fuel imports that never took place.

    The report also stated that there has been an increase in the number of fuel importers, and that about $1.2 billion has already been spent on fuel import subsidy this year. According to the report, about $6 billion was lost to fuel subsidy corruption, in the past three years. It also named Nepal, Fresh Synergy, Ibafon and Techno as among the companies that the National Assembly indicted, but which has found their way back as official importers of fuel.

    In her off-handed denial to the press after a meeting between the Presidency and the Nigeria Bar Association, the petroleum minister merely stated that such development was impossible without specifically denying the inclusion of those companies named by the media. She also did not explain why the number of importers has increased, or the criteria used in choosing those on the list.

    The Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Agency (PPPRA), under the minister’s watch gave out humongous contracts for the importation of petroleum products to companies without any experience in the industry; and in some cases companies that were a few weeks old in the register of companies and with very minimal share capital. So, it will not be out of place to insinuate that another round of swindle is in the offing, unless the PPPRA and the ministry can explain this seeming recourse to the same old path. The least we expect from the authorities is the publication of the names of the approved importers for public scrutiny.

    We also hope that the National Assembly and the police will show interest now, to ensure that any of the indicted companies trying to swindle the country a second time is stopped in its track. In sieving out those to be blacklisted, it is important that the names of the shareholders and directors are noted so that the promoters of the blacklisted companies are not allowed to use new companies to continue their criminal enterprise.

    The PPPRA and other concerned agencies must also ensure that all the necessary verifications have been completed before subsidies are paid. It will be most unfair to again allow billions of tax-payers’ money to be fraudulently paid to racketeers, after which further huge sums are expended to try to recover the stolen money.

    Meanwhile, what has become of those that stole the alleged $6 billion dollars in the last three years? Is it that they have all been exonerated or that they have proved too smart for our criminal justice system? Or, is it also possible that the public officials have connived to make it impossible for the stolen public funds to be recovered? We must however warn that Nigerians will not accept the removal of the so-called subsidy as the answer for the glaring failure of governance.

     

  • Polio: Fighting  a tough battle

    Polio: Fighting a tough battle

    As preparations begin for the next sub-national Immunisation Plus’ Days (IPDs) using bivalent oral polio vaccine, Oyeyemi Gbenga-Mustapha takes a look at why the vaccine preventable polio is still endemic in Nigeria.

    Nigeria is one of the three countries that is still polio-endemic, it is in this unenviable company with Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of all the three, Nigeria is the reservoir of wild polio virus, it is the only country with ongoing transmission of all three serotypes- wild poliovirus type 1, wild poliovirus type 3 and circulating vaccine- desired polio type 2. The Northern states are the main source of polio infections.

    In 2009, operational improvements in these northern states led to a 90 per cent decline in cases of wild poliovirus type 1 and a 50 per cent decline in overall cases compared with 2008.

    As of last week, Polio Global Eradication Initiative, a monitoring organisation of polio situation in Nigeria, reported that two new cases of wild polio virus 1 have been found in Kano and Taraba states, bringing the total number of wild polio cases for this year to 18. The case from Kano is the most recent case in the country.

    According to medical experts, as long as a single child remains infected, children in all countries are at risk of contracting polio. Failure to eradicate polio from these last remaining strongholds could result in as many as 200, 000 new cases every year within 10 years. Polio has no cure but can be prevented.

    In most countries, the global effort has expanded capacities to tackle other infectious diseases by building effective surveillance and immunization systems.

    A delicate balance

    Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by a virus. It invades the nervous system, and can cause total paralysis in a matter of hours. Initial symptoms are fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness in the neck and pain in the limbs. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), one in 200 infections lead to irreversible paralysis (usually in the legs). Among those paralysed, five per cent to 10 per cent die when their breathing muscles become immobilised.

    According to WHO, globally, Polio cases have decreased by over 99 per cent since 1988, from an estimated 350, 000 cases to 223 reported cases in 2012. The reduction is the result of the global effort to eradicate the disease.

    Nigeria is fighting to end the endemic. However, there are sundry factors militating against the actualisation of this hope.

    The polio eradication programme continue to miss too many children in key geographic areas and population groups due to a mixture of operational and social factors. In 2012, going by data supplied by Polio Global Eradication Initiative, 61 children were paralyzed by polio in the first half of 2012, as opposed to 24 at the same time in 2011. In 2011, more than 95 per cent of all cases occurred in the eight persistently endemic northern states of Borno, Jigawa, Kano, Katsina, Kebbi, Sokoto, Yobe and Zamfara.

    A formerly strong primary health care system in northern Nigeria has been weakened over many years due to incessant polio outbreaks and resistant of a segment of the populace over the safety of the vaccination. This has led to serious gap in the administration of the vaccine and subsequent disruption of campaigns as well as the killing of vaccinators. Now routine immunisation services are either no longer available or irregular; coupled with limited resources for health services and gaps in vaccine storage and distribution.

    According to a nongovernmental organisation, PATH, Northern Nigeria has one of the lowest rates of immunisation coverage in the world. In many parts of the north, barely 10 percent of children receive all of their routine vaccines. Coverage rates for the vaccine against tetanus among women are equally low.

    Misunderstood scheme

    The north is rife with misperception on the effects of the contents of the vaccine on health, especially reproduction. Campaigns have been on in the north that vaccination leads to reduction of productivity, this has been countered at all levels but the impact is still there.

    But in the face of sundry factors including insecurity, especially of Boko Haram, ridding the country of the polio virus can remain a mirage. Conflicts and insecurity do weaken public health systems.

    For instance, attacks on health workers in Kano State have robbed vulnerable populations of basic life-saving health interventions. In the face of these, Nigeria continues to pose a significant risk to surrounding countries. In 2011, polio viruses originating from Nigeria were detected in five countries on West and Central Africa. Despite dozens of vaccination campaigns over the past years, according to Polio Global Eradication Initiative, no more than 65 percent of children have received four or more Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) doses in Borno, Kano, Sokoto and Yobe states.

    Viruses with genetic evidence of long periods of circulation without detection are still being found, indicating surveillance gaps. Sub national engagement of political leadership remains patchy. Future benefits of polio eradication are immense. Once polio is eradicated, the world can celebrate the delivery of a major global public good that will benefit all, no matter where they live. According to WHO, Economic modelling has found that the eradication of polio would save at least US$ 40 to 50 billion over the next 20 years, mostly in low-income countries. Most importantly, success will mean that no child will ever again suffer the terrible effects of lifelong polio-paralysis.

     

     

  • Path to agric revolution

    Path to agric revolution

    For some years, the growth of the agricultural sector has been stunted by paucity of funds, crude implements, lack of government support and land tenure system. These have triggered food insecurity. But the Lagos State government is set to reverse the trend by boosting farming and food production through the building of farm estates and settlements across the state. DANIEL ESSIET reports.

     

    The agricultural sector plays an important role in Lagos State’s economic development. The sector does not just provide rural employment and uplift rural incomes, it also ensures food security. But food supplies to the state is short of what is required.

    The Commissioner for Agriculture and Cooperatives, Prince Gbolahan Lawal, said aggregate food supplied internally was less than 10 per cent of total consumption. In addition, national demand for agricultural produce is expanding rapidly and there are many niches the state can exploit, given its natural advantages. Lawal said the state was poised to raise the bar to 25 per cent in the next five years through its various projects.

    To this end, the state has intensified farming activities in areas where it has comparative, ecological and socio-economic advantages. These areas, he stated, include fisheries, livestock, vegetable production, as well as agro-processing, with emphasis on rice and cassava. He said marketing and the whole value chain would also be given attention. Thus, the state is pursuing the strategy of building farm estates and settlements across major farming communities, he said.

    Through the estates, the government envisions a transformation from fragmented and small-scale farms to integrated, clustered and large-scale agri-businesses. Key agricultural commodities covered under the farm scheme are: rice, vegetable, poultry, piggery and aquaculture.

    By using farm estates, Lawal said the state was moving towards a model which is not only inclusive but anchored on market-centricity, economies of scale and value chain integration of the various factors involved in the production of the commodities.

    He said farmers using the estates would benefit from extension services and inputs, such as seedlings, fertilisers and pesticides, adding that the government was making efforts to develop critical infrastructure, such as roads in aquaculture zones. This is to support the private sector’s investment in operating infrastructure, such as processing plants, grow-out farms and hatcheries, he noted.

    He observed that the absence of farm-to-market chains was the primary obstacle inhibiting agri-business takeoff. For this reason, he said the government was working to allow farm-to-market chains to operate efficiently.

     

    Agriculture Youth Empowerment Scheme (AGRIC-YES) Estate

     

    The Agriculture Youth Empowerment Scheme is at Araga Farm Settlement in Epe Local Government Area. Through the scheme, the state is attracting young men to farming. One hundred youths were drawn and housed within the estate. They were trained for 18 months in crops and live stock production.

    Dormitories are available for new intakes while the programme offers resources, hands-on training, and technical assistance on sustainable practices. These include production, processing, business principles, and marketing of farm-raised products, such as rams, chickens and vegetables.

    During their training, the young farmers raise rams, poultry, fish and vegetables. Farmer-trainees are expected to operate independently after the 18 months of training.

    Also, the programme is training the students to: produce building materials for green houses, improve soil fertility, develop irrigation, manage pests/weeds and promote marketing. As a result, Lagosians can now access hot and sweet pepper and pumpkin green.

    The reason for adopting the strategy, Lawal explained, was to reduce dependency on the government for employment, create and sustain new jobs and reduce frustration among young people. With the average age of farmers increasing and the sector facing skills shortage, he said it was important for the industry to attract and retain young people.

    Lawal said the programme has completed two cycles of training, internship and settlement with 100 youths each during the review period. He said the first batch of youths that graduated in December 2010, are about to settle in newly-built 100-unit two-bedroom flats at the farm settlement fashioned after the Israeli-type – Kibbutz.

    They trainees will be empowered with loans to establish their farms, payable within five years. The products from the scheme include over 1,500 crates of eggs daily, 32,000 broilers monthly, 18 tonnes of fresh fish per cycle and about 160 tonnes of cabbage, water melon, cucumber, pepper and assorted leafy vegetable which being marketed in the state.

    The settlement, Lawal said, is a highly diversified system.

    The Head of Training and Course Officer, Vegetables, Agric-Yes Training Institute, Mr Anjolaiya Hakeem, said the aim of the scheme was to breed a new generation of agro-entrepreneurs in poultry, fish farming, bee-keeping and an-all season vegetable farming cycle.

    “Since this programme started in 2009, we have trained about 300 youths and we are in the fourth batch. We train them in poultry farming, crop farming, fish farming, meat production and so on. We get our students through advertisements in the media. After that, we conduct a test for them, we usually take 36 females and 64 males for each batch, makin 100 students for a session,” he said.

    He said after the training, the participants are divided into co-operatives and each group would be given N100 million to execute its agricultural venture.

    “Apart from the N100 million, the participants are also given accommodation where they can live with their families.We also have a fully automated layer pen. We can’t even meet the demand of the market now,” he said, adding that at the estate, there is a hatchery where hens lay eggs. The eggs are collected and incubated until they begin to hatch in about 20 days. The chicks live in large grow-out houses.”

    A lady trainee and leader of G2 group under the programme, Miss Esther Akintelu, sees her future in agriculture. She made the switch in career after graduating with a degree in Public Administration. She is keen on developing her skills, knowledge and experience to advance her career in the industry.

    Oladuran Oloude, leader of G1, is a graduate of Civil Engineering. Growing up on a farm settlement gave him an understanding of the business administration side of agric enterprise, as well as the daily demands of the businesses. He and his colleagues are learning vegetable production, using plasticulture plots under the green house.

    One of the resident instructors, Mr Vascular Olusola, said the young farmers need to have the mindset of entrepreneurs to succeed and enjoy farming and the independence that comes with it.

    Mr Johnson Oluwashola, the Project Officer, Ram Ranch, said the institute has about 1,500 rams. He said the rams were brought in when they were five months old, adding that though they were not involved in the breeding of the rams, the institute would soon embark on breeding at the ranch. Johnson said the success recorded at the farm was due to the state government’s investment in agriculture to create jobs and enhance food security.

     

    Ikorodu Fish Farm Estate

     

    Established on a 34-hectare parcel of land at Odogunyan, Ikorodu, the estate is producing an average of 10,000 tonnes of fresh fish per annum. A technology demonstration centre, comprising 50,000 juvenile/cycle fish hatchery and 300- kilogramme fish capacity, a processing unit has been built.

    A fish farmer in the estate, Mrs Bolaji Dania, said the government has helped farmers a lot by assisting them with feeds, adding that the government provided the needed information to farmers on how to improve their farms.

    Mrs Dania said: “I am proud of the government, because it has made things easy for farmers like us. Being on this estate to farm, has helped me in getting access to information from the government.Government also subsidises some of the products for us and I was even opportuned to get a loan from the World Bank through the assistance of the government.

    “I started fish farming with three ponds on one plot five years ago, now I have 18 ponds on three plots of land. People come with big trucks to buy fish and we sell them as fingerlings. We really need more people to go into fish farming in Lagos State because we can’t satisfy those that come to buy. Sometimes, they buy seven to eight thousand tonnes and we can’t meet that demand here.”

     

    Ketu-Ereyun fish farm estate

     

    Another initiative of the government is the proposed Ketu-Ereyun Fish Farm Estate. It will be sited on a 60-hectare land on the Itoikin-Epe Road. This was conceptualised as a follow-up to the Ikorodu Fish Farm Estate. In the same manner, it has been divided into 482 plots for allocation to interested and qualified members of the public. Like the Ikorodu Fish Farm, the Ketu-Ereyun Fish Farm also has capacity for 10,000 tonnes but with additional supporting facilities like hatcheries, processing and marketing centres.The estate is expected to produce about 4.685 million tonnes of fresh fish annually when fully established.

     

    Rice-for-job farm Settlement

     

    Rice-for-Job is located on about 200 hectares of land in Itoikin, Epe and Ikoga in Badagry. The settlement has a modern rice processing and milling centre at Imota. The programme was launched in 2008 to create jobs for the unemployed; strengthen local capacity for rice production; achieve a production target of 1,600 tonnes of paddy per annum and facilitate access to rice processing equipment.

    The programme has positively impacted 180 farmers within the last three years. The farmers produced about 180 tonness of rice, which re still far off from the consumption target of 540,000 tonnes per annum for Lagos alone.

    The officer in charge of the programme in the Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, Mr Akinola Oyebola, said the programme has created remunerative economic opportunities for young people in agriculture and built the skills they need to take advantage of these opportunities. He said the programme has given them the skills and confidence to run profitable farms or start businesses which would make upstanding citizens and community leaders of tomorrow.

    One of the beneficiaries of the project, Mr Adeniyi Ayino, said the programme has helped him a lot, adding that now he could operate a tractor very well and work perfectly as a rice farmer. “It is an interesting programme, it is a good opportunity for youths today and because we want to participate in the solution in ensuring food security in Lagos state that is why some of us go into agriculture,” he said.

     

    Imota rice processing Mill

     

    The establishment of this plant has created the first integrated rice company in Nigeria and enabled farmers to share in the value captured in the downstream segment. The company will guarantee a minimum income to farmers. Shedding more light on the rice mill, a consultant to the Lagos State government on rice project, Dr Oluwarotimi Fashola, said the mill was built with Korean technology to the highest operational standards to process 20,000 tonnes of paddy rice per annum. Operating optimally, the rice mill is estimated to produce between 350,000 and 400,000 bags of rice yearly, he said.

    The primary goal of the project, he said, is to reduce dependence on imported rice and also create jobs and wealth for the people. The mill processes 2.5 tonnes of paddy rice which consist of huller, de-stoner polisher, grader, colour sorter and automated bagging and weighing bridge, per hour.

    The following are inclusive in the package: 10-tonne soaking tank, a set of per-boiler and steamer, 15- tonne capacity drier and 60-tonne silo attached to the factory. The factory was built with two other structure for paddy rice storage of 10,000 tonnes capacity and finished rice store cum office space.The complex has 600KVA generator, an industrial borehole and two sets of water tanks; a steel over head tank of 55,000 litres capacity and sets of ground plastic tanks with a total capacity of 45,000 litres. The mill with optimum operating capacity can process up to 20,000 tonnes yearly and is estimated to generate at least 50,000 jobs. Apart from the whole grain table rice, the following by-products are also money earners: broken rice, used for rice pudding, tuwo; ground rice and rice flour. Rice ban – highly sort after for livestock feeds, oil extract and the cosmetic industry.

    Fashola said rice processed at the mill are far better than polished rice that are in the market because of its nutritious value. He said the mill has three main buildings. The first is where the raw paddy rice brought from the farm is kept, then to main building where the rice is processed and finally to the store room where it is stored before it is dispatched to the market.

    According to him, “We produce 2.5 tonnes per hour and an approximate 15,000 to 20,000 tonnes per annum.”

    On the type of rice processed at the mill, Fashola said: “Eko rice is a special brand of rice which is FARO 44 or FARO 52. We use this type of grain of rice for uniformity and that helps in monitoring the standard we produce. We specialise in par-boiled rice. We supply our rice to the government within the ministry and within the Alausa axis”.

    Farmers at the settlements will soon reduce post-harvest losses, increase income, and access post-harvest facilities with the rice processing plant which has become operational. The plant is a fulfillment of farmers’ dream of a facility that houses all the equipment for successful rice production. The project aims to improve the efficiency of rice production, storage, drying, and processing to reduce post-harvest losses and improve the quality of rice grains for human consumption. With all the equipment ready for operation, the farmers are optimistic that the facility will assist them to increase not only their income but also the attainment of self-sufficiency in rice production for the state.

     

    High quality cassava flour factory

     

    The Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives will be setting up a 1,000 metric tonne high quality cassava processing factory in Imota. When fully operational, the cassava factory will directly and indirectly engage over 500 people. This venture is in line with the Federal Government’s plan to reduce the nation’s dependence on imported wheat.

     

    Erikodo poultry estate

     

    The Erikorodo Poultry Estate, Ikorodu, is one of the five farm estates in various parts of the state to bring about self-sufficiency in chicken production.The poultry estate, has 10,000-bird capacity mechanised broiler house, 2,000 birds per day processing capacity plant and 1.5t per hour feed mill.

    Speaking with reporters, the Principal Agric Officer, Mr Idris Abideen, said the estate has a feed mill, a processing plant. He said occupants of the estate are expected to build chicken farms where the chicks are raised. He disclosed that broiler chickens are bred, especially for meatiness, quick growth, and weight gain. They are bred for excessive weight gain, especially in their breasts and thighs. The chicks live in the growing-out houses for about six weeks. At six weeks, the chicks usually weigh about 4 lb (1.8 kg), and are ready for slaughter. When the chickens are old enough for slaughter, Abideen said they are taken to the processing plant.

    At the processing plant, workers take the birds and hang them by their feet on a conveyor belt. In a typical process, the birds on the conveyor are first passed through a vat of electrified salt water called a stun cabinet. The mild electrical current in the water stuns or paralyses the birds. The birds’ carcasses hang until all the blood has drained.

     

    Pig farming estate

     

    The Lagos State Government has two pig farm estates – the Oke-Aro Pig Farm Estate and the Gberigbe Pig Farm Estate – located on a 80-hectare of land. The goal is for 1,200 pig farmers to nurture a total pig population of over 88,000.

     

    Vegetable farm settlements

     

    The state government is adopting the vegetable farming estate initiatives, similar in concept to fish and pig farming programmes. To this end, about 80 hectares of land have been designated as vegetable farms in three different locations – Igbodu (50 hectares), Iyaafin (20 hectares) and Araga (five hectares).

    Farm settlements are created as a stable place for farmers to live, grow crops and possibly raise animals.

    Farm estate provide standard residential and processing facilities for farmers.

     

  • Scholars chart path to national progress

    Provost, Micheal Otedola College of Primary Education, Noforija-Epe, Prof Olu Akeusola, has said priority should be laid on moral education in schools’ curricula. This, to Akeusola, would save the country from moral decadence,

    Said Akeusola: “Education has been seen as a medium through which enlightenment is achieved, therefore the curriculum of our schools should emphasise moral education in the different subjects taught in the schools, these include Religious Studies, Civic Education, Social Studies, Moral Instruction and also extra-curricular activities should advocate moral discipline through songs, drama, poetry and arts.leaders in different spheres of the society should lead by example and display high level of moral integrity.”

    Akeusola, who spoke in Lagos, alongside other academics, made the recommendation at a public seminar tagged Character and Values In National Peace and Progress, organised by the Rosicrucian Order, AMORC, Lagos Zone.

    Akeusola identified stealing, greed, dishonesty, unhealthy rivalry and competition and covetousness as character traits hindering peace and progress.

    He listed trustworthiness, respect for others, sense of responsibility, fairness, care, performing civic duties as some of traits needed to foster peace and progress in Nigeria.

    In his speech, Alagba Oladipo Yemitan, who chaired the event, said the loss of Omoluwabi (good character) in us accounted for the “bereftness of dignity and pride in ourselves and our country”

    “The concept, virtues and values of an Omoluwabi need to be recharged and embraced by us in this country so we can be peaceful, lawful and progressive the way we should. We certainly need to revisit and re-invent it,” he stated.

    Other scholars at the event included: professors Femi Otubanjo, and Issac Alaba, consultants in politics and culture and language and Head, Department of Philosophy, University of Lagos, Prof Friday Ndubuisi.

    Addressing journalists earlier, the Grand Administrator and Director, Supreme Board of Amorc, Dr Kenneth Idiodi, stressed that there was a grave disconnect between Nigerians and their conscience.

    “There must be an established link between the inner and outside selves for personal consciousness to bring about transformation agenda,” Idiodi further posited.